Tuesday, October 27, 2015

STUBBLEFIELD CG, SAM HOUSTON NATIONAL FOREST, TEXAS

Following a Texas A&M afternoon football game, we headed east to the Stubblefield Lake Recreation Area in Sam Houston National Forest for an overnight stay followed by adventures on the Lone Star Hiking Trail the next morning.
Here is a general orientation map showing Stubblefield (near the top) relative to Lake Conroe and IH-45.  PDF maps are available from the Forest Service and also from the Lone Star Hiking Club, which is the go-to source for info on this trail.  
Here's a closer-in map view, which makes an important distinction between the Stubblefield campground and its Overflow campground.   
There is no chance of getting last-minute camping reservations on weekends in most areas of Texas right now.  This is our prime time of year with ideal weather for outdoor recreation.  Additionally, much of the state experienced destructive floods earlier this year, which left many of our public and private facilities closed and has squeezed outdoor enthusiasts into a smaller selection of local destinations.  The main Stubblefield campground is first-come-first-served, and provides campsites with amenities for a fee.  The Overflow campground is basically an unimproved parking lot offering dry camping, and that's where we ended up because we rolled into the area well after dark, long after all the pay spots were taken.
View of the Overflow campground shortly after dawn the next morning, with our Airstream Interstate Sprinter-based Class B RV at photo left.  This place served as a temporary home to a wide variety of tent campers, RVers, and trailer folks.  
I'm a "football widow" at this time of year, so I enjoy any opportunity to snag my husband for a hike, no matter how much we have to work around the game schedule.

Football season or not, every good hike begins with a good breakfast.  I didn't turn on the generator to make toast on this day (I'm a toast aficionado), because none of the other RVers or dry-camping trailer owners turned on their generators.  Nobody wants to make the first racket!!  And that's fine because we enjoyed the peace and quiet.  
We found the Overflow campground to have a crude "speed bump" formed out of pushed-up gravel.  Getting in was not a problem, but given the long wheel base of the Sprinter, we had to use our Valterra leveling blocks to vault the rear wheels over the incline on the way out, in order to prevent damage to the undercarriage.  You can see how close to the ground the running board is at photo right.  
After we finished breakfast in the Overflow campground, we headed over to the trail head parking area in the main Stubblefield campground, which was by that time starting to clear out (it was a Sunday).  It's not necessary to pay a day use fee (I think) if you just park at the trail head and don't use any of the camping facilities available there.  
Dog is anxious to get underway.  
The Lone Star Hiking Trail is 128 miles long, and the part we hiked on this day represented just a tiny fraction of it.  
I thought I knew the forests of the greater Houston area, as I have lived here for decades now.  But this one held a few surprises.  
In many respects it was a familiar edge-of-Piney-Woods, pine-and-palmetto Houston transitional forest, although the Stubblefield area boasts a more mature assemblage of vegetation than many other local areas that were last logged more recently. That assemblage included a lot of standing deadwood. This is prime Red-Cockaded Woodpecker habitat, although we neither saw nor heard any on our hike.  
Every once in a while we would see this bizarre sight - a lightning strike victim surrounded by forest that remained untouched. 
Something else new to me and not nearly as enjoyable - this type of sticker that I have never encountered in any other forest understory around here.  They required pulling out one by one.  
I'm constantly amazed at the quality of photos obtained by the iPhone, such as this one.  I carried my phone plus one of my trusty Nikon DSLRs on this hike.
This is Nikon work, obviously.  Despite local drought conditions, Cardinal flower was in good supply.  
As were other wildflowers at the edge of Lake Conroe. 
This section of trail remains inland for about three miles, and then approaches the lake. 
Husband and dog watch a squawking great egret go by.  
A bit of macro photography during the break before the hike back. 
Here's a trace of that part of the trail, one-way, using the free Map My Walk app for iPhone.  I'm not much of an app user, but I find that one to be somewhat useful.  
All in all, a beautiful hike, plus we gained confidence in our ability to find last-minute dry-camping resources in the National Forest during peak season.  I'm looking forward to our next exploration.

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