Lincoln Bridge State Forest Campground
Northern Lower Peninsula · Lake County
Nine walk-in, tent-only sites in tall evergreens where Silver Creek meets the Pine River. Walk-in means 20 to 50 yards, so bring the wagon, not the mule. Trout in both waters, a canoe landing by the parking lot, and the ORV trails stay far enough off that the trees keep most of it out.
From above. USDA NAIP, public domain.The vibe
Works for tent, hammock, van, and a smaller rig. Measured dark skies, a real one for stargazing.
Hanging a hammock?
Hammocks are fine in Michigan state parks. There's no rule against them. The rule is about the tree: use wide, tree-friendly straps, no nails or wire, and don't tear the bark. The state sets no strap or tree-size requirement, so when in doubt, ask the park. We'll point you at sites that likely have trees worth hanging from, but we can't see the trunks, so eyeball it on arrival.
The facts
- 9 rustic sites.
- Vault toilets and hand-pump water. No hookups, no showers.
- No reservation exists. Drive in, take an open post, self-register ($20 a night). Summer Fridays fill early; have a second pick down the road.
Seven miles north of Luther.
Thicket is not affiliated with the Michigan DNR. The facts come from the DNR's open GIS data (a public record); the vibe read and the words are ours, estimated from open data (OpenStreetMap, USGS elevation, NASA Black Marble nighttime light). Sites, fees, and access can change, and first come, first served means no promises. Confirm on the DNR page, and pack out what you pack in.