Showing posts with label Big Marine Park Reserve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Marine Park Reserve. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Great autumn hikes around Forest Lake MN

Swedish Immigrant Trail
There’s no better way to experience autumn colors in the Forest Lake area than a hike.

The brilliant yellows, oranges and red
of maples to the scarlet and russets of oaks...the crisp, fresh autumn air and
the last warm rays of sunlight before winter arrives...the crunch of fallen leaves and acorns beneath your boots...stopping to enjoy a warm mug
of apple cider or a caramel apple pulled from your backpack – it all calls for an afternoon on the trail.

Fortunately, there are plenty of great autumn trails around Forest Lake to
hike. Some are right out your back 
door, while some are a day trip that you can do in an afternoon.

Big Marine Park Reserve (Forest Lake)
Hikers can enjoy a walk through a woodlands and on long pier at Big Marine Park Reserve. The unnamed trail in the Washington County park runs 0.75 miles round-trip. The turf trail leaves from the park’s western side, entering a deciduous forest, which makes for a colorful walk among yellow, orange, red, russet and olive leaves in autumn. From Forest Lake, take Minn. Hwy. 97 east. Turn left/south onto County Road 15/Morning Trail North. The park entry road (aka Lomond Trail North) is on the left/east. When the entry road splits, go straight/west, following it to the last/northernmost parking lot (the road loops back onto itself at the lot).

Swedish Immigrant Trail (Chisago)
Hikers can follow some of the same footpaths and rail lines that the region’s first Swedish immigrants used to settle Chisago County and Minnesota on the Swedish Immigrant Trail. During the late 1800s, many Swedish immigrants took the ferry across the St. Croix River and then footpaths to their destinations. A spur off the St. Paul-Duluth rail route to Wyoming opened during 1880, helping speed the immigration inland. Perhaps the best of the trail’s completed portions is the Shafer Segment, which runs roughly west of the hamlet through wooded areas and past bucolic landscapes. Birch trees dominate in some sections, but the trail is mainly lined by mixed hardwoods that leave the path and its grass shoulders covered in an array of colorful leaves during autumn. Park on the street in downtown Shafer, off of Redwing Avenue near 303rd Street. The trailhead is near 303rd and heads for about two miles east of Redwing. Look for the white signs with the trail logo in the blue and yellow colors of Sweden’s flag.

Minnesota Interstate State Park (Taylors Falls)
The southernmost section of Minnesota Interstate State Park offers a number of great day hiking trails to explore the Dalles of the St. Croix. To reach the area, from U.S. Hwy. 8 in Taylors Falls, turn east onto Milltown Road. A parking lot is at the end of the entry road. Along the parking lot’s northwest side are three trailheads. The Sandstone Bluff Trail heads northwest under Hwy. 8 to a nice vista of the valley and river gorge below. A 1-mile lollipop trail, it’s spectacular in autumn with a mix of colors from the orange maples, red sumac and brilliant yellow oaks.

William O’Brien State Park (Marine on St. Croix)
Day hikers can learn about the power of floods on the St. Croix River via the Riverside Trail at William O’Brien State Park. The 1.5-mile trail loops through a floodplain and typically is open during summer and autumn when water levels have gone down. The fresh scent of pine needles upon the trail and the gentle rush of water along the river’s rock walls instantly lulls you into a feeling of serenity. Roughly half of the trail follows the river, mainly through a good mix of hardwoods common to a floodplain forest in this region. During autumn, their leaves turn gold, red, orange and brown. Across the water is Wisconsin, and with the two undeveloped shorelines, tranquility reigns. From Marine on St. Croix, take Minn. Hwy. 95 north into the park. Turn right/east onto O’Brien Trail North/County Road 33. The road curves south, dead ending in a parking area alongside Lake Alice. The trail begins at the picnic grounds immediately east of the parking lot.

Wild River State Park (North Branch)
Silver maple and basswood flourish along the St. Croix River at Wild River State Park. The 1.5-mile River Terrace Loop and its stem trail circles through a bottomland forest in this popular park. Originally called St. Croix Wild River State Park – and it still appears on various maps that way – it’s now just Wild River State Park. From North Branch, take Minn. Hwy. 95 to County Road 12. Drive County Road 12 to the park entrance, and follow the main park road to a parking lot near the picnic area.


Saturday, August 8, 2015

Hike crosses moraine at new Minnesota park

Fishing pier on Big Marine Lake.
Photo courtesy of http://www.co.washington.mn.us. 
Day hikers can enjoy a walk through a woodlands and on long pier at Big Marine Park Reserve in east-central Minnesota.

The unnamed trail in the Washington County park – christened here for convenience’s sake – runs 0.75 miles round-trip. The park is roughly equidistant between the communities of Marine on St. Croix, Hugo and Forest Lake.

A fairly new park, Big Marine opened in 2008. It currently consists of 657 acres and features a swimming beach. Plans call for expanding the preserve to 1800 acres with about four-fifths of it set aside as a prairie-like area similar to the way pioneers found it when first settled there.

To reach the park, from Minn. Hwy. 95 in Marine on St. Croix, head west on County Hwy. 4 (aka 170th St. N.). Turn right/north onto Morning Trail North. The park entry road (aka Lomond Trail North) is on the right/east. When the entry road splits, go straight/west, following it to the last/northernmost parking lot (the road loops back onto itself at the lot).

The turf trail leaves from the park's western side, entering a deciduous forest, which makes for a colorful walk in autumn. Sitting between two wetlands, the woods is atop a ground moraine, or sediment – usually sand, clay and boulders – deposited in piles as the glacier retreated at the end of the last ice age.

Upon reaching the intersection with the paved trail, retrace your steps back to the parking lot. Once at the lot, cross to its northeast corner, where a dirt path leads to a fishing pier on the south side of Big Marine Lake; the pier is 100-feet long and handicap accessible.

A popular fishing lake, Big Marine sports populations of bluegill, crappie, largemouth bass, northern pike, walleye. Fishing poles and tackle available at the park's contact station, just in case you forgot your own.

One more caveat: Dogs are allowed on the park's trails but must be leashed.

Learn about trail guidebooks available in the Hittin’ the Trail series.