Tag: short hikes

  • Flint Ridge Trail, A Winter Walk Through Deep Time

    Flint Ridge Trail, A Winter Walk Through Deep Time


    Iron stained flint druzy quartz at flint ridge
    Huge flint chunk with druzy quartz

    On January 6th, I walked the Flint Ridge to the Creek Trail, a modest distance, just under two miles, but heavy with time. This was not a mileage day, it was a listening day. Winter had stripped the woods back to their bones. No leaves to soften the view, no green distractions, no canopy to hide the land’s shape. Just stone, bark, frozen ground, and the quiet pressure of cold air sitting against the skin.

    January in central Ohio does not ease you in. The air was sharp without being cruel, cold enough to keep the trail firm and the mud locked in place. A thin crust of frost clung to shaded patches, crunching under my crocs. While open stretches stayed dry and reliable. Wind moved lightly through the ridge, not howling, just enough to remind you that winter was in full effect. And she was paying attention. This coldness rewards preparation and punishes distraction, gloves on, layers balanced, breath steady.


    Location, Location, Location…

    A frozen pond and bare sticks and tree branches
    Frozen pond with barren tree limbs and sticks

    Flint Ridge sits in Licking County, Ohio, preserved today as a State Memorial. Long before trail markers, paved lots, and signage, this ridge was one of the most significant prehistoric flint quarry sites in North America. For more than 10,000 years, Indigenous peoples returned here again and again to extract flint. This stone is prized for its durability, predictability, and clean fractures. Projectile points, blades, scrapers, and tools made from Flint Ridge flint have been found across much of eastern North America. This is evidence of vast trade networks and migration routes that existed long before colonial borders or state lines.

    Geology

    A small frozen pond at Flint Ridge in Licking country ohio. some some holes in the ice, snow dusted woods floor and bare trees
    One of the ancient quarries filled with frozen rainfall

    The geology is the reason the ridge exists at all. Layers of Mississippian-age limestone hold dense seams of high quality flint, exposed through erosion and time. What you see today, shallow pits, uneven ground, subtle rises and dips, are not random. They are the physical record of careful extraction methods repeated across generations. These are not careless scars. They are marks of knowledge, restraint, and survival.

    Trails

    Walking this trail in winter makes those features easier to read. Without undergrowth, the old quarry depressions stand out clearly, small bowls in the earth that catch shadow and light differently. You are not just walking through woods, you are moving across an active historical document. This one was written in stone and absence.

    The Flint Ridge to the Creek Trail begins near the quarry landscape and gradually descends toward water. The grade is gentle, approachable for most hikers, and well suited to days when you want presence over push. Underfoot, the ground feels distinct, firmer, and rockier in places. Almost, as if the land is reminding you what it is made of. Dogs and kids are welcome. Though the trails aren’t exactly ADA accessible, there is a nice-paved part with educational sines and a museum.

    As the trail drops, sound becomes more noticeable. Water moving beneath thin ice, then opening up again, a distant-low conversation that cuts through the quiet. The creek is not wide or dramatic, but it anchors the hike. Stone and water have always worked together here, shaping tools, shaping trade, shaping movement.


    Dogs

    Brown dog with blue collar
    Luna

    As mentioned, it is a dog friendly trail. Though, hiking it with a dog in winter adds another layer of attentiveness. Leashes are required, and for good reason. The terrain is uneven in spots, and the historical features deserve protection. Winter conditions also mean watching paws for ice buildup and cold exposure. I always make Luna don booties. You need to remember water even when temperatures are low. Always stay alert near the creek edge. The trail length makes it a solid outing for dogs who enjoy exploration without overexertion, especially on colder days.


    Ethics

    Flint Ridge State Memorial is a protected site, collecting flint or removing natural materials is prohibited. This matters. Rockhounding ethics are not optional here. The ridge has already given enough. The act of leaving everything where it lies is part of respecting the thousands of years of use that came before modern recreation.


    Winter field dusted in snow with trees in the distance
    Field view at flint ridge park

    More trail traits

    The trail itself is well-marked and easy to follow, even in winter. Foot traffic keeps it visible, and the shorter distance makes it accessible while still feeling meaningful. This is not a destination built around spectacle. There is no overlook designed for photos, no dramatic payoff at the end. The reward is cumulative, built step by step. The pieces of flint and quartz you see along the way, and the history.


