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Hopkins Forest Loop Hike

From Oregon Hikers Field Guide

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Waterfowl at the mouth of the Clackamas River, Clackamette Park (bobcat)
File:ClackametteLoop2.jpg
On the Clackamas River Trail, Oregon City (bobcat)
82nd Drive Bridge from Cross Park, Gladstone (bobcat)
Sea lion, Sportscraft Marina, Oregon City (bobcat)
File:ClackametteLoopMap.png
The walk along the Clackamas and Willamette Rivers in Oregon City and Gladstone (not a GPS track) (bobcat) Courtesy: Google Maps

Contents

Description

These 140 acres were formerly a logged-over tree farm in the Little Buckner Creek drainage owned by Howard and Margaret Hopkins of Milwaukie. When Howard Hopkins passed away in 1989, Margaret searched for a way to keep the property out of the developers hands, and in 1990 the non-profit Forests Forever, Inc., was formed. The acreage is managed according to conservation, sustainable forestry research, and public education goals. Maintenance roads and loop trails run through various plots of forest, including a natural riparian corridor along the creek. Interpretive signs tell about different forestry practices, including even age and uneven age plantings, thinning, pruning, and cultivation of pole trees. The directions below follow the outermost perimeter of the property.

At the top of the parking area, there’s a maintenance shed and the Clatskanie Mountain Fire Tower (The staircase door is locked) with its cab missing. The tower was erected in the northern Coast Range in 1954, and then moved to the Magness Tree Farm Loop HikeMagness Memorial Tree Farm in 1984. About ten years ago, it was transferred to the Hopkins Demonstration Forest. At the south end of the parking area is Everett Hall, a meetings and events facility.

Begin your hike at the kiosk near the flagpole. You can pick up maps here, and learn about some of the activities at the Demonstration Forest. Below you is a forest of Douglas-firs being carefully prepared for harvest as telephone poles. Walk down Grouse Hollow Road past restrooms, a picnic area, and Hopkins Hall. Pass through a green gate and the junction with the Hopkins Trail, your return route. Then make a left on Post Road. Here there’s a younger plantation of Douglas-firs. Continue past the junction with the Hardwood Trail, a short connector to the Red Alder Trail. Post Road descends to the brushy, maple shaded area above Little Buckner Creek. Ignore an unmarked path leading to the creek, and take the East Loop Watershed Trail leading left.

Descend a set of steps, and cross the creek on a footbridge. Cedars, Douglas-firs, and mossy maples overhang the stream. Hike along the creek, and cross a short boardwalk. At the junction with the Little Buckner Creek Trail, go left and hike up into a clearcut recently planted with new saplings. These are shielded with mouse netting to protect them from rapacious mountain beavers, also known as boomers. The trail soon descends the hillside and crosses a footbridge over the creek to join Up Creek Road. Make a left here, and pass a closed trail that leads across a corner of the neighbor’s property. Come to the junction with the Watershed Trail Middle Loop, but stay right to reach a kiosk that tells about riparian zones. Hike little farther up the road to reach a cattail pond. Below it, a second pond has been drained. This is a good area to scan for woodpeckers and hawks gliding overhead.

Return to the Watershed Trail Middle Loop, and descend, bearing right at the junction with the closed trail. Little Buckner Creek splashes below, and a spur leads left to an overlook. Soon you’ll come to the junction with Down Creek Road, where you can make a left. Pass under tall cottonwoods as well as alders and maples. At the junction with the Uneven Age Trail, go left to descend to a junction with a skid road. Keep right on a grassy “haul road” to hike up through blackberry-choked undergrowth. This area of the property is a plantation of various species and ages of conifers. Pass an overgrown shake shelter, cross a small stream, and reach a gate and parking area at the west end of Grouse Hollow Road. A kiosk explains even and uneven age forestry practices.

A little farther on, go left on gravel Low Gear Road, and pass up through a 1977 Douglas-fir plantation. Notice all the madrones among the Douglas-firs on this slope. Pass the junction with the Shortcut Trail and then another shake shelter. Drop down a slope to the junction with the Hopkins Trail, and make a left. Follow this trail through a mossy boulder field, and hike above an amphitheater. Reach the Cedar Grove Shelter at a picnic area. There’s a hand pump here that delivers pure spring water. Below is a “sports arena” for logging games. Head up to the left past an archery target, and make two switchbacks to arrive at Grouse Hollow Road and Hopkins Hall.

Just above Hopkins Hall is a picnic area. Find the trail leading north out of here through the split-rail fence. Pass around a small sawmill, and then descend and traverse under mature Douglas-firs on the Red Alder Trail. Make two quick switchbacks, and keep left at the junction with the Hardwood Trail. Make a couple more switchbacks, and hike up near a clearcut on another property. Cross a gully, and enter an alder plantation. Switchback two more times, and cross the entrance road. Ascend under Douglas-for and western red-cedar to come out near the maintenance shed and parking area.


Fees, Regulations, etc.

  • Dogs on leash
  • Open 7 days a week: hours vary seasonally
  • Information kiosk, brochures, restrooms, picnic tables

Maps

Trip Reports

Related Discussions / Q&A

Guidebooks that cover this hike

  • Take a Walk: Portland by Brian Barker

More Links


Page Contributors

Oregon Hikers Field Guide is built as a collaborative effort by its user community. While we make every effort to fact-check, information found here should be considered anecdotal. You should cross-check against other references before planning a hike. Trail routing and conditions are subject to change. Please contact us if you notice errors on this page.

Hiking is a potentially risky activity, and the entire risk for users of this field guide is assumed by the user, and in no event shall Trailkeepers of Oregon be liable for any injury or damages suffered as a result of relying on content in this field guide. All content posted on the field guide becomes the property of Trailkeepers of Oregon, and may not be used without permission.