Highlands Nature Sanctuary--Maudes Cedar Narrows Trail

Highlands Nature Sanctuary--Maudes Cedar Narrows Trail

Bainbridge, Ohio 45612

Highlands Nature Sanctuary Official Website
Highlands Nature Sanctuary map

About this Location

1.5 mile loop with a 50 foot rise and fall in elevation. Maude’s comes off the right loop of Prothonotary Trail and returns directly to the trailhead parking lot. The trail follows the foot of the bluffs overlooking the Rocky Fork Creek, then up Franklin Branch tributary to admire the marvelous spring wildflower displays and rock formations. Great grassland birding on the return route.

To reach the Maudes Cedar Narrows trailhead, follow Cave Road north to US-50. Turn left. One mile west of Rainsboro, turn south onto OH-753 at the blinking yellow light. 2.3 miles down OH-753 turn right on McCoppin Mill. Follow McCoppin over the Rocky Fork Bridge. At the top of the next rise, turn left on Skeen Road. Follow Skeen around the bend. When the road straightens, (at the 0.3 mile mark), turn onto the next mowed lane to the trailhead. Look for tall hickory trees shading the lot.

About Highlands Nature Sanctuary

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The Highlands Nature Sanctuary is the Arc of Appalachia’s oldest and largest preserve. The heart of the 2900-acre preserve is the breathtakingly beautiful Rocky Fork Gorge, a 100-foot high steep-walled canyon renowned for its stunning rock formations, ancient white cedars, spectacular wildflower displays, grottoes, springs, and stone arches.

The Appalachian Forest Museum features large artistic murals depicting the world significance of our backyard forests for those of us living anywhere in the Eastern third of the United States. The Museum strives to raise our appreciation for America’s Great Eastern Forest and the many ways our “home-sweet-biome” influences and inspires our lives.

Sixty acres of the 2600-acre Highlands Nature Sanctuary was once home to the 20th-century nature and children’s theme park known as 7 Caves. Opening in 1930, 7 Caves was a beloved family destination for generations, reaching the peak of its popularity in the 1960s and 1970s, the same era that America was infatuated with family camping vacations. After the 70s, attendance began a steep decline alongside children’s theme parks across America, reflecting a shift in our culture’s vacation preferences.

The Arc of Appalachia purchased the 7 Caves land and buildings from its owners when the business was closed in 2005, at which time the land became part of the Highlands Nature Sanctuary. Some of 7 Cave’s historic trails, with their beautiful rock work and stunning geologic vistas, still serve visitors today at the Sanctuary, along with 15 miles of additional trails. The old 7 Caves gift shop has been transformed into what is known today as the Appalachian Forest Museum.

Seven larger caves that were illuminated for decades with 1930-era push-button lights are now returned to darkness. Although small by world standards, the caves are on the mend as natural communities; so much so that today the caves give refuge to four species of bats, three of them imperiled and one federally endangered. Although most of the caves are closed to visitors to minimize disruption to the caves’ ecosystems, the gorgeous cliffs and rock formations of the Rocky Fork Gorge which made 7 Caves such a memorable destination remain open to the public, now without charge. One of the original seven caves, known as Marble Cave, can still be viewed on the Valley of the Ancients Trail which begins at the Appalachian Forest Museum.

Features

  • Restrooms on site

  • Wheelchair accessible trail

  • Entrance fee

  • Roadside viewing

Content from Highlands Nature Sanctuary Official Website

Last updated February 11, 2023