Tag: ohio day trips

  • Exploring Columbus: Blacklick Canopy, Hayden Falls, Millikin Falls, and Roses

    I left Luna sleeping at home, heavy with regret, but the call of green canopies was stronger. The air was thick and warm, hinting that whatever we chased would carry moisture, shade, and quiet moments worth the distance. I climbed into Skylar’s car, phone in hand, and we set out.

    Blacklick Woods Canopy Walk:

    Our first stop was the new Canopy Walk at Blacklick Woods Metro Park. This treetop walkway lifts you 40 feet above the forest floor, threading through maples, oaks, and hickories. Hammock nets, rope bridges, and treehouse zones turn the forest into a playground for anyone craving adventure.

    From the top viewing platform, you can look out across the forest canopy. The day was hot, but the shade and soft green light cooled everything down. Pets aren’t allowed on the canopy walk, which is why Luna had to miss this adventure.

    Hayden Falls — Dry but Still Haunting:

    Next came Hayden Falls Nature Preserve. This pocket park usually offers a 30-foot waterfall tucked between suburban roads. This visit, though, the falls were dry.

    The overlook deck still gave us a view of rock walls and shaded cliffs, and the walk down the wooden boardwalk reminded me that nature doesn’t always perform on schedule. Even without flowing water, the cliffs and moss carried their own quiet weight.

    Millikin Falls at Quarry Trails:

    From there, we headed to Quarry Trails Metro Park to see Millikin Falls. The falls tumble about 25 feet into a quarry pool, and the limestone steps nearby make it easy to get close.

    This is one of the few falls around Columbus where you can wade in knee-deep, and on a hot 90-degree day it felt like a gift. The park itself, carved from an old quarry, blends rugged cliffs with new trails, showing how land can be reclaimed, repurposed, or even reimagined.

    Creek view l, summer sun shining, waterfall at metro park, Columbus, Ohio
    Taken from in the water

    Columbus Park of Roses:

    We wandered into the Columbus Park of Roses next, within Whetstone Park. This garden spans 13 acres with more than 11,000 rose bushes. Even in mid-September, blooms lingered, their scent tangling with herbs and late summer air.

    We strolled about a mile of pathways, breathing in color and calm. The rose garden felt like the punctuation mark on our day. With crafted beauty, balanced against the wildness of falls and quarry stone.

    Greek Fries Finale:

    We finished with a comfort stop: Greek fries at a small spot near Bryce Road. Crisp potatoes, tangy feta, and warm seasoning grounded the day after so much wandering. Plus I was near g starvation!

    Reflections:

    Even when waterfalls run dry, the land holds memory. Forest canopies remind you to shift perspective. Old quarries can transform into havens for trails and water. Roses offer the softest end to a long, hot day.

    I missed Luna at every step, but sometimes the road calls you into spaces pets can’t go. Days like this remind me why I chase trails, gardens, and the little hidden corners of Columbus.

    Ready to Explore Columbus for Yourself?

    If you’re planning your own day of adventure around Columbus, don’t stop with the obvious. Wander off the path so to speak, discover the places between, and end your trip with a flavor you’ll remember. Share this post with friends and let them know where you’re heading next.

    Poeaxtry’s Links

    Hiking journals photos from this trip!

  • Waterfall Loop Road Trip from Newark to Cleveland | Dog-Friendly Easy Hikes & Scenic Stops

    Waterfall Loop Road Trip from Newark to Cleveland | Dog-Friendly Easy Hikes & Scenic Stops


    We Love Waterfalls

    Do it before us. Do it with us. Do it after us.

    Let me explain what this is.

    Actually, no. Let me explain how I got here first:

    I just came off a 12-hour shift.

    Got my shoe peed in while giving a shower 2 hours exactly before clock out time.

    Had to finish my shift with pee sock, pee leg, pee vibes.

    Drove my bestie and coworker 35 minutes in the opposite direction so she could start her vacation. Since she worked last night for me.

    Dropped off another one a mile from my house.

    And I still had to go feed 4 cats, one dog, and the neighbor, coworker, and or buddies cats before I even changed clothes.

    And yet?

    I’m still about to chase waterfalls.

    Why?

    Because this week is STNA Week, and I’m an STNA.

    Because I’m a caregiver, a poet, a creator, a walking paradox of exhaustion and excitement.

    Because I owe this moment, this daylight treasure hunt of stops to myself.

    This is the Loop-de-Loop of Watersong:

    A full-day road trip from Newark to Cleveland and back, with:

    Waterfalls 🌊 Forests 🌳 Overlooks ⛰️ Trails under 1 mile 🥾 Dog-friendly stops 🐾 And photo ops so good they might just heal something you forgot was broken.

    📍What You’re About to See

    This is a build-your-own experience. You can:

    Start closest to your house Do just a few or go full loop Spread it out over two days or crush it in one maybe just save it for a better time or send to a friend who’d love it.

    This is the fastest and softest way to refill your soul when you only get two days off work, you write to survive, and you hike to breathe.

    And you work to fulfill the capitalist agenda

    📲 Click the Map & Follow the Route

    This is the route I’m taking.

    Do it before me. Do it with me. Do it after me.

    🌐 Click here to open the full route in MapHub

    (Replace with your final My Maps link)

    ⚡ What’s Coming Next

    This is just part one a pre-trip drop.

    Coming soon:

    📸 Photo posts

    📖 Part 2: the full trip journal

    🌀 Maybe even more than one post, depending how wild it gets

    Because sometimes the only way to reclaim your time, your rest, your art, and your energy…

    is to take it back one stop at a time.


    What Really went this down on this waterfall “loop” links