    More trails and things to see

    Flint Ridge State Memorial also includes additional trails and an interpretive center. Education here goes deeper into the archaeology, geology, and cultural significance of the site. Even without stepping inside, the land teaches quietly. It shows how landscapes hold memory, and how walking can be a form of respect when done intentionally.

    One of the educational signs on the paved trail
    Educational sign

    This January hike did not need distance to feel complete. Just under two miles was enough to feel grounded, slowed, and centered. Winter sharpened the experience, stripped it down to essentials. Stone. Water. Breath. Time.

    If you hike Flint Ridge, go gently. Stay on trail. Keep dogs leashed. Leave what you find. Let the ridge speak for itself. Bring your kinds and educate them. The story is already there, layered beneath your boots, older than any of us, and still very much alive.


    Winter mushrooms growing in a tree
    Large mushroom growths on the trail

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    Mound Hike

  • Afternoon Recharge at Dennison Biological Reserve

    Afternoon Recharge at Dennison Biological Reserve

    A Sunday Reset

    Sunday is technically a work night for me. I’m a weekend warrior at the nursing home, but that doesn’t stop the pull of a perfect September afternoon. I woke up early around 2 p.m. and couldn’t get back to sleep. The weather was reading a nice 80 degrees, clear skies, the kind of day that begs for a quick escape, if you cannot fit in a full escape. Luna, my dog, was already side-eyeing me like she knew what was coming, wheels spinning in my head. I swear she knows me better than anyone.

    We ran to the car, like it was a race. Of course we made a quick pit stop at the drive-thru for a zero Red Bull, before we hit the road. Dennison Biological Reserve is one of our go-to spots when we want a short burst of fresh air, greenery, and wildlife without committing to a full-day hike. It is right up the street though technically a different town. Granville, Ohio is home to this local gem. Be respectful, leave no trace, don’t interfere with the natural environment as the college uses it for their programs and is nice enough to allow public access. They even leave out doggie bowls for water! Bless!!

    Arboretum Loop Trail

    We went straight for the Arboretum Loop Trail, and today we did it twice. It’s a flat, easy loop, perfect for a brisk half mile that we covered in under 10 minutes per lap. The trail is simple but full of little discoveries. Luna bounced along the path, sniffing everything, clearly enjoying the change in scenery. I spotted a striking yellow-and-blue butterfly, among the flowers as if it had been painted there for the occasion.

    At one point, we stumbled across an entire raccoon skeleton. Luna pulled and sniffed the air curiously, but I didn’t allow her close. I also didn’t risk collecting them for chimes and wands because roundworms aren’t worth that. Though, I couldn’t help but pause and appreciate how these small, almost hidden details make even short trips feel like an adventure. That’s the beauty of these local spots accessible and full of unexpected wildlife moments.

    Why These Small Trips Matter

    Even short trips like this make a difference. Being outside, moving, seeing wildlife, and noticing details like a butterfly’s wing or the pattern of leaves in sunlight. At least for me is a reset for my brain. It doesn’t matter that we only did a mile; walking, breathing fresh air, and being somewhere alive with natural details gives me the kind of mental recharge that sticks with me for hours. The sunlight is a big part of what makes this so important for someone like me with seasonal affective disorder. Though I would argue sunlight is important in boosting almost every individuals day… in the right situations.

    Autumn leaves freshly fallen on the Ohio trail
    Autumn Leaves on The Arboretum Trail

    These little adventures remind me that you don’t always need a full day or a long trail to feel recharged. Even a short loop or two at a local reserve can be enough to clear the head, reset perspective, and get me ready to handle the rest of my day… or night at work. Now I’ll be feeling much lighter and more grounded.

    Local Highlights

    Wildlife spotting: Butterflies, raccoon skeletons, birds, and the occasional squirrel or chipmunk. Trail accessibility: Seasonal vibes: September afternoons bring warmth, crisp air, and long shadows… perfect for photography or just breathing it all in.

    Dennison Biological Reserve is one of those gems that’s easy to forget until you need it. Quick, local, low-commitment, but high in payoff for mood, energy, and mental clarity. Even a single mile, a short loop, can remind you why you keep chasing little moments of nature.

    Though just to note there is also a close to 2 mile loop here and another closer to 3.5 mile loop. That both sit on a privately owned no access allowed lake/pond. Please respect others and their property and do not disturb the private lake areas.

    Poeaxtry’s links

    Photos discord

    Nature

  • 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