Sunday, April 19, 2026

Cleburne State Park: Spillway Trail (Blog Hike #1113)

Trail: Spillway Trail 
Hike Location: Cleburne State Park
Geographic Location: southwest of Cleburne, TX (32.25650, -97.55269)
Length: 1.8 miles
Difficulty: 5/10 (Moderate)
Date Hiked: February 2026
Overview: An out-and-back past a hand-carved spillway to an overlook of Cedar Lake.
Park Information: https://tpwd.texas.gov/state-parks/cleburne
Hike Route Map:
On The Go Map
Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: (coming February 26, 2027)

Directions to the trailhead: From Cleburne, take US 67 west 7.4 miles to Park Road 21 and turn left on Park Road 21.  Drive Park Road 21 southwest 6.2 miles to the signed park entrance on the right.  Turn right to enter the park, pay the entrance fee, and park in the small gravel parking area on the left just past the first restroom building.

The hike: Many things change over the course of a century.  For example, consider the case of Cleburne State Park and Cleburne, Texas.  When this park was formed in 1934, Cleburne was a small rural town of about 11,000 people, and its economy was mainly driven by local agriculture and some major railroad hubs.  The dust bowl and the Great Depression had taken their tolls on both aspects of Cleburne's economy, so area residents donated land to form a state park so that the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) would bring jobs to the area while building the park.
            Today Cleburne sits on the southwest fringe of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, and it is experiencing rapid growth due to the Metroplex's expansion.  Cleburne State Park has become a major center of recreation, and it offers boating, fishing, and swimming on Cedar Lake, a 58-site developed campground, a primitive group camp, several picnic areas, and 11 hiking trails, most of which are less than 1 mile long.  This hike features the Spillway Trail.  While not the longest trail in the park, the Spillway Trail features this park's famous CCC-built hand-carved spillway and leads to a nice overlook over Cedar Lake.
Carsonite post marking the trailhead
    
        A brown carsonite post at the north side of the parking lot marks the start of the Spillway Trail.  The single-track dirt trail heads north before angling right to cross the main park road and enter the dense 
juniper and oak forest.  Such forest is typical of the cross timbers region of north Texas and east-central Oklahoma.  West Fork of Camp Creek, the main outflow of Cedar Lake, soon comes into view on the right.  A couple of the creek's steep-banked tributaries are crossed as the trail continues north.
Hiking through the cross timbers
    
        At 0.25 miles, you enter the spillway area and reach a major trail intersection.  The option going left leads to a secondary parking area, while the option continuing straight leads to the park's mountain bike trails.  Thus, you want to turn right to cross the West Fork of Camp Creek on a wooden footbridge.  As you cross the creek, notice how steep and chiseled the sides of this water channel are, a testament to the power of eroding water.
Creek in the spillway
    
        Next the trail climbs away from the creek, and at the next intersection you need to turn left to stay on the Spillway Trail.  Look for tan arrows on brown carsonite posts to mark the way.  The grades on this trail are not particularly steep or long, but the eroded and rocky treadway will make the going slower and harder than you might like.  That treadway is the main reason I rank the difficulty of this hike as moderate; otherwise it would be easy.
Climbing out of the spillway
    
        At 0.5 miles, you reach the main overlook for Cedar Lake's dam and spillway.  The terraces cut in the rock are what make this spillway famous: they were hand-carved by the CCC.  The terraces look like the famous Serpentine Wall in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, but that wall is made out of concrete.  This overlook is about 50 feet above the spillway with no railing for safety, so be careful where you step as you try to get a good view and photograph of the spillway.
Cedar Lake dam and spillway
    
        After heading upstream past the dam, the trail dips and then rises as it curves right to head away from the lake.  There are several narrow unofficial trails in this area, but the official Spillway Trail is wide and easy to follow.  At 0.7 miles, the Limestone Ridge Trail, which is primarily a mountain bike trail, exits right.  Turn left to stay on the Spillway Trail.
Hiking the Spillway Trail
Cedar Lake overlook
    
        The Spillway Trail dips through a rocky ravine as it stays close to the park's east boundary on the right.  0.8 miles into the hike, you reach the north end of the Spillway Trail.  For a nice view of the lake, turn left and make a short moderate descent to reach a lakeside overlook at 0.9 miles.  The clear blue lake waters contrasted nicely with the green and brown cross timbers forest and matched the sky perfectly on my visit.  If you have more time, you can continue north on the Coyote Run Trail toward the campground, but I faced a long drive to Oklahoma City that afternoon.  Therefore, I turned around at the lake overlook and retraced my steps to the trailhead, thus completing the hike.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Mother Neff State Park (Blog Hike #1112)

