An accessible cabin for people with disabilities is available at High Cliff State Park and makes for great camping near Neenah. The cabin can accommodate up to six people and can be rented for a maximum of four nights per year. The cabin is available May through mid-October.
The family campground has 112 campsites (32 with electric and two accessible) and eight group sites. Campground hosts stay on site 58 from April through October. Pets are permitted in the family and group campgrounds.
A flush toilet/shower building is in the family campground for overnight guests. There are also several vault toilets throughout the campground. The shower building is open seasonally, usually May to mid-October.
A sanitary dump station and recycling/garbage station are available and free to use by all registered campers. There is a $10 fee for others to use the dump station.
Amazing and beautiful place for pictures or hiking or just a fun adventure day, I love this place!
This is a stunning state park in Wisconsin! The trails we took was the lime kiln trail which was super easy but so very beautiful. If we had more time we would have gone down more trails. Will be back for sure
I absolutely love this place! Beautiful for pictures, amazing hike, animal friendly, beautiful beach.
Made the 90 minute drive from home during a rare kid free weekend. This park pretty much has it all: tons of hiking from challenging for very fit people, to gentle walks, lots of playgrounds for kids, beaches for swimming (with showers), clean restrooms, plentiful parking, observation towers, history, and geography. It was an awesome way to spend an afternoon.
We started with the Lime Kiln trail. Approximately a 2 mile hike that is flat and easy if you stay on the lower portion near the water, and turns into something very challenging but spectacular if you take the upper at the base of the Niagara Escarpment. I love running the ice age trail, and this was challenging but well worth it. The face of the escarpment was majestic and something to behold.
From here we walked up the trail to the observation tower. It was a paved path, maybe a third of a mile long but up a moderate slope. The climb was worth it, the observation tower was maybe 50' tall, on top of the escarpment which affords tremendous views of the neighboring landscape and Lake Winnebago.
Lastly we took a drive up to the Indian Mound trails for a gentle walk. It was a bit underwhelming, but offered new landscape and beautiful views.
We probably only saw about a fifth of what the park has to offer. There were many more hiking trails and amenities we didn't get a chance to experience. We'll eventually be back next time we have a full day to kill.