- Soaring Eagle Casino
Casinos Near Me Ltd attempts to provide accurate and up-to-date information in good faith, however cannot guarantee the information will always be accurate, complete and up-to-date. The map data and directions information is provided by a third party, Casinos Near Me has no control over this information. The Soaring Eagle Casino & Resort is a casino, hotel and entertainment venue located near Mount Pleasant, Michigan. It is owned and operated by the Saginaw Chippewa Tribal Nation. Soaring Eagle offers a typical selection of pit and table games such as.
Hot4.8 (2)
215080500Contact Information
989-775-7777
Location
6800 Soaring Eagle Boulevard
Mount Pleasant
MI
48858
43.61
-84.71
RV Parking and Camping Information
Campground Information
RV Park 2 miles away, shuttle
Other Information
Photos
Map
User reviews
4.5
5.0
5.0
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Hotels Near Me Soaring Eagle Casino
We have stayed here in the past and as always it is a great place to overnight. The reason for the low mark on Dining was because the selection and some of the items were cold. At the deli the sandwich's were great and the ice cream shop is always good.
A
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5.0
5.0
5.0
5.0
Soaring Eagle Casino Membership
5.0
5.0
Rv parking is free, stayed overnight, close to the casino 10 min walk or you can wait for a shuttle, they want the rv's to park across the street in a huge lot, lots of security driving around all the time. Also stayed at the the rv park which is really nice place, it has a small lake attached to it. The casino is large with good food.
M
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Soaring Eagle Casino Merchandise
report from Terri S., June 25, 2009
We used your site to find a place to try out our new RV without hook-ups or having to pay. Since the last update for Soaring Eagle in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan is from last year I thought I would update:
Called ahead first and was told by an employee that yes we could park our RV overnight for free in the RV lot. We arrived mid-afternoon on June 20, 2009 and there were only a few RVs there (we were surprised since it was a Saturday). The lot also services the administrative building for the casino but it seems to be closed on the weekends since there weren't really any actual 'cars' parked in there.
The main casino building houses the table games and slots and the majority of the restaurants and whatever entertainment venue they have, along with the hotel. From reviewing their website, we were excited to try the freshly sliced, hot roast beef sandwich offered at the cart near the entrance but we were a little disappointed by it. The meat tasted fine but was a bit dry (could have used a dip in au jus) and very skimpy. For $5.95 it wasn't a rip-off but I would have preferred to pay $10 for a 'piled high' sandwich. It came with sautéed onions and mushrooms.
We didn't eat anywhere else but I did look the buffet over. The desserts looked pretty good and the dinner selections seemed adequate for $19.95. Of course it doesn't hold a candle to a good Vegas buffet but then again, we're not in Vegas.
The other casino building is much smaller and houses the bingo hall and some additional slot machines. There are shuttles that take you back and forth between the buildings but they're very close together so we walked (you do have to span parking lots so if you don't enjoy walking you can certainly avail yourself of the bus).
Also within walking distance (only 1 small block away) is a Shell gas station and a new little strip center with a pizza parlor and a pharmacy. Didn't try the pizza out but some patrons inside said they enjoyed it. We didn't re-enter either of the 2 casinos since they were both horribly smoky so instead of twiddling our thumbs we decided to continue on MI-20 West (we had come from the east which was mostly residential) and discovered plenty of restaurants (Burger King, McD, and many sit down places) and a Meijer (a little over 3 miles from the casino). We enjoyed a snack at the Culver's located in the Meijer parking lot and then headed back to set up camp.
The night was uneventful - plenty of people were running generators all night but there were so few of us there that we were spaced many parking spots away from one another and noise wasn't an issue. The only blip was the person weed-whacking early the next morning but it was our fault we parked near the grass and they were just doing their job. We moved to the center of the parking lot and weren't troubled any longer. We noticed fellow RVers walking dogs and exchanging pleasantries in the lot. We stretched our legs, used the restrooms (the Bingo/Slot hall was a closer walk from where we parked so we went there), put $2 in a slot machine and headed on our way.
Overall we enjoyed ourselves - it seemed safe, wasn't noisy and the neighbors were respectful. We didn't go for the casinos really (so I can't give a recommendation there) - we went more for an 'allowed' boondocking experience and for us it was definitely worth the trip (2.5 hour ride). Would definitely recommend to those who want to try their hand at boondocking and for anyone who is passing through and wants to stop for the night.
We used your site to find a place to try out our new RV without hook-ups or having to pay. Since the last update for Soaring Eagle in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan is from last year I thought I would update:
Called ahead first and was told by an employee that yes we could park our RV overnight for free in the RV lot. We arrived mid-afternoon on June 20, 2009 and there were only a few RVs there (we were surprised since it was a Saturday). The lot also services the administrative building for the casino but it seems to be closed on the weekends since there weren't really any actual 'cars' parked in there.
