Hike through land wooded with oak, hickory, sassafras, beech and maple on this easy .9 mile trail in the Abe Martin Lodge hiking trail network.
RELATED: The Best Hiking Trails in Brown County State Park, with Maps and Rankings
You can use this interactive map at the trail! Here’s how
Download map GPX file
Trail 1 (Lodge Trail) map GPX file
Directions
Trail 1 (Lodge Trail) trailhead. From the north entrance of the park, head south on Brown County State Park Road for 1.4 miles. Turn left at the sign for Abe Martin Lodge and follow the drive .8 miles. The trailhead is behind the lodge, but to get to it you must pass through the parking lot on the right and loop around on the one-way drive to the back. There is less parking behind the lodge but the spaces are usually not full. You will pass the trailheads for Trails 2 and 3 before reaching the start of Trail 1.
Difficulty
Easy
Hiking Time
30 min
Total Distance
.9 miles
Route type
Lollipop
Cost
$7/vehicle (in-state), $9/vehicle (out-of-state)
Dogs
Allowed on 6-foot leash
Sun exposure
Dense tree canopy
Bathrooms
Yes
Flora/fauna
Copperheads, timber rattlers, ticks
Accessible?
No
Kid friendly
Yes
Hiking Trail 1 (Lodge Trail)
Part of what makes this short trail great is that it ties into Trail 2 near Abe Martin Lodge. However, as of this writing (2020), the trail is not seeing its usual traffic because the nearby portion of Trail 2 that it connects to is currently closed due to major storm damage.
That’s certainly a shame, but it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do Trail 1, and the alternate route to Trail 2 (which can be found at the Trail 3 trailhead) isn’t far away.
The trail quickly descends into the valley before turning southwest and climbing Kin Hubbard Ridge over the next quarter mile.
Once at the top, the trail circles back to the valley before reconnecting with the main trail where you’ll head back to the lodge parking lot.
Use this map on your hike!
Load this web page on your phone while you still have service.
Then, tap the arrow icon on the map to show your current location and follow along.
Tap the layers icon to switch between topo, satellite and other helpful map layers.
To save battery life, put your device in airplane mode. GPS still works even without service!
PLEASE HELP US OUT!
If you enjoyed this free article on hikingillustrated.com, please consider
purchasing anything on Amazon via our affiliate link at no extra cost to you.