If watersports ---skiing, boogie-boarding, power-boating, party-cruising---are your thing---and your ONLY thing---this is definitely the place for you. But if you also want a place to gather with family beside the water, or to paddle, to fish, to hike, or to simply enjoy a view of nature without having to get in your car and motor to another destination, choose somewhere else to vacation. The cabins are fairly well-appointed , though if you plan on using the kitchens for more than just making coffee you'll need to bring all your cooking apparatus including pots, pans, paper goods, and utensils. The cabins also have spacious, shady back decks with comfortable chairs, overlooking a wooded hillside sloping toward the lake in the distance. But neither cabins nor condos feature what I would term a "lake view", and neither are accessible to the lake without driving and parking, or a hike through woodland. The "condos", have an efficiency kitchen with almost no utensils. They have little furniture, nothing on the walls (which needed painting), and an old TV with intermittent DIRECT satellite reception. They had a small shared deck with a few plastic chairs, and no hooks or towel racks in the bathroom. They offer a front view of a dumpster and heavy equipment, and a back/deck view of other cabins and a work station. The floor in ours needed mopping as soon as we arrived, I killed several flies, and it had a very strong odor of cleanser. The adjoining door to the next cabin was not locked. My bed was more comfy and supportive than most, but hubby's bed (2 queens) wasn't and he ended up with a stiff back. Far beyond the trees in the distance, down the hill, was a glimpse of a large, crowded, noisy, and busy marina. Neither type of accommodation was within reasonable walking distance or appropriate accessibility of the water. There was no nearby, terraced, stepped, "walk-down" place to gather on the water with family and friends, and just hang out. The only docks available for bank fishing, or just sitting in lawn chairs watching the sun go down, were at the ends of the marina's many floating metal boat houses, where not more than one or two people could have fit. The drive between accommodations was less than what we' expect from a federal public natural area--it included not only glimpses of deer at woodlands' edge, which was nice, but parked heavy equipment and dozens of boat trailers in the woods, some with grass growing through them. We were unpleasantly surprised to find that the fishing barge we had rented for one day was not available until 8 a.m., and was due back at 6 p.m., and that it included neither troll motor, as promised, nor an anchor. We came back to the dock for an anchor, which they reluctantly provided. Its rope was barely long enough to reach the bottom in many spots. Lake Greeson itself offers a great expanse of relatively clear water, wooded hillsides, and lots of obstacle-free room for lots of people to simultaneously engage in motorized water sports, and in general, party on the water. But you want or need anything else in a lake-based summer family get together..." Meh. I've experienced better". read more