By Robert Earle Howells; executive summary by darmansjah
The 277-mile (365-kilometer) Superior Hiking Trail, which hugs a ridgeline
above the Lake Superior shoreline between Duluth and the Ontario border, is the
best long hike in the country between the Continental Divide and the
Appalachian Trail. It covers rugged terrain—bluffs, cliffs, and the spine of
the ancient Sawtooth mountain range—as it traces streams and skirts wild
rivers, rises to mighty bluffs overlooking the great lake, and plunges into
deciduous forests of birch, aspen, and maple interspersed with redolent stands
of boreal spruce and balsam. Massive beaver dams compete for the title of
Minnesota’s Hoover—you cross over one on a 440-foot (134-meter) boardwalk.
The Superior serves up every sensation of a great wilderness hike, but adds
in all sorts of flexibility. With 30 trailheads near roads and towns, plus 86
free backcountry campsites, the trail lets you get away for a long weekend or
embark on a three-week epic with the possibility of crashing at an inn or two
along the way. (Zealous thru-hikers add in extensions on the
65-mile/105-kilometer Border Route Trail and the 40-mile/64-kilometer Kekekabic
in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area.)
Sightings of moose, bears, beavers, wolves, coyotes, or grouse are possible.
At times you’re strolling through carpets of leaves, and at others ascending a
bald for yet another dramatic lake vista—from the south you can spy the Apostle
Islands; from the north, Isle Royale. Fall brings out the best in the Superior
Trail—lower humidity, fewer bugs, intense colors, and a migration of hawks and
eagles.
Need to Know: Maps and info are available at www.shta.org.
The Superior Shuttle (www.superiorshuttle.com)
costs $15. Arrange a trip with Boundary Country Trekking (www.boundarycountry.com).
No comments:
Post a Comment