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Besides some very basic improvements, we have left the trails
rough and rugged. They are steep in places, rocky in others, and frequently
muddy and slick after rain. Use extra caution as you walk through the area. We
encourage you to stay on the trails. The soil on the top is very thin and excess
traffic causes long-term damage. On the hillsides, erosion is a problem,
especially where people short-cut between trail sections.

The Main Trail
Currently, the main trail system at Redbud Valley consists of
one loop trail, approximately one mile in length. The trail is steep and rugged
in spots, and is faint or braided in others. The trail can be very rough in a
few areas. Use caution and be sure of your footing, especially on slopes.
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The trail begins at the parking lot (1) and goes west up the
steep slope. From the top of the rock outcrop (2), the trail winds through a
stunted woodland of Post Oak, Blackjack Oak and scattered Texas Hickory. Soon
you will begin to notice scattered Prickly Pear Cactus in the clearings. There
is Fragrant Sumac throughout this area, and a few small trees of Chittamwood, or
Gum Bumelia. |
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The trail forks (3) at which point you may decide whether you
want to choose the Prairie Fork or the Woodland Fork. Either trail will lead you
to the same spot. The Woodland Fork winds through a forested area, while the
Prairie Fork will take you through a section where the soil is so thin that few
trees grow. (If this is your first visit, we recommend the Prairie Fork.) Here
you will find much more cactus and many grasses and flowers typical of a dry
prairie habitat. Look carefully for the small Mammalaria cactus found
here, as well as for Yucca. Other interesting plants in this area are Smoke Tree
and Deciduous Holly. This are is sometimes burned as a management tool.
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Eventually the two forks rejoin at the top of The Ravine
(4).This break in the cliff allows the trail to drop down to the base of the
cliff face. The environment here is radically different from the uplands, being
cooler and much more moist. Notice that several types of fern grow on the
limestone rocks. In spring you may find Columbine growing here. |
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| Turn right at the base of The Ravine (5). Not far is a good size
cave, and after that, an active spring (6) emerges from the base of the cliff
and feeds the ponds below. If the weather has been dry, the spring may produce
barely a trickle, but after a good rain, the spring will run with surprising force. Look
for Sugar maples which are common in this area. You will pass several more small
caves before the trail begins to drop down the hillside to the bottom of the
slope (7). |
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Just past the bottom of the hill the Bluff Trail begins, an
alternate and rugged route back to near the parking lot, following the
limestone ridge. Climbing up above the bluff and taking
"shortcuts" down the hillside kills rare plants and causes
erosion. |
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From the bottom of the hill, the main trail wanders through the
flood-plain of Bird Creek, in a habitat much more typical of
northeastern Oklahoma. Still, the hillside to the south has unusual
plants, especially Dutchman's Breeches, which can proliferate in early
spring. |
| The trail winds around large limestone blocks which have slipped
to the bottom of the hill. One of these is now surrounded by trees and large
grape vines. (This section can be very muddy in wet weather.) The trail
continues around the hill and returns to the parking lot (8). |
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