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5 Best National Parks To Take Your
Dog
The welcome mat in our National Park
System rolls up when we drive in with our dogs. Very few national
parks allow dogs on hiking trails. In Yellowstone National Park
dogs are not allowed more than 100 feet from roads, parking areas
and campgrounds. In Yosemite National Park dogs can walk the
paved paths of the Valley floor but are not permitted on any
trail or slope. At the Grand Canyon dogs can walk along the South
Rim in developed areas but can not go on any trail below the
rim. At Zion National Park dogs are permitted on one mild trail.
And on and on. So, while most of America is making plans to visit
our national natural treasure, we dog owners must be a bit more
creative. Here are the 5 best national parks to take your dog
in America.
1. Acadia National Park Bar Harbor,
Maine
Acadia
National Park is certainly one of the crown jewels in the
National Park Service and dogs will not bark in dissent - this
is the best national park to bring your dog for outdoor adventure.
Except for the swimming beaches and ladder hiking trails like
the Precipice Trail, dogs are allowed throughout the park.
Much of your time with your dog in Acadia will be spent on its
intricate network of carriage roads. Mount Desert Island, named
by French explorer Samuel Champlain in 1604, was once the summer
playground of America's rich and famous. When John D. Rockefeller,
Jr., no great fan of the horseless carriage, visited the Maine
coast he enjoyed outings with his team of horses and open coaches.
He painstakingly directed the construction of wide, motor-free
carriage roads twisting through the island mountains. Forty-five
miles of rustic broken stone roads were eventually built between
1913 and 1940 and the hand-built byways are the best examples
of the construction technique still in use in America. In addition
to the stone roads and stone guardrails, irregularly spaced granite
slabs known locally as "Rockefeller's Teeth," there
are 16 stone-faced bridges - each unique in design.
One of the wealthy elite, George B. Dorr, devoted 43 years and
much of his family fortune to preserving the island. He offered
more than 6,000 acres to the federal government and in 1916,
Woodrow Wilson established the Sieur de Monts National Mounment.
Three years later Lafayette National Park became the first national
park east of the Mississippi River. Honoring its Acadian heritage,
the park became Acadia National Park in 1929.
Several park highlights come with little purchase for your dog.
The Jordan Pond Nature Trail is a mile-long loop leading
to views of glacial mountains reflecting in the pond waters.
The rounded mountains, known as the Bubbles, can be climbed on
short trails. Other easy hikes include the Ocean Trail
to Otter Cliffs that clings to the edge of lands' end over the
Atlantic surf and exploratory walks atop Cadillac Mountain. The
1530-foot summit is the highest point on the Atlantic Ocean north
of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and sunrise hikes here will be the
first to be illuminated in America. The Great Head Trail
loops across Sand Beach and most people go right at the head
of the loop. But going left into the maritime forest saves the
spectacular coastal views from one of America's highest headlands
until the end. All these trails are easily accessed from the
Park Loop Road and can get busy. Seek out trails across Somes
Sound - America's only fjord - in the western reaches of the
park to find fewer paw prints.
2. Shenandoah National Park Luray,
Virginia
The Blue Ridge Mountains that host Shenandoah
National Park are the oldest rocks on earth. A billion years
ago these mountains were higher than the Rockies when they were
created. Time has weathered and rounded the peaks and valley
that we see today. But what we see in Shenandoah has not been
left to the hand of nature, as we have come to expect in our
national parks.
Shenandoah is very much a planned national park. Herbert Hoover
established a Summer White House on the Rapidan River (the park
is only 75 miles from Washington DC) helping to trigger wilderness
development. During the Great Depression Shenandoah was officially
designated a national park and Franklin Roosevelt's "Tree
Army" planted hundreds of thousands of trees on slopes that
had been cleared for farms and firewood.
At the same time construction began on the 105-mile Skyline Drive
that is today the only public road in Shenandoah National Park.
Your dog is welcome at just about every stop along the way -
only 20 of the more than 500 miles of hiking trails are off-limits
for dogs. These are usually trails involving awkward passages
and rock climbs. Unfortunately one such trail is on Old Rag Mountain
that is considered by many to be the best hike on the East Coast.
But generally your dog will be able to visit the best views and
waterfalls in Shenandoah National Park.
3. Cuyahoga Valley National Park
Brecksville, Ohio
Raise your hand if you knew that America's first national park
of the 21st Century was created in..............Cleveland? To
the first people who came here 12,000 years ago the Cuyahoga
was the "crooked river." Its steep valley walls inhibited
settlement as easterners poked into the region in the late 1700s.
But a navigable water link between Lake Erie and the Ohio River
was a priority in the early American Canal Age and in 1832 the
Ohio & Erie Canal became a reality. Ohio boomed and settlers
poured into the area. The canal was put out of business by the
Great Flood of 1913 and the Cuyahoga Valley was left to recreational
purposes. The 33,000 acres along the banks of the Cuyahoga River
were protected as a national recreation area so the heavy lifting
for creating the park was done before its designation as a national
park in 2000.
As befits its history as a recreation destination, Cuyahoga
is a national park that permits dogs on its trails. It doesn't
have the feel of the grand American national parks but instead
evokes an intimate feel on the trails that are squeezed between
highways, farmlands and neighborhoods.
