Superior Hiking Trail
Map 1 - Section 3
Jay Cooke State Park to Grand Portage Trailhead
Date Hiked: April 26th, 2025
Other Sections Hiked That Day: Map 1 - Section 4, Map 1 - Section 5
Finally, a NOBO hike where I didn't have to worry about how to get back to the starting point! Although, of all the places on the trail where that would be a concern, a parallel with the Munger trail was probably among the most convenient of options. Not only was it rail grade and paved, but being the trail on which I'd recorded my longest hike to date (as of this writing on May 9th), familiarity was a bonus too, considering the dense remoteness of the majority of the Superior Hiking Trail.
It's amazing how quickly this trail transitions from "hanging out with everyone at the state park" to "when did I get out of the Red Lodge and why is everyone calling me Dougie?" The Northwoods in general have a knack for that skill, but it never becomes less surprising. With Jay Cooke in the proverbial rearview, I straddled the line of intentional isolation among its copious ridges. Turning around a bend, I'd be traversing the ledge of one, spotting another several hundred yards away, and nothing but cavernous abyss between them. Then, without fail, a descent worthy of the hopes and dreams of northeast Ohioan football fans would bring the trail to a creek whose idea of a bridge was "hop on that rock and hope it's steady." Continuing on, almost immediately, the upward trajectory brought the trail back to the other side of that ridge, where I could look back fondly and realize that even a year ago, I'd have been struggling and sore from those two elevation changes, and not just because I hadn't yet discovered the magic of trekking poles. I'd feel really good about myself, and then inevitably be passed in either direction by a trail runner.
Trail runners simultaneously reminded me of two very different things:
- For all the physical progress and endurance I've gained since becoming a serious hiker, they're on a level I cannot even begin to comprehend. I didn't even like to run playing team sports when I had to. Doing it by choice on such terrain blew my mind. But also...
-The level of difficulty on this trail mostly keeps it limited to those who are serious and dedicated to trail activity, as compared to my "couldn't find a date today/let's take that 38th selfie while blocking the narrow trail" excursion to Judge CR Magney State Park back in February. At some point, maybe by the time you're reading this, I'll have revisited that section as part of the Superior Hiking Trail as opposed to the Minnesota Hiking Club, which now seems like a distant childhood memory of whimsical proportions.
The timing of this hike presented me with views that would likely very soon be covered up by dense leaves and swarms of bugs. The St. Louis River peeked out beyond thousands of temporarily empty branches, before it would inevitably greet me upon the second section of this hike.
I wasn't anywhere near ready to be done yet.
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