Destination Defender Celebrates Off-Roading and Trophy Winners

This May, Defender hosted Destination Defender 2026 at Cedar Lakes Estate in Port Jervis, New York, bringing owners, families, and brand loyalists together for a weekend of off-road driving, vehicle showcases, live music, outdoor programming, and the North American Defender Trophy finalist announcement. 

Destination Defender event turned Cedar Lakes into a full Defender campus. A wide green field opened into rows of glamping tents, mountain views, lake docks, wooded trails, and weekend events. At Basecamp, a large DEFENDER sign sat against the grass with Defender vehicles staged nearby, giving the weekend the feeling of an outdoor festival built around one very specific kind of obsession. Destination Defender gave guests a chance to see the vehicles outside a showroom setting and understand what they can do on uneven ground, in deep mud, and over rock obstacles. For a brand built so heavily around heritage, utility, and all-terrain performance, the weekend was the perfect opportunity to showcase the capability of the vehicle in motion. 

The Defender Drive Experience was the main event. The course we chose was about fifteen minutes, but it was long enough to feel how the vehicle responds across different terrain. The trail moved through a purpose-built section of mud, rocks, inclines, and uneven ground, with Defenders making their way between trees and over sculpted mounds. Our instructor, Tom, an engineer at Land Rover Manhattan, walked us through the drive and made the vehicle’s systems easier to understand in real time. We were driving a Defender with an inline-six, three-liter engine making around 400 horsepower, but the most interesting part of the experience was not the power itself. It was how precisely the vehicle adjusted to each condition.

As the Defender moved over rocks, Tom explained the Terrain Response system. Rock Crawl prepares the vehicle differently than Mud and Ruts. On sand, the vehicle may start in second gear to avoid over-torquing the wheels and causing them to spin. In Rock Crawl, the center and rear differentials lock for maximum traction, while the throttle becomes less sensitive for better control. In Mud and Ruts, the system allows the wheels to spin enough to clear mud from the tire treads.

Photo by Knockturnal

That explanation became easier to understand once another Defender entered the rock section ahead of us. The vehicle angled over the mound with one wheel lifting higher than expected, its body staying composed as the ground changed beneath it. One side compressed, another extended, and the independent air suspension kept working to hold the tires to the surface. It was a useful reminder that off-roading is not just about power. It is also about balance, control, traction, and patience.

Inside the cabin, the information screen showed much of that work in real time. Ride height, steering angle, side tilt, forward and back tilt, altitude, torque distribution, and differential status were all visible on the display. The vehicle was in off-road height and low range, with Mud and Ruts and hill descent control activated. Outside, the tires moved through mud and rock. Inside, the cabin stayed quiet. 

The hill descent control was one of the highlights. In first gear, the Defender walked itself down the incline without brake or throttle input. It was slow and composed. The car moved through deep mud and rocks with very little strain. Rather than overpowering the terrain, the vehicle glided over it. 

Photo by Knockturnal

Destination Defender was clearly designed as a brand world, but the crowd there made it seem more than a brand event. There were longtime Defender enthusiasts, new owners, families, and fans who traveled from all over the country. Conversations moved easily between models, modifications, history, new releases, and the particular loyalty Defender tends to inspire. The Defender Store was one measure of that enthusiasm. By Saturday, the Defender Trophy merchandise had already sold out, including limited run jackets.

Inside the Barn, the Defender Museum connected that fandom to the brand’s longer history. Heritage vehicles were displayed beneath warm wood beams and chandeliers, giving the room a polished but archival feeling. That history also came up during remarks at the Defender Dining Experience, where the brand’s U.S. story was framed around both legacy and rebuilding community. Defender had only been sold in the United States for a short window in the 1990s, which meant the early American fan base was relatively small and deeply loyal. Destination Defender, now five years in, was described as part of the effort to bring that community into a new era.

The North American Defender Trophy finalist announcement gave the weekend its biggest competitive moment. The Trophy program is built around the phrase “Embrace the Impossible” and positions itself as more than a traditional off-road competition. Participants are tested through driving, navigation, engineering and ingenuity tasks, physical challenges, mental resilience, teamwork, and judgment. The program also includes a conservation component tied to Tusk, the Africa-focused conservation organization.

More than a thousand people applied for the competition. Around 120 advanced to the semifinals in British Columbia. By the time the group gathered at Destination Defender New York, twelve competitors remained, and four finalists were selected to move forward toward the global final in Africa. The U.S. finalists announced were Nathaniel Briggs and Tirin Cameron, alongside two Canadian finalists.

Photo by Knockturnal

The announcement had the energy of a sports style reveal, with finalists gathered on stage and the crowd closing in around the moment. Joe Eberhardt, President and CEO of Jaguar Land Rover North America, emphasized that the competition was not only about individual capability, but also about teamwork, friendships, and the bonds competitors formed throughout the process.

Music, food, and hospitality filled out the schedule, with performances from artists including Greg Banks, City of the Sun, Matt Walden, River, and Gigi Rosa. The glasshouse, with its high black framing and walls of windows, became one of the weekend’s more popular spaces, hosting everything from wellness programming to the Defender Dining Experience. It also gave the event a visual softness that contrasted with the mud course. Sunlight, lake views, and the calm of a retreat setting. Those pieces helped make the weekend feel complete, but the vehicles remained the center of attention. Everything seemed to circle back to what Defender represents: utility, heritage, design, and the promise of going farther than the road ahead.

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