Sunday, March 20, 2022

Merrill Creek Reservoir, NJ with Warren Highlands Trail to Marble Mountain

ABOUT THE PARK: 
Warren Highlands Trail - Warren Parks
NJ State Parks description of this section administered by Spruce Run Recreation Area.

DIRECTIONS: 
GPS Coordinates 40.7388104, -75.090349
Hiker parking across from the boat launch parking lot.

TRAIL MAPS: 

HIKE DISTANCE:  13.4 miles

THE HIKE: 
At the boat launch, one lonely snow goose.   How sad that he was left behind.
Crossing through the boat launch and up the steps of the Perimeter Trail.
Two pileated woodpeckers overhead.
Leaving the Perimeter Trail to the left to follow the shoreline.  We would pick up the Perimeter Trail again later on.
Working our way around the nature center.
The deer are really tame.  This one had a staring contest with Brodie for quite a long time.
Meeting back up with the Perimeter Trail where we turned left.
Here is where the Warren Highlands Trail comes in.  To the right is a section we hiked previously.  Today we continued straight where the Warren Highlands Trail joins in with the Perimeter Trail for a bit.
People must be heeding this sign because I did not see any poop bags around.  Brodie carries an empty peanut butter jar in his backpack so he can pack out his own poop without it smelling or getting squished.  I did, however, see a pile of full dog poop bags in the corner of one of the port-a-potties.  Seriously people?  It is stuff like this that gets dogs banned from places.
Picking up the light blue-blazed Warren Highlands Trail.
The Perimeter Trail leaves to the left, the Warren Highlands Trail goes right.
At the parking lot ...
... a right turn to exit the lot ...
... and turn left on Fox Farm Road for a road walk section.
A left at the intersection ...
... then a right just past those arborvitaes.
The blazes stop here for a bit so it is a little confusing but you keep straight ahead between the corn field to the left and a backyard to the right ...
... veering to the left following the dirt road.
Nice countryside views along this stretch.
The blazes pick up again at this structure.
The trail descends steeply at times.
At the bottom things get dicey.  There is fork with several blazes to the left, a single blaze up ahead to the right.  I tried both ways and the blazes and trail just stop.  Looking at the map, it appeared the trail should go left behind homes then right to the residential road.  I had to bushwhack and climb over piles of debris to make that happen.
Once on the residential road I saw blazes for the return route at a gated woods road so I would go that way to see what I missed on the way back.  (Turns out I did not miss anything but more on that later.)
From this point on the blazes are easy to follow.
Where the trail leaves the corn fields and turns left on very busy Belvedere Road was our turn around point.
Heading back over to that mountain up ahead which we would soon be climbing.
Back at the gate I followed the blazes even though that area is posted.  Usually if there are trail blazes it is OK but maybe not in this case because ...
... it just lead to a pile of mulch and debris and no more blazes.  We climbed over because at this point I knew where we were as I had been standing on the other side coming down off the mountain.
This is what it looks like from the other side.  Not at all anything resembling a trail.
This is how it plays out coming down off of the mountain.  The left fork to where the blazes end, over the mulch pile then to the gate and right on the residential road.
Back up the mountain.
Where the trail turns right there is also a woods road to the left so I took that to see if it would loop around the other side of the mountain and rejoin the Warren Highlands Trail.  It did.
Keeping right at the fork.
A left on the Warren Highlands Trail.
Back at Merrill Creek Reservoir we kept to the right of the kiosk on a gravel road.
There is a path on the left ...
... that leads down to the Perimeter Trail where we turned right.
Following the rest of the Perimeter Trail back to the parking lot.
Balloons 9, 10 and 11 picked up along the Warren Highlands Trail.