The main trail through the park is the nearly 20 miles of the
Towpath Trail along the route of the historic canal. Ten
trailheads make it easy to hike the crushed limestone path in
biscuit-size chunks. The trail is a mix of meadows and forests
and the remnants of locks and villages. Another long distance
trail through the park is the Buckeye Trail that circles
the entire state of Ohio for over 1200 miles. About 33 miles
of the blue-blazed pathway wander the ravines and ridges of the
valley.
Some of the best outings with your dog in the park are in the
north end of the Cuyahoga Valley, in the Bradford Reservation.
A five-mile all-purpose trail traverses the Tinkers Creek Gorge
area, exploring Ohio's most spectacular canyon. The gorge is
a National Natural Landmark, noted for its virgin hemlock forests.
Short detours off the main trail include an easy walk to Bridal
Veil Falls and the Hemlock Creek Loop Trail.
Other highlights include the dark and mysterious 2.2-mile ramble
around the Ledges (from the Happy Day camp) and a short 1.25-mile
loop through the Brandywine Gorge that takes your dog to the
lip of Brandywine Falls and 160 feet down to the water level.
4. Hot Springs National Park Hot Springs,
Arkansas
The water that bubbles to the ground at 143 degrees Farenheit
fell to earth 4,000 years ago, percolating deep into the earth
and heating four degrees every 300 feet before seeping out of
the lower west slope of Hot Springs Mountain. Spanish explorers
and French trappers visited the springs for centuries. In 1803
the United States acquired this land in the Louisiana Purchase
and in 1832 the Federal Government reserved land around the springs
- the first "national park" to protect a natural resource.
There was little done to administer the reserve, however, and
private bathhouses sprung up to cater to tourists visiting to
relax in the "healing" waters. Finally in 1921, Hot Springs became a true
National Park, a unique blend of a highly developed small city
set in low-lying, rounded mountains.
There are more than 30 miles of top-notch hiking trails available
in Hot Springs, mostly on short, inter-connecting jogs on Hot
Springs Mountain and West Mountain that flank the city. Many
of these paths were carved for visitors who were encouraged to
walk daily in addition to their baths as part of an all-encompassing
healthy routine at the spas. Most were constructed wide enough
to handle carriages and are still roomy today. Although the mountains
only top out at little more than 1,000 feet expect to find some
climbs that will leave you and your dog panting. Also, there
aren't many streams so make sure you carry plenty of cooling
water for your dog on a summer afternoon's outing.
For extended canine hiking head out on the Sunset Trail
that leaves West Mountain and tags Music Mountain at 1,405 feet
(the highest spot in the park) before doubling back onto Sugarloaf
Mountain. This trail doesn't loop and is a good candidate for
a car shuttle. Back in town you can take your dog on a tour of
Bathhouse Row with a half-mile saunter down the Promenade, vsiting
several of the 47 springs that flow at an average rate of 850,000
gallons a day.
The one place you can't take your dog in Hot Springs is in the
centerpiece bathouses but across from Bathhouse Row you can catch
a ride on a Duck Boat, an amphibious vehicle that drives south
of town for a cruise on Lake Hamilton. Dogs are allowed to ride
on the top deck.
5. Mammoth Cave National Park Mammoth
Cave, Kentucky
Not named for extinct wooly elephants but rather the length of
its passageways, Mammoth Cave
is by far the longest known cave system in the world. There may
be no traces of mammoths in the vast underground world but archeologicalists
have unearthed evidence of human occupation in Mammoth Cave from
as far back as 4,000 years ago. In the early days of the country,
Mammoth Cave was used commercially to produce saltpeter needed
to manufacture gunpowder and in 1941 the cave was protected as
a national park. In 1981, Mammoth Cave was named a World Heritage
Site.
Your dog won't be able to sniff around the 336 miles of underground
passages in Mammoth Cave but there are more than 70 miles of
trails above ground to explore in the park. A variety of leg-stretching
hikes less than two miles are available around the Visitor Center,
including the Green River Bluffs Trail that snakes through
thick woods to a promontory above the Green River. For prolonged
canine hiking head for the North Side Trails. A half-dozen
mid-length day hikes launch into the dark hollows and hardwood
forests from the Maple Spring Trailhead (North Entrance Road).
This labyrinth of trails cuts through rugged terrain that has
been left in its natural state. In the Big Woods (Little Jordan
Road), you can hike the White Oak Trail through one of
the last remaining old growth forests in Kentucky.
Along Highway 255 (the East Entrance road) is a small parking
lot for a short trail to Sand Cave. For several weeks in the
1930s, this remote section of woods was the most famous spot
in America. A local cave explorer named Floyd Collins became
trapped in the cave and the nation became fixated on the rescue
efforts that were meticulously detailed in newspapers and radio
reports. Rescuers were ultimately unsuccessful in freeing Collins
from a leg-pinning rock. The incident spawned books and a movie
starring Kirk Douglas, Ace In The Hole. The small entrance
of Sand Cave is wired off today and there is little to remind
visitors of the drama that once gripped America here.
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