Both my partner and I went for solo quads, which turned out to be absolutely the right call — having your own bike makes a massive difference when you actually know what you're doing and want to ride at your own pace. The trail itself is genuinely impressive: proper mud sections, a couple of real river crossings where you need to commit and pick your line, and enough varied terrain to keep it interesting throughout. The 250cc Suzukis aren't the most powerful machines you'll ever sit on, but they're well-maintained and responsive enough to have real fun on the technical bits. I will say the instructor leading from the front had a good eye for the group dynamic; he could clearly see that a few of us were comfortable and gave us a bit more rope on the open sections without letting things get out of hand for the less experienced riders behind us. The Kursunlu river stop between sessions was a lovely touch — we scrambled down for a quick swim, cooled off, and were back on the bikes feeling refreshed rather than exhausted.
My one gripe is that the pace was inevitably dictated by the slowest rider in the group, which is fair enough in principle, but there were a few sections where I'd have loved to open it up properly and just couldn't. Not really a flaw in the operation, more an inherent limitation of the group format — worth knowing if you're a seasoned off-road rider expecting to push hard.








