Showing posts with label Anoka County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anoka County. Show all posts

Friday, September 4, 2020

Natural area preserves rare oak savanna

Bur oak leaves usually turn brown in autumn,
but they can be bright yellow under the right conditions.
Minnesotans can walk one of the best remaining oak savannas – a rapidly disappearing ecosystem – at the northern edge of the Twin Cities.

Each autumn, the Helen Allison Savanna Scientific and Natural Area brightens the landscape in harvest hues, as the bur oak’s brown and the pin oak’s dark scarlet leaves rise above the golden grass. While no maintained trails run through the savanna, old logging trails and degraded footpaths can be used for a 0.8-mile round trip hike (named the Bur Oak Trail here for convenience sake).

To reach the trailhead, from Minn. Hwy. 65 east of Bethel, take 237th Avenue east. Turn right/south on Gopher Drive, which becomes 229th Avenue. Go right/south on Durant Street; the junction of 229th and Durant marks the natural area’s northeast corner. In a little more than 1000 feet, park off the side of the road and head west into the natural area.

When Euro-Americans arrived some two centuries ago, oak savanna once covered around 8700 square miles of Minnesota, stretching in a band from north of what is now the Twin Cities to the Iowa border. Today, just 1 percent of that savanna remains.

A transition area between prairie and woods, the savanna attracts a lot of wildlife, including white-tailed deer and turkey, which feed on the plentiful number of acorns that drop from the trees, while the red-headed woodpecker enjoys bugs in the oaks’ trunks.

Bur oak

The dominant tree in the savanna is the bur oak. It can grow quite tall – up to 98 feet – but most Minnesota savannas have far younger and hence shorter trees. Their trunks also are massive, reaching up to 10 feet in diameter.

Not surprisingly, a big tree like the bur oak produces big acorns – in fact the bur oak bears the largest of all North American acorns. Some of them reach up to 2 inches in length and 1.5 inches wide.

If conditions are right, the bur oak’s leaves will turn yellow in autumn. Older bur oaks often boast gnarly branches, making it a perfect Halloween tree.

The bur oak is Minnesota’s ninth most common tree. Though king of the oak savanna, it can be found in every county of the Gopher State.

Pin oak
Northern pin oak also is common in the savanna. Though considered a medium-sized tree and usually shorter than the bur oak, in has been known to achieve some impressive height and girth. The record pin oak in Minnesota rose 95 feet tall with a diameter of 4.5 feet before toppling in a wind storm.

While usually paling in size to the bur oak, the pin oak more than makes up for it with its autumn leaves. They typically turn either a deep maroon or a rusty red. As winter arrives, the color diminishes to brown.

Pin oak also is less prevalent in Minnesota than the bur oak. You won’t find it in most western prairie counties or the northern aspen-oak forests.

While many of Minnesota’s oak savannas have been plowed under into farm fields or paved over into urban areas, the suppression of fire also has contributed to the ecosystem’s demise. Without natural fires, shrubs – especially the invasive buckthorn – take over the grasslands. Bur oaks persist, though, as those older than 12 years are fire-resistant thanks to their thick bark.

As trails are not maintained in the natural area, you’ll want to wear pants, long-sleeve shirt, and hiking boots while traversing it.

The oak savanna continues north of the natural area at the University of Minnesota’s Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve. While the trails there are in much better shape than those at the Helen Allison, stick to the latter. Scientific research is underway at Cedar Creek, so casual visitors aren’t allowed.


Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Fall color hikes abound in Anoka County, MN

Bunker Hills Regional Park
There’s no better way to experience autumn colors in Anoka County 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 Anoka County to
hike. Some are right out your back door, while some are a day trip that you can do in an afternoon.

Rum River Central Regional Park (Anoka)
Cottonwood, basswood and maples make for a beautiful autumn walk in Rum River Central Regional Park. The 3.25-mile Rum River Trail loops through the park’s riverine forest; about half of the trail runs along the Rum River. From U.S. Hwy. 10 in Anoka, take Seventh Avenue north. After crossing the Rum River, turn right/east onto Park Road. When the road splits in the park, go right/south. Leave your vehicle in either of the next two parking lots; the trail runs alongside them.

