Showing posts with label Frederic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frederic. Show all posts

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Take serene hike in Wis.' newest state park

Glacial erratic in Straight Lake State Park. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.

No motorized vehicles, bicycles, horses allowed
in park set aside
solely for hiking


A naturalist’s paradise, Straight Lake Wilderness State Park is Wisconsin’s newest state park. Formerly a Boy Scout camp, 2,800 acres of more than a dozen lakes and ponds may now only be accessed by foot, meaning no cars, pickup trucks, minivans, SUVs, ATVs, motorboats – not even bicycles or horses – are permitted.

While legions of Boy Scouts left lots of paths in the park, the Ice Age National Scenic Trail is the park's only designated trail. A 3-mile out-and-back segment running from the park’s northwest parking lot to Rainbow Lake makes for an excellent and extremely peaceful walk.

Glacial erratic
To reach the trail, take Wis. Hwy. 35 south from Frederic in Polk County. Turn left/east onto 280th Avenue. Just past 135th Street, 280th Avenue turns north, becoming 130th Street; at this turn is a parking lot.

The trailhead is at the road corner off of 280th Avenue. Head south into a mature Northern hardwoods forest. Some trees here are almost a century old.

After walking about 0.2 miles, the trail passes a boulder that's 6.5 feet in diameter. Known as a glacial erratic, it was brought here by the last glacier to cover the area some 10,000 years ago. Made of diorite, the rock came from north of Lake Superior.

About a 0.5 miles later, the trail begins to parallel the Straight River. Watch the waterway for a variety of animals that call the park their home; among them are black bears, fox, river otters and white-tailed deer on the ground and bald eagles, osprey, red-shouldered hawks, and the endangered trumpeter swan in the air. The forest also supports northern Wisconsin’s largest population of cerulean warbler.

Tunnel channel
In another half mile, you’ll arrive at Straight Lake’s north shore. The lake formed after melting glacial water exploded through the ice, carving what is known as a tunnel channel. Today, bass, Northern pike and panfish call the water body home.

Close to 0.75 miles later, the end of the lake’s north shore offers the best view of the tunnel channel you’re hiking. Look up and down the river, and you’ll notice you’re in a long, narrow valley. This tunnel channel stretches 7.5 miles from where you began the hike at 280th Avenue southeast to Big Round Lake.

Continuing along the trail, in short order you’ll cross the Straight River and follow its south shore line. After a quarter mile, the trail comes to a widening in the river on the left and Rainbow Lake on the right/south. This marks a good spot to turn back.

Upon returning to the parking lot, if time and energy permit consider taking a brief excursion on the trail north of 280th Avenue. You’ll be able to see the dark basalt of a 1.1-billion-year-old lava flow along the trail in about 0.2 miles. Plants do cover the ancient rock, but you should be able to spot it if keeping an eye out.

Read more about family friendly day hiking trails in my Headin' to the Cabin guidebooks.


Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Polk County (Wis.) Info Center now carrying ‘Headin’ to the Cabin’

The Polk County (Wis.) Information Center is carrying my recent book, Headin’ to the Cabin: Day Hiking Trails of Northwest Wisconsin. The center provides tourism information for visitors to Polk County and Wisconsin in general and includes a gift store featuring books on local topics. Headin’ to the Cabin details more than three-dozen Polk County trails, including those in or near the communities of St. Croix Falls, Osceola, Amery, Frederic, Luck, Turtle Lake and Balsam Lake. The information center is at the intersection of U.S. Hwy. 8 and Wis. Hwy. 35.

Find out about other trail guidebooks available in the Hittin’ the Trail series.


Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Third ‘Hittin’ the Trail’ book, on Polk County, Wisconsin, released

The third book in my Hittin’ the Trail hiking guide series, Hittin’ the Trail: Day Hiking Polk County, Wisconsin, went on sale Tuesday. The ebook lists dozens of great family-friendly trails in all of your favorite Polk County communities, including St. Croix Falls, Osceola, Amery, Turtle Lake, Balsam Lake, Frederic and Luck. Included is a primer about day hiking essentials, such as gear, clothing, navigation, and how to avoid various trail dangers. Day Hiking Polk County, Wisconsin is available as an ebook on Kindle, Nook, iBook/iPad, Kobo, and other formats.

Find out about other trail guidebooks available in the Hittin’ the Trail series.


Saturday, April 27, 2013

Frederic area boasts number of great trails

Gandy Dancer Trail heading south from Frederic.
Cabin-goers to the Frederic, Wis., area in northern Polk County can enjoy a number of great day hiking trails this summer. Among them:
g Atlas County Park (unnamed trails) – Short, unnamed trails amble through this park located between the Trade River and Long Trade Lake. The park includes picnic shelters perfect for that after-hike meal.
g Coon Lake Trail – While some of the meandering paths making up this trail are steep, they offer great views of Coon Lake on the town’s east side. The 41.7-acre man-made lake and surrounding park is popular with local residents.
g Gandy Dancer Trail – The 98-mile trail that used to be a rail line runs south to Luck and north to Siren. Within the village limits, the trail is roughly a block west of Wis. Hwy. 35.
g Ice Age National Scenic Trail – A section of this 1,000-mile trail runs through Straight Lake Wilderness State Park southeast of town. The trail runs for about four miles through the park and is marked with yellow blazes.
g Somers Lake Snowshoe Trail – Three loops northwest of town lead to scenic Somers Lake. The loops total 5 miles in length and head through a wooded area.
g Sterling Trail – This 7-mile loop rambles through a classic Northwoods setting. Be forewarned that ATVs can use the trail June 1-Nov. 15.

Read more about day hiking this and nearby trails in my Hittin’ the Trail: Day Polk County, Wisconsin guidebook.


Thursday, June 21, 2012

Gandy Dancer Trail heads thru Northwoods

Old railroad line converted

to 98-mile hiking route


The Gandy Dancer State Trail runs roughly north-south for 98 miles with a number of accessible points in Wisconsin cabin country, making it ideal for a day hike. Built atop an old Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie railroad grade, the trail is named for the Gandy Tool Company workers who built the route back in the 1880s.

Paralleling Wis. Hwy. 35, one of the easiest places to get on the trail is in St. Croix Falls at the Polk County Information Center, located at the junction of U.S. Hwy. 8 and Hwy. 35. Plenty of parking is available at the info center.

The trail begins as paved asphalt then turns to packed crushed limestone, which makes for easy walking. As trains once needed to make their way where you’ll walk, grade changes always are gradual.

A variety of trees often form a long canopy over the trail, offering plenty of shade and a real escape back to nature experience. This is especially so in autumn, when leaves change to form red, orange and golden roofs over hikers. In grassy areas, lupines, phlox and columbine flower during June.

When passing waterways, dragonflies frequently can be spotted during summer. Songbirds light most of the route with their melodies while squirrels scamper along the ground and up trees. Watch for white tail deer springing back into the woods when rounding curves.

The first segment of the trail runs 4.5 miles from the information center to the village of Centuria. If you have young children, you certainly don’t have to walk the entire trail; mile posts signs along the way tell how far you’ve walked so you know when to turn around.

If your cabin is a little farther north, no worries. Running through nine villages and connecting with city parks, you can find a trailhead at several locations, including: Centuria, Milltown, Luck, Frederic, Lewis, Siren, Webster and Danbury. Those trail sections pass farmland, lakes and forests. Bicyclists also are allowed to use the trial; be sure to keep an eye on children so they don’t get in the way.

Read more about family friendly day hiking trails in my Headin' to the Cabin guidebooks.