Doggin'
Philadelphia: 10 Cool Things To See When You Hike With Your Dog
"If your dog is fat," the old
saying goes, "you aren't getting enough exercise."
But walking the dog need not be just about a little exercise.
Here are 10 cool things you can see in greater Philadelphia while
you hike with your dog.
FOLK ART
In 1855, a hotel entrepreneur built a new inn on Rex Avenue.
To draw attention to his hostelry he constructed an Indian from
old barn boards and propped it up on top of a rock overlooking
the Gorge. In 1902, when the Indian Rock Hotel was long gone
but with the silhouette still there, artist Massey Rhind was
commissioned to make a representation of a "Delaware Indian,
looking west to where his people have gone." The kneeling
warrior has gazed up the Wissahickon Gorge ever since. A switchback
trail leads to the Indian Statue where you can get close enough
to pat his knee. And take in a breathtaking view.
MONUMENTAL M0NUMENTS
The Multi-Use Trail rolls past reconstructed huts and parade
grounds that transport you back to the Revolution. The National
Memorial Arch, a massive stone tribute dedicated in 1917, stands
out along the route. The inscription reads: "Naked and starving
as they are, we cannot enough admire the incomparable patience
and fidelity of the soldiery. Washington at Valley Forge, February
16, 1778." In the southern part of White Clay, reached by
the Twin Valley Trail, is the Arc Corner Monument marking one
end of the 12-mile arc which forms the Pennsylvania-Delaware
state line, unique in American political boundary-making. The
circular divide dates to William Penn's directive of August 28,
1701, when Delaware was still a part of Pennsylvania, known as
the Lower Three Counties. A little more than 1/2 mile to the
west is another monument marking the tri-state junction of Delaware,Pennsylvania
and Maryland.
AMERICAN CASTLES
Breaking out of the woods at several points on the hilltops you
are greeted with an unparalleled view of Granogue, one of the
more spectacular of the American castles dotting the Brandywine
Valley's chateau lands.
MOVIE LOCATIONS
Flying concentric circles outward from Philadelphia, Hollywood
location scouts for Oprah Winfrey's movie project, Beloved, spotted
the Fair Hill terrain and selected it as the backdrop for the
film's rural scenes. A ramshackle 19th-century tenant farm was
constructed and much of the movie shot here. The producers decided
to leave the movie set intact, to deteriorate naturally. You
can wander among the fake buildings and even knock on the styrofoam
stones.
COOL FORTS
Where else can a dog climb into an actual battery and scan the
Delaware River where gunnery officers once aimed guns capable
of accurately firing 1,000-pound projectiles eight miles like
he can at Fort Mott State Park? Fort DuPont, named for Civil
War fleet commander Admiral Samuel Francis duPont, saw active
duty in three wars before becoming a state park. The 1-mile River
View Trail, a grassy loop path, begins in the marshland along
the Delaware River and finishes in shaded woodlands. The trail
takes you past several ruins of the military installation, camoflauged
to river traffic, and features sustained views of the Delaware
River and Fort Delaware on Pea Patch Island.
REMARKABLE BRIDGES
In the farthest northern section of Tyler State Park is the longest
covered bridge in Bucks County. The 117-year old Schofield Ford
Covered Bridge burned in 1991 but after five years of fundraising
the 166-foot, two-span crossing was entirely rebuilt by volunteers
on its original stone abutments using authentic period materials
and methods. An elaborate, reinforced wooden railroad trestle
bridges a ravine on the Glen Trail. The trail runs by a stream
under the trestle and there are sweeping views of Wenonah Woods
from the top. A walk through Brandywine Park provides a quick
lesson is the history of bridge architecture. The classical arch
form is represented in grand style with the magificent stone
viaduct across the river and numerous reinforced concrete spans.
