Lost Maples
I loved this place for its outstanding hiking and very unfinished atmosphere. Just the drive to get there is worth it- you forget you're in Texas (unless you live in hill country, which I do not). It reminds me a bit of 81 in CT around Southington, or parts of Maine, and even some of the eastern foothills of CO a little.
It is a river canyon of epic glacial proportions. Apparently the glacier left behind maple trees in the riverbed that turn all kinds of colors in the fall- something we don't see too much of here in TX. They had not turned yet on this trip.
The state park is kinda.. eh. The regular campsites kind of suck- they are small and very close together and there aren't very many of them. If you go and you're looking for a remote and private experience, take the sites at the very back of the loop that are as far away from the entrance to the camping loop as possible, otherwise you'll end up in the middle of a field with a zillion people up your butt.
The back country sites here run the gambit from very accessible (and therefore very "camped") to extremely INaccessible and fairly remote. There are some ponds on the west trail that are amazing- that's the place to pack in, if you're going to do it, but be advised that since it's an easy hike, everyone else is, too. The other sites are way, way in there, and truly difficult terrain- tons of loose and unforgiving river rocks on completely unimproved trails. I am an experienced hiker and it whooped my a$$, I cannot imagine packing in enough water to camp for days and up at the top of the ridge there is NO water source to draw from, not even if you can purify, so if you don't pack in enough you would be kind of screwed. I did check into every single site, and all of them are pretty, but you had better be prepared. No fires in the back country (which is par for course in Texas but always kind of scary to me in these kind of wild places).
The first pic in this series is among my most favorite moments in all my life on the trail. It is not staged, at least not by me. I just happened upon this, and I loved it...
