Friday, June 6, 2014

Woodbourne Forest and Wildlife Preserve, PA


ABOUT THE PARK:
Woodbourne Forest and Wildlife Preserve - The Nature Conservancy

DIRECTIONS:
GPS Coordinates  41.761191, -75.897856

View Larger Map
Parking right off of Route 29.

TRAIL MAP:
No online map.  There were paper maps and laminated maps in the display case in the pavillion.

Woodbourne Forest and Wildlife Preserve, PA at EveryTrail


HIKE DISTANCE:
Woodbourne Forest - 1.2 miles
There are many more miles of trails but since we had just hiked 7 miles at Salt Springs State Park we only hiked the yellow lollipop loop.

THE HIKE:
Access the trails at the northern end of the parking area parallel to Route 29,
The trail leads to a pavillion.
This would be the important notice.  We were only going to be hiking the yellow trail so it did not affect our hike.
Trails are clearly blazed - they all start together then eventually branch off.
A tunnel of greenery leads downhill ...
... into the woods.
The Runners Loop is not on the map but on Google Earth you can clearly see a woods road so that must be what this is.
Viewing platform at the swamp.  Blue leaves to the left here.  Red and Yellow will continue to the right.
It appears as though yellow/red is under water but no worries, it has been relocated to dry land so just ignore the blazes in the water.
All of the hemlocks are marked with tags.  Some have wire fencing around the trunks to prevent the beavers from taking them down.
There are some gorgeous old growth hemlocks in this area.
Beaver Dam
A great blue heron flew in ...
... and landed in a tree.  Until I uploaded the picture, I had no idea I had captured not one, but three herons in the tree!
Leaving the preserve, my GPS took me through some quiet, scenic back roads before reaching the interstate.

Salt Springs State Park, PA


ABOUT THE PARK:
Salt Springs State Park - PA Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
Salt Springs State Park - Friends of Salt Springs

DIRECTIONS:
GPS Coordinates 41.912346, -75.865700

View Larger Map
Parking at the main entrance near the barn.

TRAIL MAP:
Salt Spring State Park Map - PA Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
Salt Springs Trail Map - Friends of Salt Springs
(I found the trail blazes and intersections to be confusing and not always consistent with the maps.)
Salt Springs State Park, PA at EveryTrail


HIKE DISTANCE:
Salt Springs State Park - 7.1 miles
hiked along with
Woodbourne Forest and Wildlife Preserve - 1.2 miles

THE HIKE:
Head from the parking lot towards the barn...
... veer right up the stone steps ...
... along the gravel then left uphill on the path at the Silver Creek Trail sign.
The path quickly becomes overgrown.
When the trail enters the woods it becomes well-defined.
Gorgeous trees all along with Silver Creek down below to the right.
Silver Creek
According to the maps this trail is supposed to be red but there are mostly blue markers with some orange (faded red?) and sometimes red painted blazes.
Old stone walls along the way.
There some downed trees here and there but nothing difficult to get over.
Blue does not go to the right - a cliff with a drop off down to Silver Creek is to the right.
Following the left arrow it's a steep uphill climb with the trail not always so well defined.
At the top looking down what might have been a nice waterfall in the past but is just a trickle now even after heavy rain.
Just came off of blue so this means white goes the other two ways, right?
Yes, but no, blue comes along, too!  And the yellow-blazed Meadow Trail?  Never saw any yellow blazes.
There is a meadow...
... and the trail follows along the edge of the woods.
The obvious trail comes out on a gravel road with no trail blazes but found them to the left a bit - seems the trail went through the overgrown meadow for a short distance but there was nothing to indicate that while on the trail.
Overgrown trail.
After blue leaves white to the right (and not sure where that goes since still no blue on the map in this area) white, which is the Connector Trail, goes through a lovely pine plantation.
It is actually very dark and a little creepy in here!
The trail turns left briefly on a gravel road again, then turns right into this fenced area ...
... through an old foundation?
Even though the turn blazes off of the gravel road are several steps farther along but point into an overgrown area along the perimeter of the fence.  This is a turn for the white, blue and orange/red trails but I don't know where all of the colors came from.
This blue trail is the Wetland Trail.
But it becomes impassably overgrown.  Shawnee is in there somewhere.  Can you see her?
There are pretty wildflowers everywhere.
Had to retrace on the Wetland Trail when I completely lost the trail which meant fording Fall Brook going the other way.  At this point we were still on blue however the marker on the other side, which is very hard to see, is orange.
Doesn't care about trail markers - just give her a creek to get wet in,
I brought water shoes and it was a good thing because the rocks a little farther upstream were extremely slippery.
Cold!  And deeper than it looks - was almost knee-deep in the middle.
Through the woods on the other side to a clearly marked intersection and the red-blazed Fall Brook Trail, which agrees with the maps.
A very pretty trail along Fall Brook.
A nice break area up above the water under the hemlocks.
A large old growth tree.
The Bunny Trail sign is pointing in the direction we just came from which is the Fall Brook Trail?
Found the other end of the Bunny Trail which goes uphill.
Yes, this is right, it's the Bunny Trail.
A tiny bit of a view.
When I came to this intersection after following a woods road I realized I had wanted to come up on this trail which goes by cliffs and supposedly has views but because of the confusing intersections and overgrowth I missed the turn.
On the white-blazed Friends Trail.
After crossing Buckley Road with the Bunny Trail parking lot on the left, the trail goes through a meadow.  There is no defined trail in the meadow so you just have to find your way from marker post to marker post.
Pretty wildflowers.
A field of buttercups.
Once back into the woods, more confusing intersections.
Keeping left you end up at the Hemlock Trail.
Going down to the observation deck ...
To see the waterfalls in Fall Brook.
Coming up on ...
Penny Rock
It is supposed to bring good luck to hammer a penny into the rock - if you can find a space where it will wedge.
Found a spot for our penny and hammered it in with a rock.  This is for good luck for Shawnee who will be having surgery to have a mast cell tumor on her chest removed and biopsied this Monday.  I think I found it early on so hopeful all will turn out well but wanted some additional good luck by adding our penny to the rock.  Shawnee's vet is a blog follower so just helping you out, Dr. F! :)
Salt Springs - the video shows the bubbles better.
The Fall Brook Trail that we were on earlier (the other end) actually starts here but you need to find your way along erosion and scramble up waterfalls.  This was too difficult for Shawnee with her arthritis so we did not do it although we would have if she had been able to handle it.
Taking the easy bridge over instead back to the parking lot.