You are hereeasy

easy


Easy = length less than 5 miles, elevation change less than 500 feet, no scrambling and easy navigation.

Ouachita Trail (section 08) mile 184.8 to 187.4

Snake encoutered on OT around mile 186...Hike Features:

State: Arkansas
County: Perry
Location: Off Highway 10, near Lake Sylvia
Length of hike shown:  ~ 5.4 miles
Trail: All on trail
GPS: 34.85759° N 92.81764° W (OT crossing of forest road #152)

Photo album for this hike 41 photos and topo map in OHJ Photo Gallery

Date of hike: 
2008, November 1

Bell Slough WMA nature trails

Bell Slough nature trails...Hike Features:

State: Arkansas
County: Saline
Location: Off forest road near OT mile 169
Length of hike shown:  ~ 9.8 miles

Trail:
All on trails
Difficulty: Easy
GPS: 34.93860° N, 92.41670° W

Date of hike: 
2003, October 18

Ouachita Trail (section 10) mile 212.2 to 214.8

Ouachita TrailHike Features:

Date:  August 16, 2007
State: Arkansas
County: Pulaski
Location: OT day hike starting at Lundsford Corner on hwy 300
Length of hike:  ~ 5.3 miles
Trail: All on-trail
GPS: none needed

Photo album for this hike 42 photos in OHJ Photo Gallery

Date of hike: 
2007, August 16

Hiking in the extreme (heat)...

August 11, 2007...   hiked on the OT from about 219.4 to 217.8 and back in 103°F heat.   This is the worst time of year for hiking in Arkansas.  August is typically hot and dry here but this August is exceptionally dry.  According to the National Weather Service, precipitation for August 2007 so far is 0.0 inches.   None!   Of course, 103°F isn't so 'extreme' compared to places like Arizona, but with the humidity levels here it feels quite hot.  The forest shows signs of dehydration...   the ground is hard and cracked, plants are wilting, some plants/vines are dead, oak trees are browning and other trees are turning yellow/red.   Even with the temp at 103°F yesterday, it wasn't so unpleasant under the forest canopy.  In fact, there were no mosquitoes and I didn't see one tick.   Amazing.  

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“A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise.”

- Aldo Leopold, A Sand County Almanac, 1949