Yankton
Trails
BY KELLY HERTZ
The Press & Dakotan
OK, not all trails lead to Yankton.
But the Meridian Trails System in the Yankton area is
among the best around — and it’s only getting better.
There are more than 30 miles of trails in the local system,
providing hikers and bicyclists plenty of room to roam and
plenty of places to go if you want to ditch your car for
something simpler and self-propelled.
And the system is only getting bigger.
The newest addition includes, most prominently, the
opening of the Meridian Bridge to pedestrian traffic. The
two-year conversion project was completed in the fall of
2011, allowing the bridge — which served as a main
automotive artery across the Missouri River for more than
eight decades — to continue to serve the region for many
more years to come. Planning and work are under way for
the establishment of a park on the south end of the bridge
as well as a trail on the Nebraska side that will extend out to
Gavins Point Dam. This should bolster the bridge’s new role
as a must-see (and must-experience) link in Yankton’s trail
system.
Another new trail section is set to open along Deer
Boulevard west of Yankton along Highway 52. This will add a
two-mile section to the trail system and will create a loop
when hooked up with a trail connecting with the Chief
White Crane Campground along the tailwaters below Gavins
Point Dam.
These two additions make an outstanding trail system
even better.
The Meridian Trails System runs around Yankton and
through the Lewis and Clark Recreation Area. It can carry
you from Paddlewheel Point on the east edge of Yankton to
the Summit Activities Center on the city’s north end, and
out to the Gavins Point Dam, the Hobie Cat and Midway
beaches, and numerous other points of interest. Along the
way, you’ll find the Auld-Brokaw Trail, which carries you
through the heart of Yankton along Marne Creek; the Lewis
and Clark Lake Trail; the Toe Road/Lake Yankton Prairie
Trail and much more.
The trails range from the paved to the primitive. Some
can accommodate hikers only, while others can handle all
sorts of pedestrian traffic.
There’s also the Missouri National Recreational River
Water Trail, a water trail that runs from below Gavins Point
Dam west of Yankton down to Sioux City, Iowa. This 79-mile
trail covers the Missouri National Recreational River down
to Ponca, Neb., plus the extended reach from Ponca to Sioux
City. For more information, visit www.mnrrwatertrail.com.
For more information on all of Yankton’s trails, visit
www.seeyanktonsd.com. You can also check out a
description of the trails on the center map of this
publication.
46 – VISITORS GUIDE • YANKTON, SOUTH DAKOTA