Hello everyone!!!
Things are going pretty good despite all of the rough weather!
The
snow took us by surprise...the largest single accumulation in my
lifetime left us unprepared, and caused us to reschedule the first hike
in the September 11th National Memorial Trail series. We had over sixty
signed up, and had just under forty come because our snow reschedule
date was Superbowl Sunday.
Still,
we had a really nice time! There was a pretty good showing, we
completed the hike, and some of us even continued to cover twenty miles!
The
Metrotrails crew was complimented by Morris County attendants brought
in by Mr. Tom Edmunds of Morris County Park Commission.
The group
segmented a bit when we hit the Hudson River Waterfront, as some of us
did all fo the piers, others did not, but in the city it doesn't matter
so much.
For February, a few things have changed, but we'll keep with a lot of the plan, then continue to move forward from there!
This
Saturday we are doing a difficult scouting hike on the Warren
Highlands Trail proposed route early in the day hosted by me. Sunday's
hike will be on High Tor and Hook Mountain hike in NY along the
beautiful Palisades.
The
following week, Feb 21, we will return to the 911 Memorial Trail
series, this time with the opposite side of the Hudson, heading down
the NJ waterfront of the Hudson to Hoboken Station.
For that, we will
take the train in to NY Penn Station, head to the subway north, then
walk across the GW Bridge as a group, visit Fort Lee Historic Park, then
follow the waterfront south. It's much different than the NY side, but
equally as interesting. When we arrive at Hoboken station, we simply
take trains back to our start destination.
It will be easier to keep people together for that one, because the route is a bit more straightforward.
If anyone wants an early out on that one, after we reach North Bergen, the light rail leads all the way to the end point easily.
On Saturday, February 27th, we will do something very different, but also part of a series we've been working on already...
The
September 11th National Memorial Trail mostly follows the East Coast
Greenway through Maryland and Delaware, but many of these sections are
long road walks. After many of our members indicated concern that most
of the Pennsylvania section of the proposed trail was simply a
designated route on paved roads, intended more for cyclists than hikers,
I started looking at the entire trail more closely.
It
turned out that at least forty days of the proposed trail route would
be mostly walking paved roads if we followed it as shown on line, but
this is of course still a work in progress.
Many of these road walks can be partially if not completely eliminated by following nearby trails.
One
such place in particular was the Maryland/Delaware border. The 911
Trail is shown superimposed on the Mason-Dixon Trail through Elk Neck
State Forest MD, but then follows large highways from there east. This
is easy to overlook, because the Mason-Dixon Trail guide is not
available on line, it is only available for purchase. While this is not
all bicycle friendly, it is the best route for hikers.
Rather
than do the 911 Trail sections 100% in order like I had originally
planned, I decided it best to jump around a little bit, because our
hikes could benefit the study altogether. The hike we will do on the
Mason-Dixon Trail passes several historic sites like pictured Iron Hill
Park, past the site of a famous battle, as well as other interesting
points. This section breaks away from the East Coast Greenway and
returns to it once more in Newark, DE.
Apart
from showcasing some of the designated 911 Trail route and a potential
alternate, this is also one of the only missing sections of the nearly
two hundred mile Mason-Dixon Trail we have never hiked. One more hike in
Maryland, one in Delaware, and then maybe three in Pennsylvania will
complete the trail for us.
The next 911 Memorial Trail hike as
scheduled will be on Sunday March 20th in Jersey City. That will also
kick off more of the Morris Canal series again.
Also mark your
calendars for our group's 19th anniversary, which is the twentieth
annual Warren Railroad hike scheduled to take place the day before
Easter, Saturday March 26th! Details to come on that!
Still
nothing new on my work schedule, so this is why you see no hikes on the
Metrotrails schedule after March (typically I'd have items posted for
the next six months). I'll report back if I get any further news.
Upcoming hikes are posted at www.meetup.com/metrotrails
Also,
everyone follow our facebook page at www.facebook.com/metrotrails for
constant photos and information on places we've visited over the past
nineteen years!
Best Regards
M'ke H
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