Evan L. Balkan

Best Tent Camping: Maryland


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Lake: Mill Run Campground

       38 Susquehanna State Park

      40 Assateague Island National Seashore; see also 41 and 42

       50 Tuckahoe State Park

      :: BEST FOR HANDICAPPED ACCESSIBILITY

       8 Cunningham Falls State Park: Houck Area

       10 Deep Creek Lake State Park

       16 Greenbrier State Park

       43 Assateague State Park

      46 Pocomoke River State Park; see also 47

      :: BEST FOR HIKING

       3 Catoctin Mountain Park

       5 C&O Canal: Hiker-Biker Campsites; see also 6 and 7

       8 Cunningham Falls State Park; see also 9

       21 Rocky Gap State Park

       25 South Mountain State Park: Appalachian Trail Backpackers’ Campgrounds

      :: BEST FOR HORSEBACK RIDING

      13 Garrett State Forest; see also 14

       15 Green Ridge State Forest

      19 Potomac State Forest; see also 20

       38 Susquehanna State Park

      46 Pocomoke River State Park; see also 47

      :: BEST FOR MOUNTAIN BIKING

      13 Garrett State Forest; see also 14

       15 Green Ridge State Forest

      19 Potomac State Forest; see also 20

      22 Savage River State Forest; see also 23

      34 Patapsco Valley State Park; see also 35

      :: BEST FOR PADDLING

       4 C&O Canal; see also 57

       36 Patuxent River Park

      40 Assateague Island National Seashore; see also 41 and 42

       44 Janes Island State Park

      46 Pocomoke River State Park; see also 47

      :: BEST FOR SNOWMOBILING

       10 Deep Creek Lake State Park

      13 Garrett State Forest; see also 14

       15 Green Ridge State Forest

      19 Potomac State Forest; see also 20

      22 Savage River State Forest; see also 23

      :: BEST FOR SWIMMING

       10 Deep Creek Lake State Park

       21 Rocky Gap State Park

       30 Elk Neck State Park

       32 Hart-Miller Island State Park

      40 Assateague Island National Seashore; see also 41 and 42

       43 Assateague State Park

      PREFACE

      I’ve had the good fortune to travel quite a bit, visiting some 25 countries on four continents and more than 30 American states. When I travel, comparisons to home are inevitable. Maryland, by most accounts, should come up short. After all, while Maryland enjoys a rich history (I grew up just a mile from a church built in the late 1600s), what is it against Machu Picchu, the Roman Coliseum, or the pyramids at Giza? Maryland’s high point tops out at just over 3,300 feet—what’s that against major peaks in the Rockies, the Andes, or the Himalayas? Yes, I’ve spent many