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112 Bear Mountain Loop

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     Today the weather forecasters are calling this 'the pick day’ of the week for outdoor activities with highs near 70° before more snow arrives later in the week.  I’ll head up to Drury Mincy and do some nearby hiking while I have the chance (for more at Mincy C.A. see: 111 Bee Creek   & Cornell Road ).   Off Gunnison Road, I head up the steep gravel road into Mincy Conservation Area, about half a mile to the parking/trailhead area on the south side of the road.  This is ‘Bear Mountain Trailhead’ with parking for four or five vehicles. Bear Mountain Trail with white blaze      Bear Mountain Trail heads out south the woods then downhill pretty quick, the trail is easy to follow with white blazes stating,  ‘hiking trail’.  The steep trail has lots of small loose rock, soon arriving at what I’m assuming is Bear Cave shown on the very ‘basic’ Conservation Area map.    From here standing on the trail it doesn’t...

111 Bee Creek and Cornell Road

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     Drury-Mincy Conservation Area (4,089 acres) is across the state line in Missouri, next to Bull Shoals Lake, one of those ‘close to home’ places I have been wanting to check out.  Today looks to be a good chance, since most of the snow has melted and the weather prediction says: 'sunny with highs in the low sixties'.    Drury-Mincy has two separated sections: Drury Conservation Area (DCA) to the northeast, and the larger Mincy Conservation Area (MCA) farther south, at the south end of Mincy is Bee Creek, that’s where I’ll start exploring. Bee Creek at Bull Shoals Lake      Pulling into MCA along Bee Creek I follow the road as far as I can, Bee Creek flows into Bull Shoals but the road turns to the north before reaching the lake.  The road crosses Bee Creek four times, with no bridges each ford is deeper than the one before.  After the fourth  crossing the road turns away from Bee Creek heading up the hill covered in sheets ...

110 Peter Cave Road

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     It’s Christmas Eve and the weather is just beautiful, so nice in fact it would be a shame not to get out and do something.  We go for a drive around the Buffalo scouting possible parking spots for future hikes.   A little over 3/4 of a mile on Tyler Bend Road, Peter Cave Road heads off west and down into a Calf Creek drainage.  At the bottom after crossing a little creek we notice an old house in ruins off to the south in the woods near the creek, and just beyond an intersection. short trail to vista      We pull off Peter Cave Road and park on a side road at a cable gate that’s open, this looks to be a possible hike for the future.    Just about 100 feet farther on Peter Cave Road the OHT/BRT heads off the road northeast up to Collier’s Homestead,  going the other way northwest from here, Peter Cave Road is the Ozark Highlands/Buffalo River Trail.  We are now driving  on the trail and soon cross Cal...

109 Slippery Hollow to Marble Falls Spring

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     After my hike here just last week (see:  108 Boozer and Big Music ) , I found a map online showing this Natural Heritage site boundaries, and sure enough most of my route down into Boozer Hollow wasn’t even in the park .   So today I’ll be staying smack dab in the middle of the natural area and shouldn’t even get close to any private lands. moss covered rocks in a small drainage      From the parking lot I head southeast parallel to Highway 14 and go downhill into the first hollow I come to.  This little hollow is pretty ‘trashed out’ here close to the highway, it also has a lot of undergrowth making for some slow going.  Then it starts raining, just a sprinkle I keep going, it should let up soon.    It isn’t steep, as I progress down into the hollow the brush thins out as does the trash making for fairly easy hiking. low bluffline       Along both sides of the  creek,  are low broken bluffs c...

108 Slippery Hollow, Boozer and Big Music

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     I’m going back to Slippery Hollow over two years later, and this time I’m going alone since Kat had things at home she wanted to do.  On the short drive to Slippery Hollow, I wondered when the last time was that I went hiking by myself.  Possibly  way back in August of 1986, when I hiked solo on an overnight trip to a small alpine lake in the Trinity Wilderness of northern California.  Wow, I guess this is way overdue.     P ulling in the parking area of  Slippery Hollow (Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission) , I notice some ‘parking’ improvements since our last visit.    From the small parking lot, I head northeast past the locked gate on an old road first to that old homesite we found almost three years ago.  It appears to be a small house or maybe it was a shack,  but nothing is left of the walls, now just a green shingle roof sitting on the ground.  I return to the old road then leave that at t...