Texarkana Gazette

Game and Fish will dedicate nature trail Sept. 21

- To reserve a spot in the flotilla, email kirsten.bartlow@agfc.ar.gov or call 501-223-6473.

The new Electric Island Nature Trail at Lake Hamilton near Hot Springs, Ark., will be dedicated Sept. 21 by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and The Nature Conservanc­y.

Access to the island is by water, so the AGFC will open the event with a special float via kayak or motorboat shuttle beginning at 9 a.m. Sept. 21.

The boat ride will be 8/10 of a mile and will launch from the Andrew H. Hulsey State Fish Hatchery boat ramp for the 10 a.m. dedication followed by a guided 2-mile hike on the island.

“For more than three decades, the 118-acre island in the middle of Lake Hamilton has been managed as a nature preserve by The Nature Conservanc­y of Arkansas. The new trail will enhance opportunit­ies for public hiking, exploring, bird watching, fishing and picnicking,” said Kirsten Bartlow, the AGFC’s wildlife coordinato­r.

The island is 98 miles from Texarkana, Ark., and the estimated travel time is one hour and 38 minutes, Bartlow said.

Before the land was donated to TNC in 1981, the island belonged to Arkansas Power and Light (which became Entergy Corp.), hence the name Electric Island. It was created in 1931 when the Ouachita River was dammed, creating Lake Hamilton while bringing hydroelect­ric power to the area.

Bartlow credits wildlife biologist Jake Whisenhunt with the idea of creating a nature trail on the island. AGFC helps manage the island, but hunting and camping are not allowed. “He saw a trail as a way for people to enjoy this public land,” Bartlow said.

Whisenhunt said his interest was sparked by people coming to the AGFC’s Hot Springs office asking about waterfowl hunting. That was out of the question because of the strict deed from AP&L to TNC to maintain it as a nongame reserve, but Whisenhunt still wondered what might allow the public to enjoy all the island had to offer.

“It’s been in our WMA system since 1984,” he said. “The Game and Fish had adapted a management plan (in 1993) that included a trail, but the trail had not been laid out. I read that management plan and brought that the idea back up with The Nature Conservanc­y. It took off this time.”

Once TNC was in, “I got with Kirsten. She knew who to contact to get workers out there. She got with The Nature Conservanc­y point person, Mitchell Allen, and they laid everything out and got it going,” he said.

Bartlow describes Electric Island as one of the rare places of solitude amid a lake that’s usually bustling with activity and noise.

“This lake is a busy place most of the time, but you can sure have some quiet and see the Ouachita woodlands and wildlife right among the hubbub of Lake Hamilton,” Bartlow said. “It has gentle topography, which makes it an easy hike for families with kids.”

The island has been known for its wildlife, Bartlow said, such as a herd of deer that swims to and from its shore and the shores of Lake Hamilton. Also, depending on the season, visitors might see bald eagles, loons, great horned owls, red-shouldered hawks and waterfowl as well as other migratory songbirds—not to mention armadillos and box turtles. “It’s neat, all the creatures that are living on the island,” Bartlow said.

A two-mile, natural-surface hiking loop has been cleared on the island, thanks to help from work-release inmates from the Arkansas Department of Correction Benton unit, Bartlow said.

Visitors will find two trailheads on the north side of the island with signs and beaches where boats can tie up. Among the unique spots to explore are the remnants of two houses that were on the land before Lake Hamilton was created, with concrete foundation­s and chimneys still in place.

TNC’s Allen and Bartlow laid out the trail, walked it and mapped it. The inmates did the work and “built the trail the old-fashioned way,” Bartlow said, “with hand tools—Kaiser blades, hoes, rakes and saws. They did a really great job. It was a lot of work.”

The island has a park-like look to it, Bartlow said. “The Nature Conservanc­y has done some periodic prescribed fire, creating an open understory.”

Electric Island is still “a work in progress,” Whisenhunt said.

“There is still stuff we want to do out there as far as putting in informatio­nal signs such as signs at the old home sites so people can get background on those sites and the history and even of the lake itself, when the island was formed, when the lake was created,” he said.

Maps and directions to the island are available at agfc.com/electricis­land. “For people who want to paddle, it’s best to avoid those really busy weekends and holidays on Lake Hamilton,” Bartlow said. “Paddlers ought to hit it early in the morning or off-season, or during the week when it’s not so crowded.” She adds that 9-10 a.m. on a Friday at the beginning of autumn should be just right for the people attending the dedication.

“For more than three decades, the 118-acre island in the middle of Lake Hamilton has been managed as a nature preserve by The Nature Conservanc­y of Arkansas. The new trail will enhance opportunit­ies for public hiking, exploring, bird watching, fishing and picnicking.”

—Kirsten Bartlow, Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s wildlife coordinato­r

 ?? Submitted photo ?? ■ A visitor to the new Electric Island Nature Trail at Lake Hamilton walks the path in the 118-acre island near Hot Springs, Ark. The trail will be dedicated Sept. 21 by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and The Nature Conservanc­y. Access to the island is by water, so the AGFC will open the event with a special float via kayak or motorboat shuttle beginning at 9 a.m. Sept. 21.
Submitted photo ■ A visitor to the new Electric Island Nature Trail at Lake Hamilton walks the path in the 118-acre island near Hot Springs, Ark. The trail will be dedicated Sept. 21 by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and The Nature Conservanc­y. Access to the island is by water, so the AGFC will open the event with a special float via kayak or motorboat shuttle beginning at 9 a.m. Sept. 21.

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