Seasonal Guide · Notestone Reserve
Spring waterfalls. Summer swimming holes. Peak fall foliage. Frozen winter caves. Here's what to expect in every season — from local hosts 3 miles from Rock House.
Published: February 2026 · Updated Seasonally
Spring is the most dramatic season in Hocking Hills. The winter snowmelt and April rains push the waterfalls to their fullest flow — Old Man's Cave, Cedar Falls, and Ash Cave run heavy and fast, filling the gorges with mist and sound. The forest is actively waking up: wildflowers carpet the gorge floors in April, the canopy leafs out in graduated shades of green through May, and the air smells like cold rock and wet earth.
For waterfall photography, wildflower walks, and pure sensory immersion in the landscape, spring is unmatched. It's also the season that feels most like a discovery — the trails aren't at peak crowd levels yet, and you can have moments of real quiet even at popular destinations like Cedar Falls.
| Factor | March | April | May |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperatures | 35–52°F | 46–64°F | 56–74°F |
| Rainfall | Frequent, cold | Regular showers | Occasional showers |
| Trail Conditions | Muddy, slick | Muddy to firm | Mostly firm |
| Daylight | 11–12 hrs | 13–14 hrs | 14–15 hrs |
Spring Pro Tips from Local Hosts: Don't underestimate the mud in early April — bring real hiking boots, not trail runners. The gorge floors hold moisture for days after rain. The best waterfall shots happen 24–48 hours after a significant rain, when flow is peak but the mist hasn't fully obscured the frame. And if you visit Cedar Falls on a weekday morning in April, you may have it almost entirely to yourself.
Spring weather at Notestone Reserve shifts quickly. Mornings can be raw and grey by 8am, genuinely warm and sunny by noon, and back to a cool drizzle by late afternoon. Dress in layers you can peel, and plan to come back to the cabin for a hot tub and a fire even on days that feel too warm to need it.
Summer is peak season in Hocking Hills, and for good reason. The gorges are in full canopy shade, making midday hiking far more comfortable than you'd expect in July heat. The swimming holes — particularly the pools at Old Man's Cave and Tar Hollow — draw families and couples alike. The property is deeply green, the fireflies come out at dusk, and long evenings give you time for both a long hike and a fire.
Summer is the best season for families with kids: swimming, trails that are dry and clearly marked, the game room on rainy afternoons, and daylight until nearly 9pm. It's also peak booking season — if you're planning a summer trip, book early.
| Factor | June | July | August |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperatures | 58–80°F | 65–88°F | 64–86°F |
| Rainfall | Afternoon thunderstorms | Hot, occasional storms | Warm, drying out |
| Trail Conditions | Firm, lush | Dry, dusty in spots | Dry to firm |
| Daylight | 15 hrs | 14.5 hrs | 13.5 hrs |
Summer in Hocking Hills has real trade-offs worth knowing:
Summer Pro Tips from Local Hosts: The single best thing you can do is start your hike by 8am. The trails are empty, the light comes through the canopy in shafts, and you'll be back at the cabin with coffee before the parking lots fill. If you're visiting with kids, the game room is genuinely a great option on a 90-degree afternoon — don't feel like you have to be outside all day. And pack more water than you think you need. Seriously.
Summer evenings at Notestone Reserve tend to be the best part of the day. The heat breaks around 7pm, the fireflies come out, and the combination of a fire and a hot tub feels surprisingly right even in August. Guests who spend summer days hiking and summer evenings on the deck tend to leave saying it was the trip they needed.
Fall is the most requested season at Notestone Reserve, and for good reason: the combination of peak foliage, comfortable hiking temperatures, and the particular atmosphere of a fire-lit cabin in October is hard to replicate elsewhere. Hocking Hills sits in a deciduous hardwood forest, and the color change is genuine and dramatic — oak, maple, beech, and hickory turning in overlapping waves through October.
This is also the most competitive booking season. Mid-October weekends are the hardest dates to book in the entire year. If fall is your target, plan accordingly.
| Factor | September | October | November |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperatures | 55–76°F | 44–64°F | 33–50°F |
| Rainfall | Low to moderate | Moderate | Increasing, cold |
| Trail Conditions | Excellent — dry and firm | Firm to leaf-covered | Wet leaves — slick |
| Daylight | 12.5 hrs | 11 hrs | 10 hrs |
Mid-October weekends book out 6–12 months in advance. This is not an exaggeration.
If you want a cabin for the peak foliage window (typically October 10–20), you should be booking in the February–April window of the same year, or the prior October. Waiting until September is almost certain to leave you with nothing or choosing from whatever fell through on cancellations.
Alternatives: book a weekday stay in peak week (much more available), or target late September or early November for very good conditions with dramatically easier booking.
