The Minong Ridge Trail is Isle Royale's most challenging and remote backpacking route, traversing 26-28 miles of rugged terrain along the island's northern spine. This primitive trail was originally cut as a fire manway in the mid-1960s and deliberately maintained with minimal improvements—few bridges, limited boardwalks, and sparse trail markers. It's a route for experienced backpackers with solid navigation skills who crave solitude and are comfortable hiking from cairn to cairn across exposed rocky ridgelines. At any given time, there are more moose on the island than hikers, and you'll likely rack up double-digit moose sightings. The trail offers spectacular panoramic views of Lake Superior and the Canadian shoreline to the north, with interior lakes and the Greenstone Ridge visible to the south. Plan for 3-4 days from McCargoe Cove to Windigo, though most backpackers need an additional 2 days to reach McCargoe Cove from Rock Harbor, making this a 5-6 day trip requiring substantial food and fuel.
All overnight camping at Isle Royale requires a free backcountry permit, which you obtain when you arrive on the island. There are no advance campsite reservations—all campgrounds operate first-come, first-served. The park charges a $7 per person per day entrance fee (or use your America the Beautiful Pass). Groups of 7 or more must make advance group camping reservations and can only camp in designated group sites. Maximum party size is 10 people per itinerary; organizations are capped at 20 people on-island at any time.
Starting in 2025, Isle Royale implemented new food storage regulations. Backcounters must use bear-resistant canisters for all food, trash, and scented items (including sunscreen, lotion, deodorant). In campgrounds with food lockers installed, use those instead. Otherwise, hang your canister 12 feet high and 6 feet from the nearest trunk, or secure it to a boulder/log at least 200 feet from camp. The park is actively installing food lockers at all campgrounds throughout 2025.
Fires are permitted only at select campgrounds with fire rings. Group size for cross-country camping is limited to 1-6 people only. Full regulations: https://www.nps.gov/isro/planyourvisit/camping-regulations.htm
The island is accessible mid-May through late September when ferry and seaplane services operate, but the sweet spot for the Minong Ridge is late August through early September. This timing offers the best balance: bugs have finally subsided, days are still reasonably long, water sources remain reliable, and temperatures are comfortable (highs in the 60s-70s, lows in the 40s-50s).
Avoid mid-June through mid-July unless you're prepared for relentless mosquitoes and blackflies. Biting insects hatch in late May and peak from late June into early July. Early June brings the additional challenge of blackflies, and you'll face cold nights (30s-40s) with daytime highs only in the 40s-60s. By contrast, late May has fewer bugs but blackflies can still be miserable some years.
Mid-August onward sees insect numbers plummet significantly, making the entire experience more enjoyable. However, September means shorter days and reduced ferry schedules, so plan accordingly. There are no shoulder season concerns—the park simply closes November 1 through April 15 annually.
Water planning is critical on the Minong Ridge. The most challenging section is the 12.6-mile stretch from North Lake Desor to Windigo, which has no reliable, clean water sources along the trail itself. Before leaving North Desor, fill every bottle and consider carrying a 2-liter dirty water bag to filter en route. You'll encounter three beaver dams and a few streams along this section, but the water is typically brown, septic-smelling, and requires aggressive filtration. One hiker described filtering "brown water" at multiple beaver dams—functional but far from ideal.
From McCargoe Cove to Todd Harbor (6.7 miles), water access is limited. Between Todd and Little Todd (6.8 miles), approximately three streams cross the trail. The Little Todd to North Desor section (5.7 miles) has one stream and a beaver dam. Carry 3+ liters between campgrounds and treat everything.
There is no resupply on-island. The closest resupply town is Houghton, Michigan (mainland), though most backpackers stock up before boarding the ferry. Mail drops are not practical for typical 5-6 day trips. Plan to carry all food and fuel from the mainland.
The Minong Ridge Trail earns its reputation as Michigan's hardest hike through relentless challenges:
Navigation: Much of the trail follows rocky ridgelines where cairns are the only indication you're on route. No other Michigan trail uses cairns so extensively. Missing a cairn can lead to significant off-trail wandering. Bring a map, compass, and GPS. The NPS describes this as a trail "for experienced backpackers with navigation skills."
Beaver dam crossings: At least four major beaver dam crossings punctuate the route, with most search-and-rescue incidents occurring when hikers get disoriented trying to navigate through them. Your feet will sink into muck—there simply aren't spots that support body weight. Wear quick-drying shoes or ankle-high waterproof boots. Getting lost in these crossings burns time and water, leading to dehydration.
