Nerstrand-Big Woods State Park
Date Hiked: June 6th, 2025
Trail Hiked: Hidden Falls, Fawn, Hope, Beaver, Maple Big Woods, and Fox Loop
Distance Hiked: 10.6 miles
Elevation Gain: 830 feet
Duration: 3h 21m
I have previously described the Hiking Club trails as the appetizer for what the rest of the park has to offer. Afton, for instance, had a small loop that teased the prairie, woods, and some of the ridges along the river, only to later unveil longer, more difficult trails with better views that made the Hiking Club trail disappear like mist upon the morning on the lake.
In this case, the Hiking Club trail is like getting dessert first and then wondering why they're so hesitant to bring you the meal you ordered in the first place.
Maybe that sounds mean, or harsh, or like I don't want the park to exist anymore, and that'd be fair, given that I don't often extend any level of hostility or negativity toward state parks, especially in this day and age. And I admit the possibility of everything just seeming lonely and cavernous as I felt isolated and distant from everything and everyone no matter what I did could also have been an influence to my experience.
But while the Hiking Club trail itself was quite good, well-maintained, and traversed the land near the small waterfall with a good quality short hike, going deeper into the woods of the Big and Nerstrand variety only made me feel like either I shouldn't have been there at all, or that nobody else spent much time doing so.
Granted, this is June in Minnesota. The mosquitos were thick and the humidity thicker. The morning dew is replaced by the sweat of the grass, the trees dripping like they'd just filmed a Gatorade commercial. Cedar: Just Do It. If you're from the Midwest, you know exactly the kind of day I'm describing. If you don't, imagine the woods where you're from. Put them through a rainstorm. Get bit. Feel like spiderwebs are wrapping you up like you're about to get paralyzed and taken to the Cirith Ungol. Throw all your clothes in a swamp then put them back on. Take cold water, heat it up like you're about to make soup, then dip your face in it and try not to overheat. Do all those things, then go try to walk a hiking trail that is spongy, muddy, and mostly is made of tire tracks going through six-inch grass, and that was June 6th revisiting a state park for me that day.
If you want a hike that's longer than a novice jaunt, I'd suggest staying on the falls trail and doing that five or six times, unless you're really into unkept, deep woods mosquito farms. I'm not saying I dislike the park itself, only that the upkeep and maintenance seems to stick to the initial trail most are likely to traverse upon arrival. While that's not necessarily bad for first visits and just starting out, my mission around this time was to pick the most difficult trail a park had to offer and add that to my verified complete list. I sure got that, at least.
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