Pioneer Park (Blaine)
Maple and oak trees line the paths at Pioneer Park in Blaine. A loop and the two stems to it run about 0.8-miles round trip. About half of the 100-acre city park is an upland woods with most of the trails paved. From Minn. Hwy. 65 and 125th Avenue NE in Blaine, take the latter east. The park’s main entrance and a parking lot is on the left/north.

Kordiak Park (Columbia Heights)
A canopy of colorful autumn leaves covers a pathway that almost fully loops Highland Lake at Kordiak Park. A 1.5-mile trail heads around the lake’s south, west and north sides as well as runs to adjoining streets. From Central Avenue NE, take 49th Avenue NE east. The parking lot is on the avenue’s left/north side after passing Fairway Drive NE.

Bunker Hills Regional Park (Coon Rapids)
Majestic burr and red oak groves await hikers at Bunker Hills Regional Park. A 2.5-mile paved loop is especially stately in autumn when the burr oak turns a golden yellow-brown and the red oak various shades of crimson, burgundy, yellow and orange. A few paper birches, whose white trunks support aureate-colored leaves, can be found near the marshy sections. From the intersection of U.S. Hwy. 10 and Main Street NW in Coon Rapids, take Main Street east; turn left/north onto County Road A and park in the lot on the right/east side of the highway just before the junction with County Road B. Pick up the trail from the lot’s northwest side. The loop runs north/east of County A, east and north of County B, and south of Bunker Lake.

Innsbruck Nature Center (Fridley)
Hikers can head through an oak woodland at Innsbruck Nature Center. A roughly 2-mile round trip trail loops around a small pond and heads to the center’s far corners. Interpretive signs along the way tells about Innsbruck’s birds, wetlands, geology and more. From Minn. Hwy. 65 in Fridley, go east on Mississippi Street NE. Turn right/south onto Central Avenue NE, then left/east onto Gardena Avenue NE, and finally right/south onto Arthur St. NE. The nature center is on the left/east.

Lakeside Lions Park (Spring Lake Park)
Walkers can enjoy a paved path line by fall foliage at Lakeside Lions Park. The 0.35-mile loop partially heads alongside Spring Lake. From Mounds View Boulevard in Spring Lake Park, take Pleasant View Drive south. The park is south of Hillview Road.


Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Great trails in Wyoming/Stacy, Minn., area

Topo map for Sunrise River Trail.
Scenic lakes and wildlife await day hikers in the Wyoming/Stacy region of east central Minnesota.

Located immediately northwest of the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area, the Wyoming/Stacy region is easy to reach with Interstate 35 running through both communities on its way to Duluth.

For a good day hike in the Wyoming/Stacy area, try one of these trails:
g Martin-Island Lakes Trail – A paved trail connects the parking lot at the Martin lake boat ramp to the swimming beach at Island Lake in Martin-Island-Linwood Regional Park. The park is northwest of Wyoming in neighboring Anoka County off of County Road 26.
g Pool 8 to Pool 9 Trail – Several hunter trails crisscross Carlos Avery Wildlife Management Area in neighboring Anoka County. One nice 4.5-mile round trip route runs from the parking lot off of Stonebridge Road on the south side of Pool 8 to the lot on the northeast side of Pool 9.
g Sunrise Prairie Trail – The chances of seeing wildlife are high on this trail, which runs for 23 miles from Hugo to North Branch. A 4.5-mile round trip segment of the trail in Chisago County makes for a great day hike and provides an opportunity to spot wild turkeys.
g Sunrise River Trail – A 2-mile round trip trail heads through a wooded area to the Sunrise River east of Stacy in the Sunrise Unit of Carlos Avery Wildlife Management Area. From County Road 19, after passing Mud Lake, turn right/south onto a dirt road and then take the first left/east; park at the intersection for the trailhead.

Read more about day hiking Northeast Minnesota in my Headin’ to the Cabin: Day Hiking Trails of Northeast Minnesota guidebook.