It was a marriage of primal carnage and carnal passion... nothing more.Man, I hate to hear that such a solid foundation could be rocked by this serious business on the internet.
It was a marriage of primal carnage and carnal passion... nothing more.Man, I hate to hear that such a solid foundation could be rocked by this serious business on the internet.
Sounds like something you should write a book about!It was a marriage of primal carnage and carnal passion... nothing more.

So y’all talking about $1000 membership but who’s going to be willing to pay $1000 for a place to ride realistically? Also who’s going to pay that kinda $$$$ then spend every spare weekend doing trail maintenance and upgrades to the park? Sure as hell isn’t me, been there done that and never got to wheel the park I was a member of for those reasons. Only way this works is being run as a business with employees to do the work IMHO.
I think its a little smaller than the Mt City property, around 3-4k acres. Hard to tell exactly what is OHV area on the GIS site, but that the land in between cotton place rd, moccasin creek rd, and wolf den road encompasses about 3500ish acres.Just for comparison, what is the acreage at Uwharrie? Trail system, not the whole park.
I'll echo @obullfish. Why should we have to front $1k? All I would want to do is show up an wheel, not financially support the park. The only way this get's off is if some bazillionare comes out with cash. Last I checked most of nc4x4 is middle class joe fucking salary manPeasant. You were much more fun before when you were "single"![]()

We (a club) tried that twice and it failed miserably each time.
I'll pay the gate, roll in, wheel and go home. Zero interest in owning, managing, or in any way being responsible for wheeling property ever again.
My best comparison would be the cove near Winchester which @zuke is familiar with. Entry fees for wheeling are pretty high, compared to other private parks, and only held a few times a year. But the park is multi purpose so they can bring in money other ways. Primarily as a campground I think…
This.The Cove is a great comparison and example of how to make something like that work... But also shows that an OHV park can't survive stand alone.
The Cove is a campground that has a lot of streams of income, of which Big Dogs is just a small part, and the relationship with the campground is often tenuous. People go to the Cove for many reasons, they have decent facilities that people go to just to camp there, they have Motocove for Dirt Bikes, ATV's, and SxSs (the campground manages that). They have a nice lake with fishing and non-motorized boating. They have two nice firing ranges. they have Music events and other entertainment events. Groups can arrange small private wheeling groups outside of Big Dogs, but this usually costs more per individual than Big Dogs events, and is variable since these groups negotiate directly with the family that owns the park.
Big Dogs is a separate entity, they're more or less like a promoter, they get the wheeling specific liability insurance for each event (they don't have an ongoing policy) and arrange the dates and keep a calendar. When you go to a Big Dogs event, You pay a fee to Big Dogs and you pay a fee to camp.
If you want to build an Offroad park, you need to generate income in other ways as well. The best way to do it is probably to build the campground first, since that can generate income all the time, Then build the OHV for SxS's and Bikes, That is a steadier stream of income, then finally you can try have events for full size 4x4s, Or, get a company like Big Dogs to come in and arrange events.
It's a lay down yard for a gas company. They contacted the property owner, established a LEGALLY BINDING LEASE/CONTRACT and are paying him a nice chunk to use it. Who knows what will happen after they are done. The owner has passed away and his estate is in charge of the lease now.Is the Flats still being used a pipe storage yard or something? I wonder if there is any chance of being able to wheel there again some day. That place was a ton of fun.
Rausch Creek would disagree with youThe Cove is a great comparison and example of how to make something like that work... But also shows that an OHV park can't survive stand alone.
That sounds like a big no then. Dead owner is how we lost Callalantee too I believe.It's a lay down yard for a gas company. They contacted the property owner, established a LEGALLY BINDING LEASE/CONTRACT and are paying him a nice chunk to use it. Who knows what will happen after they are done. The owner has passed away and his estate is in charge of the lease now.
The Cove is a great comparison and example of how to make something like that work... But also shows that an OHV park can't survive stand alone.
The Cove is a campground that has a lot of streams of income, of which Big Dogs is just a small part, and the relationship with the campground is often tenuous. People go to the Cove for many reasons, they have decent facilities that people go to just to camp there, they have Motocove for Dirt Bikes, ATV's, and SxSs (the campground manages that). They have a nice lake with fishing and non-motorized boating. They have two nice firing ranges. they have Music events and other entertainment events. Groups can arrange small private wheeling groups outside of Big Dogs, but this usually costs more per individual than Big Dogs events, and is variable since these groups negotiate directly with the family that owns the park.
Big Dogs is a separate entity, they're more or less like a promoter, they get the wheeling specific liability insurance for each event (they don't have an ongoing policy) and arrange the dates and keep a calendar. When you go to a Big Dogs event, You pay a fee to Big Dogs and you pay a fee to camp.
If you want to build an Offroad park, you need to generate income in other ways as well. The best way to do it is probably to build the campground first, since that can generate income all the time, Then build the OHV for SxS's and Bikes, That is a steadier stream of income, then finally you can try have events for full size 4x4s, Or, get a company like Big Dogs to come in and arrange events.
Rausch Creek would disagree with you![]()
Ya know, that's not the worst idea. And there's a huge revenue source not too far away at App State.Can't we just grow pot?
FIFYYa know, that's not the worst idea. And there's a huge revenue source not too far away at my house.