The Kishwaukee River Recreation Path runs for 2.5 miles in Cherry Valley on the outskirts of Rockford in northern Illinois. The well-maintained, asphalt trail connects the Kishwaukee River Forest Preserve with Blackhawk Springs Forest Preserve. The trail crosses the Kishwaukee River twice as it drops to the river's edge and climbs up out of the valley. It offers pleasant scenery and is almost entirely sheltered from commercial or residential development.
In addition to the paved bike path, there are also hiking trails (for walkers only) available throughout Blackhawk Springs Forest Preserve, which spans more than 600 acres and is heavily wooded.
The address of the Blackhawk Springs Forest Preserve is 5360 Mulford Road. South of Rockford, exit Interstate 39 at Baxter Road. Travel east 1.16 miles and turn left onto South Mulford Road. Travel north 1.7 miles to the Kishwaukee River Forest Preserve entrance on the left. Follow the park roads down to the river to find the trail head. There are many parking spots available at either trail head. The southern trail head has parking on both sides of the river.
There is also parking and access at the Blackhawk Springs entrance north of Blackhawk Road on Mulford Road near the midpoint of the trail.
Such a beautiful path, partially in shade- partially open. There are multiple restrooms along the way, benches, picnic tables as well as a playground about halfway thru the trail! The paved path was mostly smooth and very easy to navigate. There is a few dips and hills but nothing challenging. Highly recommend!
Great walk! Wonderful scenery.
Great path to walk with kids...not to long. Kids will love path entering Belvidere park lots to see, historical sites and bridges. Fun for the family.
Love this path for a short week night ride after work. If you ride into the Kishwaukee Forest Preserve round trip is almost 6 miles. Prairie and forest with some hills that aren't too challenging on an asphalt path make it a great ride.
As others have described, this short trail has a LOT to offer. It certainly seemed longer than 2.5 miles. Might be a tad tough for a beginner in a couple spots but all in all the hills are manageable. The variety of scenery is what really makes this trail stand out. That and the fact it is relatively secluded. The asphalt path is well maintained and wide enough to get around those pesky walkers who don't seem to be able to grasp the idea to keep to the right.
I have hiked pieces of this path several times. It starts in Kishwaukee River Forest Preserve heading north along the Kishwaukee River and then turns to the east through the center of Blackhawk Springs FP and ends up along the eastern side of the FP where it turns south and ends up crossing the river at the far SE corner of Blackhawk Springs. It is paved and well maintained. I have crossed it a number of times while hiking and there always seems to be people out enjoying it. The scenery is nice. Kind of a park like setting mostly. Unfortunately, you get to the end of the path and it just ends. There is no good way to get back where you started without retracing your path if you are on a bike. Hikers have a lot more options as there are hiking trails one can take inside Blackhawk Springs FP that one could take back most of the way without retracing your steps. The path also provides access for hikers to Espenscheid, Oak Ridge, and Deer Run FP. The access is not always real obvious. There is a gravel service road at the path where it turns south along the eastern edge of Blackhawk Springs. If one takes the gravel road to the east about 100 yards, one can cross Perryville Road and enter Espenscheid. You have to go north along Perryville for maybe 50 yards, cross and then come back down and look for the unsigned trail head, but it is right across the road from where the gravel service road touches Perryville. There is a one lane mountain bike trail that one can access there as well as hiking trails. The mountain bike trail is not on the trail map but is well maintained and signed near the preserve entrance to the north. It is a loop that has a lot of zigs and zags but if you keep going you will eventually get through it. There is also a hiking trail (on the park maps) that goes under a bridge in the SE corner of Blackhawk Springs that gives more obvious access to Espenscheid for hikers. If you take the path to the end at the far SE corner of Blackhawk Springs one can walk north along Perryville Road to get into Deer Run FP, or south to get to Oak Ridge. Neither access is real obvious, but it is there for hikers. You can also ford across the river under the west set of power lines that go north south through Deer Run and Oak Ridge. The ford is for horses but is not real deep and is gravel bottom there. It is not yet on the park maps but is well signed. You could probably loop through all these preserves on foot doing 30 miles or more and never see more than a few miles of the same trail sections. If you decide to do a hike in Deer Run, don't forgo a pass through McKiski FP. It is located to the north of Deer Run and there is no access to it except by horseback or on foot. It is a 2+ mile hike through Deer Run just to get to McKiski and the trail there while it is well maintained, is not on that park map either. It is a nice hike through the flood plain forest there that you would not want to miss.
The Kishwaukee River Recreation Trail, more than, makes up for its short 2.5 mile length in quality and scenery. The trail is well maintained entirely in sealed and striped asphalt. Park benches and picnic tables pepper the path. The forest preserves it passes through are popular with fishermen, hikers and picnickers during peak times. There are no road crossings making it a great place for young families. If you still have energy after biking the trail, the forest preserve roads are lightly traveled and posted at 20 mph. We enjoyed the moderate hills, curves and bridges as the trail wound through forest, prairie and riverside.
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