Trails: Channel Dunes, Water's Edge, and Wetlands Trails
Hike Location: East Harbor State Park
Geographic Location: east of Port Clinton, OH (41.55100, -82.79913)
Length: 3.1 miles
Difficulty: 3/10 (Easy/Moderate)
Date Hiked: October 2024
Overview: A nearly flat double loop first along the shore of Lake Erie and then around a wetland.
Park Information:
https://ohiodnr.gov/go-and-do/plan-a-visit/find-a-property/east-harbor-state-park
Hike Route Map:
https://www.mappedometer.com/?maproute=974178Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: (coming June 13)
Directions to the trailhead: From Port Clinton, take SR 163 east 6.2 miles to SR 269 and turn left on SR 269. Drive SR 269 north 0.9 miles to the signed park entrance on the right. Turn right to enter the park and drive to the park's large beach parking area. This hike begins at the south end of that parking area.
The hike: Perched on the north side of Ohio's famous and scenic Marblehead Peninsula, well-amenitied East Harbor State Park anchors north-central Ohio's fantastic collection of Lake Erie state parks. The 1831-acre park was established in 1947 to protect wetlands and provide recreation. The park used to protect a 2-mile beach on Lake Erie, but a storm in 1972 washed away large sections of the beach. Today constructions have been built to stabilize and protect the parts of the beach that remain, and you will see some of those constructions on this hike.
East Harbor State Park features the largest developed campground in the Ohio state park system, and this park is often used as a base camp to explore the Marblehead Peninsula and the famous Lake Erie islands, especially Kellys Island and South Bass Island. In its own right, the park features a marina, fishing, boating, and swimming on Lake Erie, several picnic areas, a disc golf course, and many trails totaling over 10 miles. This hike consists of 2 loops, both of which start at the park's huge beach parking area. The first loop explores the narrow spit of land that separates East Harbor from Lake Erie, while the second loop explores the park's wetlands.
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Channel Dunes trailhead at beach parking lot |
From the south end of the beach parking lot, pick-up the two-track dirt/gravel trail that heads south with Lake Erie through the trees to your left and the wetlands through the trees to your right. Park maps call this trail the Channel Dunes Trail. The outbound portion of the first loop follows this nearly straight two-track road south to the water channel that provides boats access to East Harbor. Some single track trails exit right that the park map says could be used to form a loop, but those trails quickly became overgrown when I tried to follow a couple of them. While hiking the road is not particularly scenic, it is very easy: there is no significant elevation change anywhere on this hike.
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Boat channel leading to East Harbor |
1 mile into the hike, you reach an open area along the water channel that connects East Harbor with Lake Erie. Looking right lets you peer into the large harbor, while looking left lets you gaze out toward Lake Erie. Notice how calm the water is here, and remember that calmness for later in this hike. The houses across the waterway are on private property, but they still add to the lakeside scenery.
The channel is also the park's south boundary, so next you need to turn sharply left and begin heading back north. The path now becomes a single-track dirt trail, and the park map calls this trail the Water's Edge Trail. Quickly you reach a narrow sandy beach on Lake Erie. I came here on a chilly and windy day in mid-October, and the Lake Erie water was visibly white-capped and choppy in contrast with the relatively calm harbor channel water. I saw numerous birds including gulls, mallard ducks, and Canada geese. I also saw Kellys Island, South Bass Island, and the famous Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial at Put-in Bay across the lake. Despite the weather, this small beach was my favorite part of this hike, so take your time and enjoy the scenery.
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South Bass Island across Lake Erie |
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Lake Erie beach |
To your left you can see a concrete wall start to emerge out of the sand, and pretty soon the lake and wall start to converge, thus forcing you up the wall and off of the beach. This wall is one of the erosion control constructions I mentioned in the introduction. The rest of the Water's Edge Trail heads north atop these erosion control constructions. The densely wooded area features basswood and sycamore trees with a dense understory of honeysuckle that was bearing bright red berries on my visit. Some spots with picnic tables and benches invite you to sit, rest, and enjoy more lake views near the midpoint of this hike.
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Hiking the Water's Edge Trail |
2 miles into the hike, you return to the beach parking area and close the first loop. Of course you could stop now, but why not take a tour of the wetlands as well? To start a loop through the wetlands, take the mowed grass trail that heads southwest from the parking lot. This trail is called the Wetlands Trail, and while it is the tightest trail you have hiked so far, it was easily passable on my visit. At 2.2 miles, a short boardwalk exits right. You could cross the boardwalk now, but I chose to continue straight and curve right around the south side of the wetland. |
East Harbor |
After another 500 feet, you reach the shore of East Harbor, which sits in front of you. The South Beach Trail goes left, but that trail was closed on my visit. Thus, I turned right twice and took a short detour across the boardwalk. Honestly, this short and old boardwalk is not particularly impressive: tall grasses line either side of the wooden trail surface, and no views across the wetlands emerge.
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Boardwalk through wetland |
Return to the west side of the boardwalk, then head north to continue the Wetlands Trail. The wide mowed-grass trail goes up the west side of the wetland, allowing you views both across the wetland to the right and across East Harbor to the left. At 2.7 miles, you reach a cul-de-sac at the end of a gravel road. Another short loop exits left, but it passes more of the same scenery. Thus, I angled right to walk the gravel road back to the parking lot. A long walk through the large beach parking lot completed my hike.