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        Woodland Trail

Distance: 4-mile loop
Type: Dirt path
Terrain: Woodlands, Tittabawassee River
Difficulty: Moderate

Woodland Trail may be part of Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge but it is literally on the edge of a city and Saginaw is lucky because of that. If there was ever a perfect escape from its urban grasp, this is it; a point of land where two great rivers converge to form a moat against the advances of what some people would call progress and others decay. On the north there's the Tittabawassee, on the south side the Shiawassee. In between the two is an area of woods, marshes, creeks and 5 miles of trails open to hikers, mountain bikers and cross-country skiers.

The trail system is divided into three loops of various lengths that all begin from the same trailhead. The Marsh Loop is the shortest, a mile-long loop in the woods. The River Loop is 2 miles and includes a half mile stretch that passes through a field along the bank of the Tittabawassee River.

Woodland Trail is the longest loop at 4 miles and true to its name stays primarily in the bottomland forest with only a passing glimpse of the Tittabawassee River and none of the Shiawassee River. It would be easy to add the scenic stretch of the River Loop to the Woodland Trail. That would reduce the length of the route to 3.6 miles but in doing so you would miss one of the most interesting stretches of the Woodland Trail. What to do? Ride or hike them both for a 6-mile outing.

Unlike the Ferguson Bayou Trail on the south side of the Shiawassee River, the Woodland Trail is a narrow primitive path rather than utilize a series of dikes. But overall the trails are level and easy and surprisingly dry considering the swamps and ponds they pass. They are ideal for beginner mountain bikers and are popular in the winter with cross-country skiers when there is sufficient snowfall.

Keep in mind that this area is a floodplain prone to excessive seasonal flooding and wetness, particularly in the spring. The bugs can also be thick here in early summer.

To reach the trail depart I-75 at exit 149 and head west on M-46 for almost 7 miles, crossing the Saginaw River along the way. Turn south (left) on Center Road and in 1.7 miles you’ll cross the Tittabawassee River and then see a sign for the refuge trail on the east side of the road. The parking lot and trailhead is just off Center Road.

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An observation blind at Shiawassee NWR.

Hardwood forest at Shiawassee NWR.

Map to this Trail

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Trail Guide:

To the east of Center Road, Stroebel Road ends at the trailhead and parking lot where there is also vault toilets and a information board. The trail departs into the woods and immediately arrives at a well posted fork where Woodland Trail is marked as heading to the south (right) as if you’re following it in a counter-clockwise direction. Within a third of a mile you cross sluggish Bullhead Creek on a foot bridge and then shortly after that pass beneath a power line.

Beyond the high wires and steel towers, something you’ll encounter two more times during the loop, the trail moves into an open meadow and then arrives at a lowlying area that includes a pair of ponds and usually hundreds of deer tracks if not the animals themselves scampering into the nearby woods.

At one point you cross a bridge over a sluggish stream and pass a nearby bench before re-entering the bottomland hardwoods. You stay in the woods until Mile 2 when the trail passes underneath the power lines again.

The junction with the River Loop is reached at Mile 2.8. Continue north (right) if you want to follow the River Loop along the banks of the Tittabawassee River before rejoining the Woodland Trail at Bullhead Creek. I find the section of the Woodland Trail, however, much more interesting than skirting the sluggish Tittabawassee.

For the Woodland Trail you head west (left) and quickly climb to follow a raised bed that appears like a dike. The dike keeps you dry despite the low-lying flood plains on both sides and allows you to peer down into the greenish woods and wetlands. At Mile 3.4 you break out at the power line but do not pass underneath it before returning to the woods.

In the final half mile you skirt the base of an out-of-place hill that no doubt is leftover from the coal mining industry that was here in the early 1900's and then arrive at the posted junction with the River Loop and Marsh Loop just before crossing a bridge over Bullhead Creek. The trailhead parking area is now less than a quarter mile away.



 
 

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