Blowdowns: Recent trip reports counted 79 blowdowns between McCargoe and Todd Harbor alone. While manageable one at a time, they add cumulative time and energy expenditure.
Rocky terrain: Long stretches across exposed bedrock ridges are jarring on ankles and tough on knees. When wet, the ridgeline becomes dangerously slick. Trekking poles are essential. Multiple hikers report taking "several spills in a storm."
Exposure: Open ridgelines offer spectacular views but no protection from weather. Be prepared for sudden storms, high winds, and temperature drops.
Wildlife: Moose encounters are frequent. Give them wide berth—moose are unpredictable and dangerous, especially cows with calves. The island's tiny wolf population is rarely seen but present.
Limited maintenance: The NPS deliberately maintains this as a primitive route with minimal trail work each season. Expect changing conditions year to year.
Isle Royale sits 56 miles offshore in Lake Superior, accessible only by ferry or seaplane. Most Minong Ridge hikers use a combination of transportation to avoid backtracking:
Ferry options: - Ranger III (Houghton, MI to Rock Harbor): NPS-operated, 6 hours, runs late May-early September. Website: https://www.nps.gov/isro/planyourvisit/ranger-iii.htm - Isle Royale Queen IV (Copper Harbor, MI to Rock Harbor): Private ferry, 3+ hours, runs early May-late September. Website: https://www.isleroyale.com/ - Voyageur II / Sea Hunter III (Grand Portage, MN to Windigo/Rock Harbor): Multi-stop routes, runs June-early September. Website: https://www.isleroyaleboats.com/
Seaplane: Isle Royale Seaplanes flies from Hubbell, MI to both Windigo and Rock Harbor. Flights are 45 minutes, operate mid-May through mid-September, and allow you to pick up at the opposite end from where you started. Faster but more expensive. Website: https://www.isleroyaleseaplanes.com/
Parking: Long-term parking is available at all mainland ferry terminals. Seaplane base charges $8/day or $16/day for oversize vehicles.
Strategy: Many hikers take the Ranger III from Houghton to Rock Harbor, hike 2 days to McCargoe Cove, complete the Minong Ridge west to Windigo over 3-4 days, then seaplane back to the mainland. This avoids backtracking and breaks up the journey.
All ferry and seaplane services require advance reservations. Book early—summer weekends fill up.
Campsite strategy: The 12.6-mile North Desor to Windigo section is brutal if you're low on water or arrive late. Start early from North Desor—5:00-6:00 AM is not excessive. Some hikers push this section in 7.5 hours, but plan for 8-10. The 5.7-mile Little Todd to North Desor section, while short on paper, typically takes a full day due to rough terrain and beaver dams.
Shelter availability: McCargoe Cove and Todd Harbor have three-sided shelters (first-come, first-served), which are excellent in rain but fill fast. Shelters at McCargoe offer outstanding views of the cove. Little Todd and North Desor have tent sites only—no shelters. Washington Creek (Windigo) has shelters. Always bring a tent.
Footwear: Bring shoes that can get soaked and dry quickly. The beaver dam crossings guarantee wet feet. Some hikers bring camp shoes or sandals specifically for these crossings to keep boots dry, though this adds weight.
Water filtration: Carry a filter capable of handling turbid, sediment-heavy water. Sawyer Squeeze and similar filters can clog quickly on brown beaver dam water—bring a cleaning syringe or backup.
Navigation tools: Download offline maps. Cell service is nonexistent. Bring paper maps as backup. The trail is poorly marked in sections, and fog on the ridgeline can reduce visibility to near zero.
Cairn-following technique: On open ridgeline sections, stop at each cairn and visually locate the next one before proceeding. If you can't see the next cairn, you may be off-route.
Bugs: If you must hike during peak bug season (mid-June to mid-July), bring a head net, long sleeves, long pants, and permethrin-treated clothing. Bug pressure is relentless and soul-crushing without protection.
Moose photography: The Minong Ridge's lowland sections and beaver ponds are prime moose habitat. Early morning and evening offer the best wildlife viewing. Maintain 25+ yards distance.
Thimbleberries: Mid-summer brings ripe thimbleberries along certain sections. They're delicious but grow on slopes with steep drop-offs camouflaged by foliage—watch your footing.
Timing your trip: If you have flexibility, monitor Isle Royale Forums (https://isleroyaleforums.com/) for recent trip reports in the weeks before your departure. Conditions—blowdowns, beaver dam water levels, bug intensity—change year to year.
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