Lake Charlotte
Houston, Texas
March 2007
Lake Charlotte is east
of Houston, Texas, along Interstate Highway 10, northeast of the Trinity
River bridge. The lake is about 1.5 miles in diameter, and has a narrow
pass through the woods connecting it to Miller Lake, Mud Lake and the
Trinity River.
First up for this report,
is a map of the area, showing the general layout and driving directions.
Originally I planned on a canoe put-in under the I-10 bridge at the Trinity
River, then paddling north to Lake Pass, and following that north to Miller
Lake and Lake Charlotte. However, the bridge access is closed off on both
sides of I-10 due to construction of a second, parallel, bridge span.
So instead, I drove north on Route 563 to Cedar Hill Park, and put-in
on the shoreline at the northeast corner of Lake Charlotte. Then we paddled
southwest to Lake Pass and Lake Miller.

The Trinity River access
at the I-10 bridge is closed on both sides:

Directions to Cedar
Hill Park:
From Houston, drive
east on I-10 to exit #810. Turn north on Route 563 and drive for 2.9 miles
to Lake Charlotte Rd. There is a road sign on the left, but it’s
hard to see because of the orientation of the sign. The landmark to look
for is a sign for a Xmas tree farm. Turn left and go 1.1 miles west on
Lake Charlotte Rd. Cedar Hill Park does not have a sign at the road. So
how do you know when you’re there? Good question. If you get to
the 90-degree right bend in the road, you’ve gone too far. The other
driveways along the road have mailboxes on them, as they are residences.
The Cedar Hill Park dirt entrance road does not have a mailbox, and it’s
across the street from a small cemetery. Once you enter that dirt park
road and curve around a corner, then you finally see a park sign. Good
sign location, eh?
Cedar Hill Park has
a restroom in the front section, and if you continue down the road you
come to a loop by the lakeshore. There is a boat ramp on the loop at a
small shell and dirt beach. Just lift up the end of the steel cable blocking
off the top of the ramp and lay it on the ground, then drive across it.
But if you don’t have much to unload, the distance is very short
from the parking, and you can just carry gear from the parking loop. There
are also picnic tables by the loop road, as well as a path running south
along the east shoreline to a public pier.
Two alternate access
sites were in consideration back along Interstate 10.
1) On the southwest
bank of the Trinity River at I-10 is a “wildlife trace” with
dirt roads on top of levees. One of these goes right up to the river,
and you could put-in there. But this starts you about a half-mile downstream
from I-10.
2) Likewise, on the
southeast bank of the Trinity River at I-10 is a public park, with a real
boat ramp, at the location of a dam. This would put you about one mile
downstream from I-10.
I made this trip with
my girlfriend, Kay, and her 85-lb. golden retriever. This dog is very
well trained, but not experienced in a canoe. We checked his behavior
out in a canoe on a small pond previously, to make sure he would behave,
before we got to deep, open water.

Photo: The happy trio
at the Cedar Hill Park put-in site, about to hit the river. My canoe is
an Old Towne Discovery 15'8". The dog did not create a problem by
being rambunctious in the canoe, although I did worry about it. He also
had his own little doggy life vest just in case he jumped in.
The water level at
the Lake Charlotte gauge this day was at about 8.5 feet. The normal water
level seems to run about 7.0 feet. You can view this gauge online at:
http://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?08067118
)
This is the typical
cypress swamp that rings the shoreline of the lakes: Just for fun, zip
around amidst the trees for a while.

This next map is cobbled
together with screen image prints from Topozone on the internet. It’s
crude, but it shows the necessary detail. The dotted red line is the course
that we paddled. You can view various maps of this area with Topozone,
here:
http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?lat=29.85656&lon=94.7321&size=m&u=4&datum=nad27&layer=DRG

Kay and Truman in the
front of the boat:

We paddled southwest
across Lake Charlotte, found the Lake Pass "channel", and weaved
through the dense trees and brush to Miller Lake.
I was surprised at
the difficulty of finding the entrances to Lake Pass and Lake Miller.
All those trees along the shoreline blend in together from a distance
and look the same – there is no obvious gap. At least it wasn't
obvious to me. I had to study the map carefully, then paddle right up
to where I thought it should be, locate the tiny opening, and then wonder
if that narrow weaving gap in the trees is really the official Lake Pass.
Lake Pass was congested
with trees, floating logs and overhanging tree limbs (with spiders!),
and was good for low-speed maneuvering and spider squashing exercise.
Here are some GPS coordinates
I captured of key intersections, which can be used to help find these
points amidst the clutter of flora. All of these coordinates are UTM format
using datum NAD-27.
Cedar Hill Park beach:
15R 03.33.945 E
33.06.179 N
Lake Charlotte / Lake
Pass intersection:
15R 03.32.645 E
33.03.985 N
Lake Pass cut to Miller
Lake:
15R 03.32.224 E
33.03.593 N
Miller Lake exit back
to Lake Pass:
15R 03.32.255 E
33.03.475 N
This photo, below,
illustrates the difficulty of finding the pass. The shore looks like a
solid line of trees and brush. But this is the actual location of the
pass from Miller Lake back into Lake Pass, and you must find it to get
off the lake and return to your launch site. So after entering Miller
Lake, turn around and study where you are, so that you’ll know how
to get back to it. The narrow pass is hidden in those trees!

This is a typical view
of Lake Pass, below, which one local fellow called Two Mile Pass: Notice
that it’s narrow, and weaves around downed trees, floating logs,
and overhanging branches. At this water level, we never touched bottom,
not even with dipping paddles.
As congested as this jungle appears, however, there was evidence that
someone has been in here with a chainsaw to remove critical obstacles.
Whoever that mystery trail-maintenance person is, deserves our thanks.
Without that, this pass would be impassable.

I was expecting high
ground somewhere along the shoreline for a picnic lunch, but we found
none - everything was just swampy water at the edges of the lakes. So
we tied-up to a cypress tree, snacked in the boat, and saved the lunch
for later when we returned to the park. The water level gauge for Lake
Charlotte was at about 8.5 feet. The normal level seems to be about 7
feet. Even Bird Island was not an island - it's underwater - there was
just a cluster of trees sticking out of the water where Bird Island should
be:

As for other boaters,
we encountered only one other canoeist, one kayaker, and a small motorboat
in the distance. Other than that, we had the lake all to ourselves for
half a day. It's quite a pretty place. There were not a whole lot of birds,
but the spectacular ones were the giant white egrets (?) deep inside the
trees, which stood out in stark contrast from the normal greens and browns.
There were also one pileated woodpecker, and numerous grayish-blue herons,
and ducks. The wildlife highlight, though, was spying a baby gator lying
atop a log (below). Fortunately, we didn’t meet mama.
I
=== The End ===