The spot tapping of a hairy woodpecker. |
Here the sign tells you distance from the parking lot, not the distance to the destination |
If you expect great vistas from this side of the park, be prepared for disappointment. All of the views from late March to November are filtered through the branches of fir, maple, alder, and the occasional cottonwood. After all, we are far below the treeline on Lords Hill. Honestly, the most interesting things to see are closer up anyway.
As you walk through the woods, listen for the soft tapping of a hairy woodpecker, or the jungle call of a pileated. I walked between two members of the Picidae family working methodically just a little above me while wrens and robins flitted from brush to branches. In the early spring, trillium open white in the shadows of the woods then fade to a lavender.
Trillium |
Kind of a view |
Moai of Lords Hill |
The riveted twins are stark, foreboding, and off limits as they beam unseen waves about the valley. Razor wire and no trespassing signs let you know to keep moving.
If you head down the maintenance road from the towers, you'll find the backdoor to Springboard trail (not on the park map) and a nice escape to past centuries. On weekdays, I have never seen a moutainbiker on it, but be alert and remember they built the trail.
Springboard will carry you almost back to Main Trail. If you are tempted to keep heading down the towers' maintenance road to save time, don't bother. The short-cut back to the Main Park entrance is closed by jealous property owners who no doubt have had more than their share of happy and clueless wanderers trampling on their tulips.
Many of the trails are unsigned. Other signed trails are not on the map. |
With the aid of the biker-built Springboard Trail on the way out, the amount of backtracking can be significantly reduced. Once back on the Main Trail, turn left to return you to your car. To make a longer day of it, head right for more ponds, a better viewpoint, or the river. (Please see my other posts on Lords Hill).
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