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The Ozark Trail had its beginnings in the 1970s when a group of public land managers, land owners, and trail users met to discuss the concept of a long-distance hiking trail. A comprehensive state outdoor recreation plan prepared by the state of Missouri in 1975 showed a need for an addition of 500 to 900 miles (805 to 1,448 km) of hiking trails.
Classic T-bar shoes by Start-rite (known as Sonnet in the United States). A T-bar sandal or T-bar shoe (also known in the United Kingdom as "school sandal" or "closed-toe sandal") is a closed, low-cut shoe with two or more straps forming one or more T shapes (one or more straps across the instep passing through a perpendicular, central strap that extends from the vamp).
Ozark Trail may refer to: Ozark Trail (hiking trail), a hiking and backpacking trail in Missouri; Ozark Highlands Trail, a hiking and backpacking trail in Arkansas; Ozark Trail (auto trail), an early network of locally maintained roads and highways; Ozark Trail (brand name), a private-label brand name owned by Walmart
The park is traversed by the Ozark Trail, a popular long-distance hiking trail that passes Rocky Falls and crosses the Current River on Highway 106 at Powder Mill. The park has resident feral horses and elk have been reintroduced on state lands nearby and are expected to eventually populate the park.
In 2002, it created the first "shoftshell" shoe made with Schoeller fabric. In 2004 "Gryptonite" ultra-sticky rubber was introduced, and in 2005 PRFRM thermo-moldable foam was introduced in the Molokai and Molokini flip flops, Enduro-Soles, and rock climbing shoes; Gryptonite rubber was extended to trail running shoes; Hardrock was introduced. [4]
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