Rockwoods Reservation
Rockwoods Reservation is a state forest and wildlife conservation area in St. Louis County, Missouri. It was established in 1938, making it one of the oldest conservation areas established by the Missouri Department of Conservation.
Rockwoods is significant for its close location in a rapidly developing suburban area and close to a major urban area. It supports a diverse array of native plant and animal life, contains geologically-interesting rock formations, and ecologically-important springs and caves. Rockwoods Reservation is not a pristine wilderness untouched by human hands, however; remnants of extensive former limestone, clay and gravel quarrying operations are hidden in the dense second growth hardwood forest. Most of the original forest was clearcut to feed lime kilns.
Rockwoods Reservation adjoins St. Louis County's Greensfelder County Park to the south, which itself abuts the state's Rockwoods Range Conservation Area. Together, these three parcels constitute a contiguous green belt of almost. The Greenrock Trail is a hiking trail that crosses all three areas with one terminus in Rockwoods Reservation.
There are six trails in Rockwoods Reservation:
- Wildlife Habitat Discovery Trail
- Rock Quarry Trail -
- Trail Among the Trees -
- Lime Kiln Trail -
- Green Rock Trail - of the trail's
- Turkey Ridge Trail -