Trails: Prairie Loop, Wash Pond, Cave, Tower, and Pond Trails
Hike Location: Mother Neff State Park
Geographic Location: southwest of Waco, TX (31.33186, -97.46769)
Length: 2.9 miles
Difficulty: 4/10 (Easy/Moderate)
Date Hiked: February 2026
Overview: A round-the-park loop passing several CCC-built structures and Tonkawa Cave.
Park Information: https://tpwd.texas.gov/state-parks/mother-neff
Hike Route Map:
On The Go Map
Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: (coming February 12, 2027)

Directions to the trailhead: Between Temple and Waco, take I-35 to FM 107 (exit 315).  Exit and go west on FM 107.  Drive FM 107 west 13 miles to SR 236 and turn left on SR 236.  Drive SR 236 south 0.5 miles to the signed park entrance on the right.  Turn right to enter the park, pay the entrance fee, and park in the first parking area to the right after the entrance station; this parking area is the signed parking lot for the Prairie Loop Trail.

The hike: Located between Temple and Waco in the fringe of Texas Hill Country, 259-acre Mother Neff State Park is one of the oldest state parks in Texas.  The park originated in 1916 with a 6 acre land donation from Isabella Neff, who was the mother of Texas Governor Pat Neff.  The Governor himself deeded a total of 250 acres in 1934, and the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) worked to build the park from 1934 through 1938.  The park opened to the public in 1937.
            Today Mother Neff State Park remains small in terms of acreage, but it contains some nice amenities and scenery that make it quite popular.  The park offers a 35-site developed campground, plenty of CCC history, and 6 short hiking trails.  The hike described here uses all but 1 of those trails as it visits every point of interest in the park.  I was not expecting much from this park when I drove in on a seasonally warm Sunday afternoon in mid-February, but I had a very good hike.
Trailhead for Prairie Loop Trail
    
        From the signed trailhead for the Prairie Loop Trail, walk southwest to the picnic tables, then turn right to begin heading counterclockwise around the Prairie Loop.  The prairie consists of sunny grassland interspersed with thickets of juniper/cedar trees.  Just shy of 0.2 miles, you reach a picnic table at an overlook.  This narrow viewpoint looks south across the prairie toward the Leon River.
Overlook on Prairie Loop Trail
    
        Curving more left than right brings you to a trail intersection near a park road cul-de-sac at 0.4 miles.  The Prairie Loop continues to the left, but this hike turns softly right to follow the park road past the playground and into the campground to head deeper into the trail system.  At 0.7 miles, you reach a major trail intersection at the campground bathroom building.  We will pass through this intersection twice; for now, turn right to cross the campground road, then turn right again to begin the Wash Pond Trail.
Starting the Wash Pond Trail
    
        Marked with green trail markers, the narrow dirt Wash Pond Trail descends gradually as it winds its way southwest through dense oak and cedar forest.  Ignore the rough Bluff Trail as it exits left.  1 mile into the hike, you circle the wash pond, a natural pond that the CCC enlarged by building a dam.  The dense cedar thicket keeps this pond cool and shady, and this is a nice place to watch for birds and wildlife.
CCC Wash Pond
    
        Continuing south, a gradual descent brings you to the south end of the Wash Pond Trail and a major trail intersection at 1.25 miles.  We will eventually go up the Tower Trail via the stone stairs to the left, but first continue downstream, heading for Tonkawa Cave on the Cave Trail.  Soon you pass a stone table built by the CCC.  This table was built out of local materials to make it blend in with its natural surroundings.
CCC stone table
    
        The Cave Trail soon starts curving right to begin heading up another ravine.  An unmarked trail exits left, but that trail is now closed due to flood damage.  At 1.4 miles, you reach Tonkawa Cave.  More of a rock shelter than what you would normally think of as a cave, Tonkawa Cave has a large rock overhang, and its cool recess was a popular place on the warm afternoon that I came here.
Tonkawa Cave
    
        Backtrack past the stone table to the Tower Trail, then angle right to climb the Tower Trail's stone steps.  At 1.65 miles, you reach the stone tower for which this trail is named.  Climbing the curved stone stairway lifts you up to the viewing platform at the tower's top.  While the view is 360-degrees, the surrounding trees have grown considerably since the CCC built this tower, and trees block out much of the view today.
CCC stone tower
View west from top of tower
    
        Exit the tower area by going north on the Tower Trail, which climbs gradually through more dense cedar forest.  Just past 2.1 miles, you get back to the campground bathroom building.  Angle right and then left to hike through the campground and begin heading north on the Pond Trail, but before you head to the pond take a short detour to view the old CCC bell.  Interpretive signs tell you that this bell was used to call CCC workers to dinner and meetings, but today it occupies an isolated spot on the grassy prairie near the perimeter of the campground.
CCC bell
    
        The Pond Trail heads north on a fairly flat course with the park road close to the left.  At 2.65 miles, you reach the pond.  This pond appears man-dug, but it should be a nice spot to watch for birds and wildlife although all was quiet on my visit.  Backtrack a short distance and turn right to cross the park road.  Turning right twice more returns you to the Prairie Loop parking area and completes the hike.