The main casino building houses the table games and slots and the majority of the restaurants and whatever entertainment venue they have, along with the hotel. From reviewing their website, we were excited to try the freshly sliced, hot roast beef sandwich offered at the cart near the entrance but we were a little disappointed by it. The meat tasted fine but was a bit dry (could have used a dip in au jus) and very skimpy. For $5.95 it wasn't a rip-off but I would have preferred to pay $10 for a 'piled high' sandwich. It came with sautéed onions and mushrooms.
We didn't eat anywhere else but I did look the buffet over. The desserts looked pretty good and the dinner selections seemed adequate for $19.95. Of course it doesn't hold a candle to a good Vegas buffet but then again, we're not in Vegas.
The other casino building is much smaller and houses the bingo hall and some additional slot machines. There are shuttles that take you back and forth between the buildings but they're very close together so we walked (you do have to span parking lots so if you don't enjoy walking you can certainly avail yourself of the bus).
Also within walking distance (only 1 small block away) is a Shell gas station and a new little strip center with a pizza parlor and a pharmacy. Didn't try the pizza out but some patrons inside said they enjoyed it. We didn't re-enter either of the 2 casinos since they were both horribly smoky so instead of twiddling our thumbs we decided to continue on MI-20 West (we had come from the east which was mostly residential) and discovered plenty of restaurants (Burger King, McD, and many sit down places) and a Meijer (a little over 3 miles from the casino). We enjoyed a snack at the Culver's located in the Meijer parking lot and then headed back to set up camp.
The night was uneventful - plenty of people were running generators all night but there were so few of us there that we were spaced many parking spots away from one another and noise wasn't an issue. The only blip was the person weed-whacking early the next morning but it was our fault we parked near the grass and they were just doing their job. We moved to the center of the parking lot and weren't troubled any longer. We noticed fellow RVers walking dogs and exchanging pleasantries in the lot. We stretched our legs, used the restrooms (the Bingo/Slot hall was a closer walk from where we parked so we went there), put $2 in a slot machine and headed on our way.
Overall we enjoyed ourselves - it seemed safe, wasn't noisy and the neighbors were respectful. We didn't go for the casinos really (so I can't give a recommendation there) - we went more for an 'allowed' boondocking experience and for us it was definitely worth the trip (2.5 hour ride). Would definitely recommend to those who want to try their hand at boondocking and for anyone who is passing through and wants to stop for the night.
PU
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- report from Karen B, August 2007
Just a little to add to the other reports. We stayed for two nights in the huge RV lot. The first night was fairly quiet even though the were a good number of other RVs and even some trucks along with us. The second day, Friday, was much busier and a few of the people left their generators on all day and into the evening. The only really annoying one was a construction type generator on a platform on the back of a fifth wheel. It wasn’t hot enough to need continuous air conditioning but the generator ran constantly.
The smaller casino has a room that they call a virtual casino. It has nothing in it but the new large machines with virtual dealers. This is an experiment that the casino is trying.
A shuttle runs continuously and there are new sidewalks that go to the front door of the new casino across the street.
The Ziibiwing museum is excellent. It’s about a ½ mile away and there are new sidewalks the entire way. Turn left after exiting the RV lot.
We’ve found that Indian casinos usually don’t have very good pay tables for video poker but this one seems pretty good. There are several large banks of four of a kind progressive 6/9 bonus poker.
We also drove through the campground even though we didn’t stay there. It’s a little rustic with dirt roads and many trees but to us it looked nice enough.
Just a little to add to the other reports. We stayed for two nights in the huge RV lot. The first night was fairly quiet even though the were a good number of other RVs and even some trucks along with us. The second day, Friday, was much busier and a few of the people left their generators on all day and into the evening. The only really annoying one was a construction type generator on a platform on the back of a fifth wheel. It wasn’t hot enough to need continuous air conditioning but the generator ran constantly.
The smaller casino has a room that they call a virtual casino. It has nothing in it but the new large machines with virtual dealers. This is an experiment that the casino is trying.
A shuttle runs continuously and there are new sidewalks that go to the front door of the new casino across the street.
The Ziibiwing museum is excellent. It’s about a ½ mile away and there are new sidewalks the entire way. Turn left after exiting the RV lot.
We’ve found that Indian casinos usually don’t have very good pay tables for video poker but this one seems pretty good. There are several large banks of four of a kind progressive 6/9 bonus poker.
We also drove through the campground even though we didn’t stay there. It’s a little rustic with dirt roads and many trees but to us it looked nice enough.
Soaring Eagle Casino Near East Lansing Mi
PU
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