C18. Matthaei Botanical Gardens

See also Hike C18A for a possible supplement to your tour of the Botanical Gardens.

Comments:

The Matthaei Botanical Gardens (MBG) have a lot to offer, and as a result it can get a bit too busy on sunny weekends if a quiet encounter with nature is your priority. The trail network features two large ponds, a creek, a bit of prairie, and woods with an impressive variety of trees.

A grand tour using the trail segments on the perimeter of the network is about 2 miles long. In addition, there are interesting trail segments in the interior running roughly north-south for about 1/2 mile on either side of Fleming Creek . There are bridges across the creek near Trail Markers 2 and 6 that connect these trails, making it possible to supplement your perimeter hike by heading upstream on one side of the creek and downstream on the other. I've saved a GPX route map for a 3.5 mile tour that illustrates one of the many ways to do this here [What's this?]. A similar route is still available online at MapPedometer .

If you want to see even more of Fleming Creek, consider walking south to Parker Mill County Park along the paved pathway that runs parallel to Dixboro Road [see Hike C18A].

Dogs and bikes are not allowed on the trails.

Updates:

There's an interesting post about the beavers on the MBG blog .

Directions:

From downtown Ann Arbor, head north on Division, crossing the Huron River at the Broadway Bridge. Continue northwest on Plymouth Road for another 4.5 miles. Turn right (south) onto Dixboro Road and look for the entrance to MBG on your left after about 1/2 mile.

There is ample parking, but it is not free ($2.50/hr).

Excerpts from the website:

Trails winding past stunning natural features have been part of the Botanical Gardens’ Dixboro Road site since before its development in the early 1960s. Starting east of [the Visitor Center] and heading across the boardwalk over the constructed wetland, visitors will see the Trail Head Information Station.

Dix Pond Trail is a great place to take an exploratory hike or go bird watching, given the range of habitats. On rare occasions, visitors may see a fox. Explore the natural changes that have occurred since a series of farming and gravel operations ended on this property by the 1940s. The large namesake pond is a long abandoned gravel pit that was dredged below the water table.

The Fleming Creek Trail provides some of the best views up and down Fleming Creek. In season, kingfishers are frequently seen flying along the creek. The diverse former floodplain forest was not lumbered -- it was too swampy -- but the tree stumps are mute testimony to what happened and why parts of the floodplain are so open now. Invasive exotic pests have killed all the majestic American elms (Ulmus americana) that dominated the swamp until the 1960s.