There is even a small iron arch bridge over the mill race. A
prototypical 19th century pier and girder iron bridge transports
trains over the Brandywine. And the pedestrian footbridge across
the water, the Swinging Bridge, is a little suspension bridge
employing the same engineering principles as the mythical Brooklyn
Bridge. A floodplain is a safety valve for the release of a raging
creek's overflow. Along the Paper Mill Trail, just off the Creek
Road Trail, is an exhibit on managing these protective wetlands
that create a unique wildlife habitat. The stone double-arch
bridge next to the floodplain exhibit was built in 1847. The
fall line on the Pennypack Creek was the natural choice for fording
the creek back to Indian days. William Penn was not so patient
in waiting for the tide to take the water away each day and in
1683 he asked that "an order be given for building a bridge
over the Pennypack." Each male resident was taxed in either
money or labor to build the bridge, which, when completed in
1697, became the first Three Arch Stone bridge in America. Designated
a National Civil Engineering Landmark, the bridge over Frankford
Avenue in Pennypack Park is the oldest stone bridge still carrying
heavy traffic in America. Germantown Pike was the first road
to be started in Montgomery County, dating to 1687 when funds
were allocated for a "cart road" from Philadelphia
to the Plymouth Meeting settlement. Later extended to present-day
Collegeville, an eight arch stone bridge was built to span Skippack
Creek in 1792. An equestrian trail crosses the bridge, which
is the oldest bridge in continuous, heavy use in America. Ashland
Covered Bridge, built in the days before the Civil War; the adjoining
Succession and Flood Plain Trails visit meadow, marsh, pond and
forest landscapes. Theodore Burr built a bridge spanning the
Hudson River at Waterford, New York in 1804. He added an arch
segment to the multiple truss bridge popular at the time, attaining
a longer span. Patented in 1817, the Burr Arch Truss became one
of the most common in the construction of covered bridges. The
Larkin's Bridge, a 65-foot long, 45-ton "Burr Arch"
covered bridge erected in 1854 and rebuilt in 1881, was relocated
to the northeast section of the park in 1972. Larkin's Covered
Bridge is the only remaining legacy of Milford Mills. In 1850
Albert Fink, a German railroad engineer, designed and patented
a bridge that used a latticework of rods instead of cables to
reinforce stiffness. This construction was cheap and sturdy,
making the Fink Truss one of the most commonly used railroad
bridges in the 1860s, especially favored by the powerful Baltimore
& Ohio Railroad, Only one Fink Truss bridge remains in the
United States - an abandoned 108-foot span in Zoarsville, Ohio.
A wooden reproduction of a Fink Truss is in a field at Warwick
County Park for you and your dog to climb.
CANAL LOCK
Pennsylvania's first canal system was cobbled together in 1815
using 120 locks to stretch 108 miles from the coal fields of
Schuylkill County to Philadelphia. Railroads began chewing away
at canal business in the 1860s and the last coal barges floated
down the Schuylkill River in the 1920s. Today, the only sections
of the canal in existence are at Manayunk and Lock 60, built
by area name donor Thomas Oakes, at the Schuylkill Canal Park.
In 1985 the Schuylkill Canal Association formed to keep the canal
flowing and maintain the lock and towpath. In 1988, the area
was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
CHAMPION TREES
The Taylor Memorial Arboretum provides a 12-Tree Self-Guided
Tour. The collection is especially strong in Far Eastern specimens
and spotlights three Pennsylvania State Champion trees: the Needle
Juniper, the Lacebark Elm and the Giant Dogwood. Also on the
tour is a Dawn Redwood, an ancient tree known only through fossils
until 1941 when a botany student tracked down living specimens
in rural China. Some of the first seed to come to America resulted
in this tree. Liberated from their sun-stealing neighbors of
the crowded woods, the "King" and "Queen"
White Oaks have spread out into a massive canopy of leaves. The
"Queen" measures seventeen feet around at the thickest
part of the trunk and the "King" is closer to twenty.
The two trees are part of the "Penn's Woods" collection
of 139 trees standing when William Penn arrived to survey his
Pennsylvania colony. The arboreal oldsters reside at the last
stop of the nature trail. bacterial infection. Awbury Arboretum
in East Germantown was the summer estate of 19th century Quaker
shipping merchant Henry Cope. Across the 55 acres are plantings
of groves and clusters of trees set amidst large swaths of grss
fields in the English landscape garden tradition. You can investigate
more than 200 species, mostly native, in your informal explorations
of the grounds. Old macadam paths lead to most areas of the odd-shaped
property. Also on the grounds are wetlands surrounding an artificial
pond.
BARNS
While many of the Hospital Farm's buildings have disappeared,
the unique dairy barn remains. Built in 1914, it is shaped like
a wheel with four spokes. The fame of the hospital's dairy operation
was widespread. In 1961 alone, nine cows produced 1.1 million
pounds of milk - more than 300 pounds of milk per cow per day.The
Visitor Center is a restoration of a 1923 Sears & Roebuck
mail order barn. A century ago Sears sold anything and everything
by mail - including kits for building houses and barns. The kit,
which could cost as little as a few hundred dollars depending
on style, would include rough lumber, framing timbers, plank
flooring, shingles, hardware, sash and paint. Usually shipped
by train from the west, the barn kit would be loaded onto a freight
wagon and hauled to the building site for assembly by local carpenters.
COOL ROCKS
Forty million years ago an igneous explosion occurred underground
here and cooled very quickly leaving behind a particularly fine
granite rock. Tourists and students of geology alike made the
pilgrimmage to the Falls of French Creek to study the rock formations.
Granite quarries mined the rock and granite from Saint Peters
once received an award at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition
in Chicago as "a fine-grained polished cube, a good building
and ornamental stone." The quarries closed in the 1960s
and many pits can still be seen. Today the giant boulders in
French Creek are ideal for your dog to sramble on - or just lie
in the sun. Mountain in State Game Land #157. The mountain is
essentially a ridge of diabase boulders and the trail to the
top calls for almost continuous rock-hopping, a technique called
bouldering. The basaltic rock provides incredible traction.
And my vote for the coolest thing of all on Philadelphia trails
- the "Ringing Rocks" in Ringing Rocks Park where the
rocks ping when struck by a hammer - or thud on "dead "
spots.
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