Doggin'
Central Park During Its 150th Birthday
How many people do you reckon visit your
local park where you hike with your dog every day? 100? 200?
If a thousand people a day visit your park every day that would
be 365,000 park users a year.
Imagine if your park got 25 million visitors every year.
That's how many people go to New York's Central Park every year.
It is the most visited park in the United States. And that's
only the two-legged count. So what can you expect if you take
your dog to America's most popular park?
Everyone knows Central Park but if you have never walked through
its 843 acres chances are your image of what it looks like is
wrong. Are you picturing rock outcroppings? Rolling hills? Waterfalls
in dense woodlands? It's all part of Central Park.
The park covers 6% of the entire island of Manhattan. It would
take the better part of a week to cover all 58 miles of fottpaths
that would take you past 9000 benches and across 36 individually
designed bridges. The park is studded with 26,000 trees and a
good part of its acreage is under the water of 14 lakes and ponds.
And the genius of Central Park is that every inch of it was crafted
not by nature but the hand of man. This naturalistic appearance
is the design of architects Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert
Vaux exactly 150 years ago.
As improbable as it may seem, even with a typical 70,000 visitors
in a day it is possible to hike in relative solitude with your
dog in Central Park. The two best places to disappear with your
dog are The Rambles in the center of the park where many twisting
paths intersect under a tangle of trees and hillocks and in the
rugged northern end around Great Hill and the Ravine. Although
your dog is not allowed to swim in any of the lakes, ponds or
fountains here you can find some doggie splashing on a hot day,
including a waterfall in the stream.
Your dog will be trotting on surfaces that range from asphalt
to wood chip to dirt and even a bit of paw-friendly grass in
the Wildflower Meadow. Dogs are also allowed to share the bridle
paths int he park. Best yet, dogs can hike with you off-leash
between the hours of 9:00 p.m. and 9:00 a.m. During the day you
will find groups of dog owners congregating with dogs romping
off-leash in places like the Great Lawn and elsewhere keep a
leash in hand if you are asked to tether your dog.
One must-see in Central Park for your dog is the bronze sculpture
of Balto, dedicated to the sled dogs that drove over 1,000 Alaskan
winter miles to deliver medicines to stop a diptheria epidemic
in Nome, an epic journey that inspired today's great Iditarod
Sled Dog Race. One of 29 sculptures in the park, Balto can be
found on a rock outcropping ont he main path leading north from
the Tisch Children's Zoo.
<<Back To August 2008 Newsletter
<<Back
To Article Index
|