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Bear Mountain and the Appalachian Trail

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Title: Bear Mountain and the Appalachian Trail


1
Bear Mountain and the Appalachian Trail
Bear Mountain Trails
  • A Proposal for Continuing
  • An Enduring Partnership

Birthplace of an Enduring Partnership
2
The enduring partnership
  • Palisades Interstate Park Commission
  • New York New Jersey Trail Conference
  • Appalachian Trail Conference
  • National Park Service

3
Proposed Outcomes
  • Establish a permanent, sustainable routes for the
    Appalachian Trail and other Bear Mt. trails
    consistent with National Scenic Trail standards
  • Restore damaged and abandoned trail corridors
  • Develop interpretive opportunities related to the
    Partnership
  • Train future generations of trail volunteers

4
A history of collaboration
  • Palisades Interstate Park Commission
  • Bear Mountain Park
  • New York New Jersey Trail Conference
  • Benton MacKaye the Appalachian Trail Conference
  • Major Welch a National Resource
  • National Park Service

5
Palisades Interstate Park Commission
  • Bi-state commission created in 1900 to protect
    the Palisades
  • Commissioners secured public private funds for
    purchase of park lands
  • Harriman donation of 10,000 acres Prison
    Commission land in 1910 included Bear Mt.

6
Bear Mountain Park
  • Bear Mountain Inn completed in 1915
  • First Appalachian Trail section built in 1923
  • Trailside Museum Ski Jump built in 1927
  • Perkins Memorial Drive and Tower built in
    1932-1934

7
New York - New Jersey Trail Conference
  • Formed in 1920 as Palisades Trail Conference
  • 83-year history of volunteers building
    maintaining trails at Bear Mountain
  • Suffern-Bear Mt. trail in 1920
  • First section of the Appalachian Trail in 1923
  • Trail Conference currently maintains 320 miles of
    trail on PIPC holdings

8
Benton MacKaye the Appalachian Trail (AT)
  • In 1921, MacKaye proposed the concept of a trail
    from Maine to Georgia as the spine of a
    continuous recreational greenbelt for east coast
    urban areas
  • PIPC holdings are an integral manifestation of
    Mackayes vision
  • Appalachian Trail Conference formed in 1925 to
    oversee the cooperative development of the AT

9
National Park Service
  • National Trail System Act - 1968
  • Appalachian Trail Park Office (ATPO) provides
    oversight of the Appalachian Trail through 14
    states
  • Land acquisition for remaining unprotected rail
    corridor begun in 1978
  • ATPO ensures resource management assistance and
    funding to the cooperative management partners

10
Major Welch A National Resource
  • General Manager of PIPC, 1912-1940
  • First chairman of NY-NJ Trail Conference
  • First chairman of Appalachian Trail Conference
  • Founded National Council of State Parks
  • Consulted with the National Park Service on park
    formation management
  • Advocated for cooperative management systems
    (agency staff/citizen volunteers)

11
Bear Mountain Trails
2003
1932
1920
12
Current Bear Mt. Trails
  • Appalachian Trail
  • Major Welch
  • Suffern-Bear Mountain
  • Others
  • 1777 East
  • Cornell Mine

Appalachian Trail section
13
Existing Design Conditions
  • Topography/Vegetation
  • Soils/Geology
  • Water Features
  • Sensitive/threatened species
  • Trails
  • Trail degradation
  • Cultural Features
  • Bear Mountain Park Use

14
Topography/Vegetation
  • Many steep slopes with open slabs
  • Vegatation changes with elevation and soil cover

15
Soils/Geology
  • Extremely thin and eroded soils in upper
    elevations
  • 1.1 billion year-old bedrock

16
Water Features
  • Intermittent streams are present
  • Springs and wetlands can be found in several
    locations
  • All water features need to be considered during
    trail layout

17
Sensitive/threatened species
  • Historical records of timber rattlesnake, fence
    lizard, rare dragonfly prickly pear
  • Natural Heritage data will be sought, surveys
    will preceed construction
  • Activities will be minimized in sensitive areas

18
Cultural Features
  • Restored Bear Mountain Inn
  • Perkins Memorial Drive and Tower
  • New Carousel
  • Picnic area at summit
  • Old roads ski jump
  • Parking areas

19
Bear Mountain Park Use
  • 1.6 million park visitors in 2003
  • Over 900,000 vehicles entered
  • Estimated 500,000 visitors to the summit
  • Estimated 200,000 visitors using the Appalachian
    Trail

20
Trail Issues
  • High Visitation
  • Trail Degradation
  • Trail User Safety

21
High Trail Visitation
  • Heavy use of the Appalachian Trail on the
    easterly side of Bear Mountain
  • Heavy use at summit of Bear Mountain
  • User unfamiliarity with woodland trail setting
    and leave-no-trace philosophy

22
Trail Degradation
  • Eroded soil
  • Loose stones
  • Trampled vegetation
  • Damaged tree roots
  • Widened treadway

23
Trail User Safety
  • Trail co-aligned with Perkins Memorial Drive
    narrow road/small shoulder
  • Conflict between heavy traffic hikers
  • Loose stones in eroding trail treadway

Appalachian Trail along Scenic Drive
24
Desired Outcomes
  • Design/build three permanent trail routes (i.e.
    AT, SBM Welch) on Bear Mt.
  • Restore natural resources of abandoned trail
    corridors (re-vegation, etc.)
  • Recruit and trail volunteers
  • Demonstrate and interpret trail building, AT
    experiences, and Partnership efforts

25
New Appalachian Trail Route
  • Create a sustainable trail route
  • Accommodate heavy trail use through proper trail
    design construction
  • Link natural, historic, cultural features
  • Increase Trail access for people with disabilities

26
What the new trail might look like
Self draining natural surface trail
Gravel surfaced accessible trail
27
What the new trail might look like
Stone retained treadway on steep terrain
Stone stairway protects adjacent vegetation
28
Resource Restoration
  • Restore damaged trail segments
  • Rehabilitate closed sections of old trail
  • Minimize erosion and run-off on all trails

After
Before
29
Increase Trail Interpretation
  • Demonstrate trail construction process
  • Interpret trail restoration process
  • Incorporate natural cultural history into
    interpretation program
  • Highlight AT hiking experience, trail etiquette,
    and leave-no-trace philosophy

30
Recruit and Train Volunteers
  • Involve volunteers in trail construction and
    resource restoration
  • Conduct public trail maintenance workshops

31
Next Steps
  • Summer 2004 Assemble local and outside experts
    for the trail design process
  • Fall 2004 Design charrette at Bear Mt.
  • Winter 2004/2005 Prepare working drawings
  • 2005 - 2010 Work cooperatively to implement
    plan
  • Ongoing Secure funding for implementation

32
Birthplace of an Enduring Partnership
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