6 Miles R/T: If you're looking for a big view of the Buffalo Rver combined with a world-class geologic experience, then Big Bluff and its narrow Goat Trail is your kind of place. At 550-ft tall, Big Bluff is just that---big. In fact, it's so big that it has the distinction of being the tallest sheer bluff face found between the Rocky and Appalachian mountains.
It takes 4 to 5 hours to complete the round-trip hike, most of which is along the Centerpoint Trail, the trailhead for which is located 3 miles north of Ponca on Hwy 43. The Centerpoint trail is broad and easy to walk, although like so many trails in mountainous Buffalo River country, it's basically uphill all the way back (2.5 miles). This is another trail on which you'll want to have plenty of water and a hearty snack along, as well as posses a reasonably good physical fitness level in order to enjoy.
From the Centerpoint Trailhead, it is about a 1-hour hike to the spur trail that takes you out onto Big Bluff. This is where the trail corridor opens up into a large, rounded flat area with a fire ring that directionally is at about one o'clock on your right. The spur trail (Goat Trail) to Big Bluff is off to the right of the fire ring. From here, it's about a 1/4-mile hike out to the start of Big Bluff.
The Goat Trail is the narrow ledge trail that spurs off of the Centerpoint Trail and takes you out onto Big Bluff. It gets its name from the feral descendents of domesticated goats (brought here by pioneers) who either escaped captivity or were turned loose in the wilderness and eventually became wild. While you'll rarely see a wild goat on Big Bluff these days, a few feral goats do still roam the upper Buffalo River wilderness.
Buzzards tend to be the wildlife one sees on Big Bluff or at least an abundance of the gray down feathers you'll find scattered about where they roost. There's also a dead tree on the bluff that has years upon years of "buzzard stuff" lacquered over it.
Speaking of trees, one of the great privileges of being out on Big Bluff is the chance to see the large, aged junipers that somehow manage to grow along the trail's edge, clinging to what seems like nothing but sheer rock and very little soil. Some of these trees have been dated to over 800 years old by the National Park Service, so take a few moments to pause and wonder at these tenacious, gnarled sentinels as they watch over the bluff and the river.
As for photography, we've found the best time to capture Big Bluff is in the afternoon once the sun has moved into mid-afternoon position, say 3:00 PM or so. Although there is a perspective from the far eastern side of the Goat Trail (behind where the hiker in the photograph is walking) that is better suited for morning photography as it's a west-facing shot.
Big Bluff and The Goat Trail is not affiliated with AmericanTowns Media
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