The Hobart Woodland Trail is dirt-packed jeep trail through a hardwood forest. Photo courtesy of Indiana Dunes NPS. |
The best trails to explore the national park’s forests include:
• Calumet Dunes Paved Trail – The 0.5-miles loop heads through a hardwood forest on its way to sand dunes. Among the dominant trees are eastern black oak, white oak, sugar maple, dogwood, and yellow poplar, making for colorful fall foliage. If walking the trail clockwise, always veer right at each junction. The wheelchair accessible path connects with the Glenwood Dunes Trail and the Dunewood Trace Campground Trail. Park in the lot for the trail off of East 300 Road south of U.S. Hwy. 12.
• Dune Succession Trail – While much of the trail focuses on how the dunes evolve over time, one segment of the 1-mile trail heads through a jack pinery. The jack pines here are much farther south than they should be in the Great Lakes, and are remnants of when they flourished in the area at the end of the last ice age, when the climate was much cooler. In the pinery, you’ll also see cottonwood, red cedar, common juniper, and the bearberry bush. Park in a lot at the end of West Beach Road north of U.S. Hwy. 12.
• Glenwood Dunes Trail – Day hikers can walk through a classic Midwestern hardwood forest on this 2.8-miles lollipop trail that formerly was known as the Ly-co-ki-we Trail. Among the dominant trees are eastern black oak, white oak, sugar maple, dogwood, and yellow poplar, which make for spectacular fall colors. Park in the lot off of North Brummit Road/School House Road north of U.S. Hwy. 20.
• Hobart Woodland Trail – The 2.2-miles trail runs through forested ravines and a bur oak savanna as well as passes Lake George in the Hobart Prairie Grove System, which is disconnected from the main park. The best way to access the trail is to park at Robinson Lake Park lot off of Liverpool Road south of West 49th Avenue southwest of Hobart, Ind., then hike the Oak Savannah rail trail east for just under a half mile. The packed dirt Hobart Woodland Trail heads south from the Oak Savannah Trail.