Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In addition to hiking and biking, the forest allows cross-country skiing, snowmobiling and snowshoeing during the winter. Go: 1 Coursen Road, Sandyston. Apshawa Preserve, West Milford
The South Mountain Fairy Trail is a half-mile hiking path in the South Mountain Reservation in Millburn, New Jersey, named as such due to the many miniature "fairy houses" along the path. [1] [2] The trail is part of the mile-long Rahway Trail. [3]
The Batona Trail is a 53.5-mile (86.1 km) hiking trail through New Jersey's Pine Barrens.The trail is one of the longest in the state, behind the Delaware and Raritan Canal Trail, the section of the Appalachian Trail within the state, the Liberty-Water Gap Trail, and the completed section of the Highlands Trail in the state.
They range in height from 900 to 1,200 feet (270 to 370 m) in New Jersey, and 900 to 1,400 feet (270 to 430 m) in New York. Several parks and forest preserves encompass parts of the Ramapos (see Points of interest, below ), and many hiking trails are in the Ramapos, including sections of the Appalachian Trail , which is maintained and updated ...
The trails at the Loantaka Brook Reservation are divided into three separate micro-trails. The first portion, known as the Yellow Blaze Trail, starts at the South Street entrance near the horse stables, and continues south until Kitchell Road. The Yellow Blaze section is unique in that it consists of two separate trails that run side-by-side.
If you're looking for a new perspective, a road trip to a lush lookout point in New Jersey may be right up your alley. From lush forest views to spectacular city sights, 6 NJ scenic overlooks you ...
In 1976, the majority of Ryecliff's area was conveyed, by the trustee of the MacEvoy estate, to the State of New Jersey to become what is now the "Ramapo Mountain State Forest". The state forest built a network of hiking trails with the help of the New Jersey Youth Conservation Corps in 1978, some of which are still in use today.
Many of New Jersey’s big trees have been found in residents’ backyards. The Big Tree Conservation Program began in the 1930s, according the Department of Environmental Protection website.