Monday, January 30, 2017

Frank Jackson State Park (Blog Hike #617)

Trails: Honeysuckle, Azalea, Dogwood, and Magnolia Trails
Hike Location: Frank Jackson State Park
Geographic Location: west of Opp, AL (31.30073, -86.27211)
Length: 2 miles
Difficulty: 2/10 (Easy)
Date Hiked: January 2017
Overview: An interesting figure-eight route that includes two boardwalks and an island in W.F. Jackson Lake.
Hike Route Map: http://www.mappedometer.com/?maproute=578378
Photo Highlight:

Directions to the trailhead: From downtown Opp, drive Main Street north 0.6 miles to Jeffcoat Avenue.  Turn left on Jeffcoat Ave., which turns into Opine Road after you leave town.  Drive a total of 1.1 miles from Main St. to the park entrance on the right.  Turn right to enter the park, and pay the park entrance fee at the gatehouse.  Immediately after passing the gatehouse, turn right to head for the swimming parking area.  Park in the swimming parking area, which is the lot on the left as you approach the lake.  A playground and picnic shelter are also located here.

The hike: Consisting of 2050 acres in south-central Alabama, Frank Jackson State Park is centered around Lake Jackson, a 1037 acre impoundment of Lightwood Knot Creek.  The park opened as Lightwood Knot Creek State Park in 1970, but in the 1980’s it was renamed for Walter Frank Jackson, this area’s long-serving member of the Alabama House of Representatives who was instrumental in establishing the park.  The park is a major fishing destination due to the lake’s bass, bream, crappie, and catfish, and it hosts fishing tournaments regularly.  A 32-site campground, swimming area, playground area, boat ramp, and 3 camper cabins round out the park’s amenities.
            For hikers, the park offers 4 short trails that total about 3 miles.  The trails vary from lakeside to upland forest environments, and this park makes a nice add-on if you are hiking at the much larger Conecuh National Forest 20 miles to the southwest.  The route described here uses parts of all 4 trails and forms a figure-eight double loop with the trailhead at the pinch.
Start of Honeysuckle Trail
            Perhaps the park’s best trail is the Honeysuckle Trail, which forms a 0.7 mile loop around an island in Jackson Lake and the northern lobe of our figure-eight route.  To start with the Honeysuckle Trail, walk downhill toward the lake and angle right to cross a wooden footbridge, the only dry-foot access to this island.  An information kiosk on the mainland side of the bridge tells you that this is the G. Cleve Pierce Memorial Footbridge, and a small green sign announces this route as the Honeysuckle Trail.  An angler was trying his luck from this bridge when I crossed it.
            Upon reaching the island, ignore a trail that continues straight beside another information kiosk and turn right to begin a counterclockwise journey around the perimeter of the island, passing through a small picnic area en route.  The largest trees on this island are pines, but some yaupon lives in the wetter areas.  At 0.45 miles, you reach a grassy area on the southwestern tip of the island.  Some benches offer nice views of the lake, which was very calm when I hiked here about an hour before sunset.
W. Frank Jackson Lake
            Angle left to leave the grassy area and walk along the south side of the island.  A couple of new wooden bridges carry you over wet areas.  At 0.65 miles, you close the island loop when you return to the long footbridge over the lake.  Turn right to cross back to the mainland and complete the north lobe of the figure-eight.
            If you only wanted to hike around the island, the parking lot that contains your car sits just uphill.  To explore some of the park’s other trails, turn right and walk along the lake shore to pick up the Azalea Trail, which enters the woods behind the playground equipment.  Some interpretive signs describe birds commonly seen near the lake including bald eagles, herons, and hawks.
Seth Hammett Walkway
            At 0.9 miles, you reach the east end of the Seth Hammett Walkway, another long footbridge that crosses an inlet of Jackson Lake.  Turn right to walk across the walkway.  Looking to the right will yield a nice view of the island you just walked around.  After crossing the walkway, you come to an unsigned trail intersection with the Dogwood Trail.  The option going right leads only to the campground, so unless you are camping here you should turn left to head away from the lake.  A wetland appears downhill to the left as the trail passes under some power lines.
            1.1 miles into the hike, you reach the park entrance road you drove in on.  To continue this hike, angle left and use the road’s bridge to cross a small unnamed creek, then look for the unsigned Magnolia Trail on the right.  Turn right to leave the road before turning left to begin a short climb on the gravel Magnolia Trail.  The forest here features a dense understory of honeysuckle.
Starting the Magnolia Trail
            After passing back under the power lines, the camper cabins come into view as you top the hill.  Instead of going directly back to the parking area, the trail curves right to make a final loop through the woods east of the camper cabins.  A gradual descent delivers you to the lake shore, where a sharp left turn brings you on a westward course.  Soon a picnic shelter comes into view, which signals the end of the Magnolia Trail.  Walk around the picnic shelter and across the boat ramp parking lot to return to the swimming parking lot and complete the hike.

Monday, January 23, 2017

Lakewood Park and Florida's Highpoint (Blog Hike #616)

Trail: Red Trail
Hike Location: Lakewood Park
Geographic Location: Florida side of Florala, AL (30.98613, -86.28107)
Length: 0.7 miles
Difficulty: 0/10 (Easy)
Dates Hiked: January 2017, December 2020
Overview: A short loop around the highest point in Florida.
Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: 

Directions to the trailhead: From Florala, take Alabama SR 54 east 2.3 miles to CR 285.  Turn right on CR 285.  Very quickly you will enter Florida.  Drive CR 285 south 0.9 miles to signed Lakewood Park on the right.  Park in the only parking lot.

The hike: If you like the satisfaction of reaching a state highpoint but climbing a 13,000+ foot mountain seems beyond your ability, then maybe a visit to Florida’s state highpoint is in order.  At only 345 feet in elevation, Britton Hill is the highest point in Florida but the lowest of the 50 state highpoints.  The hill is contained in tiny Lakewood Park, which is owned and operated by Walton County.
Florida highpoint monument
            In terms of amenities, Lakewood Park offers only a few picnic tables and a short trail system consisting of three trails: the Yellow Trail, the Blue Trail, and the Red Trail.  Each trail forms a loop, but the longest loop is the Red Trail at only 0.7 miles long.  Thus, while Lakewood Park is not a pure hiking destination, if you come to visit the state highpoint you may as well take a short walk in the woods while you are here.
Trailhead beside highpoint monument
            All three loops start to the left of the highpoint monument where an unmarked trail heads into the woods.  The trails at Lakewood Park are mostly unmarked, but they are wide and easy to follow.  Very quickly you reach the park’s northern boundary, where a curve to the left brings you on a westward course.  Oak trees are prominent near Florida’s highpoint, and a layer of acorns covered the trail’s sandy soil on my early January visit.
            Soon the trail curves left and passes a pair of benches to reach a trail intersection.  The yellow and blue trails exit left here in short order, and they are marked by painted tips on arrow-like wooden planks.  Continue straight to stay on the longer Red Trail.
Hiking around the highpoint
            Now you enter the southern part of the park, which features some younger forest with a dense honeysuckle understory.  A dirt road comes into view across the park boundary to the right.  At 0.5 miles, you reach another trail intersection where the Blue Trail comes in from the left.  A confusing red-tipped wooden arrow could make you think you want to turn left, but in fact you need to continue straight to remain on the Red Trail.
            As traffic noise from the county road comes within earshot, the trail curves sharply left to begin treading along what appears to be a man-made wetland on the right.  After tracing three sides of the wetland, you come out at a small shelter with a single picnic table in the developed area of the park.  Your car sits in the parking lot just beyond the shelter.