Fall Pro Tips from Local Hosts: September is the best-kept secret in Hocking Hills. The hiking weather is ideal — 60s and 70s, low humidity, dry trails — and the summer crowds have thinned. Early color begins and the light is golden. We tell guests who are flexible: if you can do late September instead of mid-October, you'll spend less, book more easily, and have a better overall hiking experience. Save the hot tub for a night when it drops below 50 — that combination is worth the entire trip.
Fall evenings at Notestone Reserve are what repeat guests cite the most often. The air smells like wood smoke and leaves, the temperature drops fast after sunset, and the hot tub becomes the obvious answer to the end of the day. Guests tend to stay up later in fall than any other season.
Winter is the most underrated season in Hocking Hills, and one of the most photogenic. The frozen waterfall formations at Old Man's Cave and Cedar Falls are genuinely extraordinary — ice columns, frozen curtains, and sculptural formations that only exist in January and February. The gorges are stripped of leaves and reveal geological structure that's invisible in summer. Trails are quiet, often empty on weekday mornings. And there is nothing quite like coming back from a cold gorge hike to a hot tub set against 25-degree air.
Winter requires preparation and flexibility — trail conditions can be icy, access roads get slick after snow, and some smaller waterfalls freeze entirely. But guests who plan for it consistently call it one of their favorite trips to Hocking Hills.
| Factor | December | January | February |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperatures | 25–42°F | 20–35°F | 22–38°F |
| Snowfall | Occasional | Most likely | Possible through late month |
| Trail Conditions | Firm to icy | Icy to snow-covered | Variable — can be anything |
| Daylight | 9.5 hrs | 9.5–10 hrs | 10–11 hrs |
The frozen waterfall and ice formation window in Hocking Hills typically peaks in mid-January through early February, though this varies significantly year to year with temperature patterns. You need a sustained period of temperatures below 20°F for the most dramatic ice formations. The formations at Old Man's Cave lower gorge and Cedar Falls are the most reliable. Ash Cave's hanging waterfall also freezes in hard winters.
Check local conditions and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) trail status pages before visiting for current ice and closure information.
Trail Safety: Icy gorge trails are genuinely treacherous. The stone steps and ledges that are easy in summer become serious fall hazards in winter. Microspikes are not optional if there has been recent freezing or snowfall — they're essential. Don't attempt rim trails on ice without experience and proper equipment.
Driving: Our property sits on a country road that can be slick after snow or ice. Several units have steeper driveway approaches (Austen, Hemingway, Muir, Sherwood, and Thoreau especially). AWD or 4WD is strongly recommended for winter visits. If a Level 3 Snow Emergency is declared in Hocking County, we issue full refunds — but we'd rather you make it safely than have to use the policy.
Cabin Comfort: Every unit stays warm — all have reliable heat. The hot tubs are pre-heated and perform best in cold weather. You won't be cold inside. The contrast of a frozen gorge hike followed by a 104-degree hot tub is, frankly, excellent.
Winter Pro Tips from Local Hosts: Buy microspikes before you come — not after you arrive and realize the trail is a sheet of ice. The Old Man's Cave stone steps are particularly notorious in icy conditions. Check trail status at ODNR before heading out. And: January weekday mornings at Cedar Falls are as close to a private Hocking Hills experience as you'll find. We've had guests report being the only people at the falls for an entire morning. That doesn't happen in any other season.
Winter at Notestone Reserve has a specific quality that guests either discover and love or miss entirely. The fire pit after a cold gorge walk. The hot tub water steaming in 20-degree air. Stars you can actually see without any summer haze. The cabin feels more like a cabin. It's worth at least one winter trip to understand what this place is at its quietest.
Every season has genuine strengths. Here's the honest breakdown.
| Factor | Spring | Summer | Fall | Winter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Waterfall Flow | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (ice) |
| Foliage | ⭐⭐⭐ (spring green) | ⭐⭐⭐ (full canopy) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐ (bare) |
| Crowds | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (low-moderate) | ⭐⭐ (high) | ⭐⭐ (very high Oct) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (very low) |
| Hiking Comfort | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐ (hot midday) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐ (icy trails) |
| Photography | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (waterfalls) | ⭐⭐⭐ (green) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (foliage) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (ice/snow) |
| Pricing | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (moderate) | ⭐⭐ (high) | ⭐⭐ (peak Oct) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (lowest) |
| Booking Lead Time | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (2–4 months) | ⭐⭐⭐ (3–6 months) | ⭐ (6–12 months Oct) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (weeks to months) |
| Swimming | ⭐⭐ (cold) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐ (September) | ⭐ (not recommended) |
| Cabin Ambiance | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
As the hosts, here's how we'd match our specific properties to seasons and guest types.
How far in advance you need to book depends entirely on when you want to come.
Book 4–8 weeks in advance for most weekends. Memorial Day weekend and late May book faster — aim for 2–3 months out. March is very easy to book with short lead times.
Book 3–6 months in advance. July 4th and peak summer weekends go fast — 4–6 months out is safe. Late August opens up somewhat as school schedules shift.
