Oak Glen Nature Preserve
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Oak Glen Nature Preserve (temporarily closed)
Coordinates: 39.2504794, -84.6909213
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About Oak Glen Nature Preserve
Oak Glen Nature Preserve is currently closed. On March 17, 2014, Great Parks Park Rangers discovered that an underground pipeline owned by Mid-Valley Pipeline and managed by Sunoco Logistics, carrying crude oil from Texas to Michigan had ruptured, releasing approximately 20,000 – 30,000 gallons of crude oil into Oak Glen Nature Preserve.
Oak Glen Nature Preserve, 402 acres, is managed by Great Parks to preserve some of Greater Cincinnati’s most beautiful natural features. Many uncommon native species and a lack of non-native exotic plants suggest that past land disturbance at Oak Glen Nature Preserve was minimal. The 402-acre preserve boasts a rich diversity of native trees, shrubs, and wildflowers across rugged hills. No public parking or facilities, including bathrooms, are available.
Karen and Eugene Schunk, being deeply committed to nature, carefully managed their Colerain Township home and its surrounding 109 acres to maximize native wildlife diversity. When the Schunks offered their property to the park district in 1999 to assure its continued preservation, Great Parks quickly agreed and designated it Oak Glen Nature Preserve. Since 1999, Great Parks has added additional, adjoining parcels bringing the preserve up to its current 402 acres. From its inception, Oak Glen has been an exceptionally fine preserve with mature forests and diverse native wildlife unsurpassed in the Great Parks’ system. It is home for two state-endangered animals (Cave Salamander and the Lark Sparrow), two potentially threatened plant species (Pale umbrella sedge and Spring coralroot), and provides habitat for many other animals.
From Oak Glen Nature Preserve webpage
No restroom facilities.