Backpacker – September 2019

(Darren Dugan) #1
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2019
BACKPACKER.COM 73

DAYHIKE
WHITE OAK AND
RED BUCKEYE LOOP
Brazos Bend State Park
Escape the heat on this f lat, 2.5-
mile jaunt through swaying grass-
lands beside a slow-rolling river.
Dense tree canopy covers these
less-trafficked trails, offering a
shady chance to view birds (300
species), American alligators, and
f lora in this patchwork of eco-
systems. Trailhead White Oak
(29.3752, -95.5823) 50 miles south-
west of Houston Season Ye a r - r o u n d
Permit $7/person entrance fee Info
bit.do/BrazosBend

south for 6.7 miles to a primitive
campsite near the Pole Creek Trail
junction. On the final day, hike the
Little Lake Creek Loop Trail for 10
miles. Trailhead Richards parking
lot off FM 149 (30.5388, -95.7848)
73 miles north of Houston. Season
Spring and fall for good temps.
Permit None Info lonestartrail.org

OVERNIGHT
FOUR C TRAIL
Davy Crockett National Forest
The last of the logging trucks left
in 1920, giving the pine savannahs
a century to grow back into them-
selves. Wind through them on a
22.2-mile out-and-back that mostly
follows easy railroad grade. A shel-
ter and tent sites lie at mile 11.1 near
Walnut Creek. Note: The Forest
Service recommends against drink-
ing the water here; BYO, or cache
at FR 517 (mile 8.9). Trailhead
Ratcliff Lake (31.3885, -95.1566)
129 miles north of Houston. Season
Winter and spring; summer is hot
and bugg y, fall is hunting season.
Permit $5/day to pa rk Info bit.do/
Four CTra i l

Houston, TX


MULTIDAY

GRAND LOOP OF THE
LONE STAR TRAIL


Sam Houston National Forest


The 129-mile Lone Sta r Hiking


Trail rolls through forests of pines
and black alder tilting over dark rib-


bons of wetlands. These woods pro-


vide some of the last, best habitat
for endangered red-cockaded wood-


peckers, and the birding is spectacu-


lar. But if you don’t have a week to
hike the whole trail, Karen Borski


Somers (see right) suggests the


28-mile Grand Loop, which begins
at the trail’s western terminus and


boasts wildf lowers, giant beech


trees, and water so clear the creek
bottoms sparkle.


Start by winding over board-

walks, among ponds, and past open
grassy stretches on the Lone Star


Trail for 6.3 miles. Then follow a


.2-mile spur to a dry campsite in


a n open forest of mi xed ha rdwood
and pine. Next day, pass farmlands


before picking up the Little Lake


Creek Loop (mile 11.5) and hiking


Karen Borski
Somers
GUIDEBOOK AUTHOR AND
NASA CONSULTANT
THIS TEXAS NATIVE and career
scientist with NASA brought her
technical training to local hiking
when she discovered a trail in her
home state that was falling into
disrepair. The best way to rescue
it? Share it. In 2006, as Somers
hiked the Lone Star Hiking Trail,
a 129-mile footpath through east
Texas, she rolled along a mea-
suring wheel—just like Myron
Avery used to count mileage on
the AT.
“I thought, ‘While I’m hiking, it
might be good to document what
I see and put it online,’ and then it
grew into, ‘Why don’t I just write
a little guidebook,’” she says
(the second edition is due out in
November). “It just morphed out
of a desire to see the trail more
loved, more used, and better
taken care of, and knowing there
are all these people nearby who
really don’t have good places to
get out for a backpacking trip.”

It’s pines up top
and ferns down
below in the
Sam Houston
National Forest.

YO
UR

(^) G
UI
D
E

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