Posted in Hiking, Northeastern Ohio, Park review

Cascade Valley South Metro Park

Cascade Valley South is part of the Summit County’s Metro Park system. The park has multiple entrances with different attractions at each. In all there are seven miles of trail and many locations where you can view the Cuyahoga River. We began our tour near one of the River’s oxbows (an oxbow is just a tight bend in a river).

Oxbow in the Cuyahoga River viewed from the observation deck off the Observation Trail


The above photo was taken from an observation deck that’s located at the end of the Overlook Trail. The Cuyahoga River lies 125 feet below the observation deck. To the side of the observation deck we could view the heavily eroded bluff on which the deck is built.

The Overlook Trail leads to the observation deck
Observation deck viewed from the side
Eroded bluff adjacent to the observation deck on the Overlook Trail

A steep side trail leads down to the river. Not too far away is a large sledding hill.

The hieroglyphs on this sign post point out the steep trail down to the river (the wavy lines in the arrow on the top) and the Observation Trail (the eye in the arrow on the bottom).
Here’s a look at the sledding hill without snow. Although conditions weren’t conducive to sledding, we did see a small herd of deer pass through this area.

After checking out the oxbow, we drove to another entrance of the same park, so we could hike the Highbridge Trail. I assume that this trail got its name because it ascends the side of a gorge where it passes beneath a high bridge. After looking at the trail via Google maps, I’ve concluded that this bridge is where N. Main St. crosses the Cuyahoga River.

North Main Street Bridge spanning the gorge
Underneath North Main Street Bridge
Cuyahoga River viewed from bluff

You can continue on the Highbridge Trail all the way to the Gorge Metro Park, or you can veer off on a side trail that descends down to the flood plain of the Cuyahoga River; we decided to go down to the river.

We took this stairway leading to the flood plain of the Cuyahoga River.
Cuyahoga River viewed near level of water
Looking down the Cuyahoga River
Picnic grounds located on the flood plain of the Cuyahoga River

The Cuyahoga River was once one of the most polluted rivers in America. It was known for occasionally catching fire, and in one infamous incident in 1969, the river caught fire and burned down two railroad bridges. Water quality has improved dramatically since then. The presence of freshwater mollusks is a sign of a river’s health. While we were hiking we found a number of mollusk shells near the river that were leftover from some animal’s feast.

Mollusk shells found beside the Cuyahoga River

In addition to trails, pinic areas and a sledding area, the park features sports fields for softball and soccer, as well as fishing spots. In winter, the trails can be used for cross country skiing.

One trail that we didn’t visit features a signal tree. Long ago the Native Americans in this area cultivated such trees to be used as navigational landmarks. They did this by tying down the tree when it was a sapling. Instead of growing straight, the trees grew in a bent fashion and so were eye-catching.

Additional information




Location
Overlook Trail
Address: 354 Sackett Ave., Akron, Ohio 44313 (see map below)
Chuckery Area
Address: 837 Cuyahoga St., Akron, Ohio 44313
Oxbow Area
Address: 1061 Cuyahoga St., Akron, Ohio 44313


View Larger Map

More on Summit County

© Deborah Platt, Robert Platt and TrekOhio.com 2012 to 2021


2 thoughts on “Cascade Valley South Metro Park

  1. Again high quality post. I especially love hieroglyph signs. Great invention.

    Btw, nowadays when clicking Your posts, it do not go anywhere. This means that I have to search Your gorgeous blog.

    1. Hi, Sartenada! Thank you for stopping by despite the difficulty you encountered. Because we moved from WordPress com to our own self-hosted blog, we were told that we should make our old blog private at WordPress.com. But when I comment on other people’s blogs, I didn’t know how to change the link from my name to our new blog location. It continued to point to trekohio.wordpress.com which was private. But I think I’ve fixed it now so it points to TrekOhio.com. I just commented on one of your posts. I think the link points to our active blog now.

Leave a Reply to Deb Platt Cancel reply

You have to agree to the comment policy.

Complete the following sentence by typing either real or spam:
My comment is ...