Unless your dead set on staying in Copper Harbor I would stay around Houghton/Hancock area. Copper Harbor is a good day ride to hit all the sights and areas and ride back, probably 120-130 miles if you go to a few other areas to explore. Then you can head south from that location also and go a few different directions to hit other towns. Maybe you have done exploring before and just want to stay in the peninsula. The Mariner North is a good place to stay with newer cabins/hotel style rooms. Also I have stayed at The Pines. Both have bars next to them, they have more motels but I don’t think the others are open in the winter. I’m up in that area 4-5 times a winter and have never noticed any others open in Copper Harbor. I’m sure others will chime in also.[/QUO
Fireman, please take Firefigher1's advice as he is wise.
I like the Super 8 in Houghton or the Ramada in Hancock.
A compromise would be to stay in Calumet at the Americinn (may have a new name as Wyndham bought Americinn).
Remember, the further north you go the more you trailer.
Bear
Just wondering what would be a good place to stay in Cooper Harbor the first week in February.
No thanks to VRBO and all there nonsense fees. I'm sorry, but if you rent a place and leave it neat and tidy, it should not be the renter's responsibility to pay for cleaning! Also, as a sledder, be very careful with their cancellation policies. Some people don't understand that we go there to ride and if there is no snow--there is no point in going. We got stuck for a rental on Gogebic last year that really was a bad ordeal.
Unless your dead set on staying in Copper Harbor I would stay around Houghton/Hancock area. Copper Harbor is a good day ride to hit all the sights and areas and ride back, probably 120-130 miles if you go to a few other areas to explore. Then you can head south from that location also and go a few different directions to hit other towns. Maybe you have done exploring before and just want to stay in the peninsula. The Mariner North is a good place to stay with newer cabins/hotel style rooms. Also I have stayed at The Pines. Both have bars next to them, they have more motels but I don’t think the others are open in the winter. I’m up in that area 4-5 times a winter and have never noticed any others open in Copper Harbor. I’m sure others will chime in also.
Well sorry I don't stay at the dumps that you do, apparently. I have a decent sized group of big dudes, and we don't like sleeping on couches, or with each other. Losing half of your money 7 days before is a ripoff. Especially since they want ALL of your money before that. A lot of things can happen in 7 days. A house on Lake Gogebic pretty much has ONE purpose in the winter. If snow conditions are marginal to begin with, and then there is a huge meltdown, or rainstorm, most renters would understand and offer a refund--OR hold our money for a later date, which we offered to THEM, and they refused. Trust me, if we didn't book this place for that trip, nobody else was going to. I'm not going to look it up, but there were new fees added by VRBO recently to pay for their service. The fee is non negotiable. VRBO also does not offer refunds based on weather, which probably makes sense for your average vacation. They do not "get" that snowmobilers actually need snow to vacation. I believe they do offer some kind of insurance, which is the ONLY way I'd use them again, but still don't plan to. By the way, I've used VRBO for fishing and sledding trips for years, and I still have NEVER cancelled a trip. I know that you are the most famous, epic snowmobiler of all time, but I've been around a bit myself.
Your best bet is to avoid services like VRBO as much as possible and try to book places from the owner direct, which in fact is getting harder to do.