September: 4–8 weeks advance is usually fine. October (especially mid-month): book 6–12 months in advance — this is the hardest window to secure. November: 2–4 weeks for most dates.
December holidays book a few months out. January and February: often available with 2–4 weeks notice, sometimes shorter. Valentine's Day weekend is the exception — book well in advance.
If we had to pick one window: late April to mid-May. The waterfalls are at or near peak flow, the wildflowers are out, the forest is actively leafing in graduated greens, the hiking weather is ideal (50s–70s), and the crowds haven't reached summer density yet. It's the season that surprises people most — they come for fall foliage and discover that spring is its own extraordinary thing.
A close second: mid to late September. Great hiking weather, early fall color, the summer crowds thinning, and far easier to book than October.
Spring — specifically late March through May — is when the waterfalls run highest. The combination of snowmelt and spring rainfall pushes Cedar Falls, Old Man's Cave, and Ash Cave to their maximum flow. Cedar Falls in April after a few days of rain is as impressive as any waterfall in the Midwest.
Winter is the second-most dramatic waterfall season, but for a different reason: the ice formations and partial freezing create visual conditions that are completely different from any other time of year.
Summer waterfalls are the weakest — the dry heat reduces flow significantly. They're still worth seeing, but manage expectations if you're coming specifically for waterfall drama.
The peak foliage window in Hocking Hills is typically mid-October — often October 10–20, though it varies by a week or so year to year depending on temperatures and rainfall patterns in August and September. The change starts in late September with sumac and dogwood, builds through early October with maples, and peaks when the full hardwood canopy — oak, beech, hickory, and maple together — is simultaneously at color.
After peak, color fades quickly. By November 1 most of the leaves have fallen. But late October and early November have their own beauty — the bare canopy reveals gorge geology that's hidden in summer, and the trails are far less crowded.
Yes — more than most people expect. The frozen waterfall formations at Old Man's Cave and Cedar Falls are genuinely spectacular in January and February. The gorges in winter reveal geological features that are invisible under summer foliage. The trails are nearly empty. And the contrast of a cold gorge hike with a cabin hot tub at 25°F is one of the best things this area offers.
The caveats: icy trails are real and require microspikes, AWD or 4WD is strongly recommended for the rural road conditions, and you need to be willing to dress for cold weather and check trail conditions before you head out. But guests who come prepared consistently call winter one of their best Hocking Hills trips.
Old Man's Cave is about 11 miles from Notestone Reserve — roughly 20 minutes. We're in Laurelville at 14580 Notestone Road. Rock House is closer — just 3.1 miles (about 7 minutes). Cantwell Cliffs is 7.4 miles (15 minutes). Conkle's Hollow is 8.8 miles (15 minutes). Cedar Falls is about 13 miles (25 minutes). Ash Cave is 16 miles (28–30 minutes). Drive times may vary seasonally, especially in winter.
It depends heavily on the season and day of week. Old Man's Cave is the most trafficked destination in Ohio State Parks — on a summer or fall weekend, the parking lot fills by 10am and the main trail sees hundreds of visitors. Cedar Falls and Ash Cave are less crowded but still busy on peak weekends.
The practical solution: go early (on trail by 8am) or choose weekdays. Cantwell Cliffs and Conkle's Hollow see significantly fewer visitors than Old Man's Cave. And in January–February, even the popular trails are quiet enough that you can have long stretches entirely to yourself.
The rural roads around Laurelville can be icy and snow-covered after winter weather. AWD or 4WD is strongly recommended. Several of our units — Austen, Hemingway, Muir, Sherwood, and Thoreau — have steeper driveway approaches where this matters most.
If a Level 3 Snow Emergency is declared in Hocking County, we provide full refunds and will communicate proactively about access. If you're visiting with a standard passenger car in winter, reach out before your trip and we'll give you a current road conditions update. We'd rather you know before you come.
The natural pools at Old Man's Cave lower gorge and a few other locations are popular for wading and swimming in summer. These are not maintained swimming facilities — water depth, clarity, and access points vary. Summer is the only practical swimming season; spring water is cold and fast-moving, and fall and winter swimming is not recommended.
Check current conditions and any posted signage at the park — access rules and conditions can change.
For a first trip: 2–3 nights is the sweet spot. Day one arrival and settling in, day two full hiking (you can cover Old Man's Cave, Cedar Falls, and Ash Cave in one good day), day three a second hike and relaxed departure. Many guests who book 2 nights end up wishing they'd booked 3.
For repeat visitors or those doing serious hiking, 4–5 nights allows you to cover the full trail system at a relaxed pace and have genuine downtime. Extended stays also tend to get discounted rates — reach out and ask.
Article last updated: February 2026. Weather patterns and peak times are based on historical data and may vary year to year.
Whether you're chasing spring waterfalls, peak fall foliage, or a quiet winter escape, Notestone Reserve has 10 unique properties on 14 acres in Laurelville — 3 miles from Rock House, 20 minutes from Old Man's Cave. Book direct and save 10–15%.
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