New York's
"Gorge"ous Canine Hikes
Several times in its history all of New
York has been covered completely in glaciers one mile thick.
These ice sheets did not melt gently like cubes in your summer
lemonade. Instead, the glaciers died an angry death - clawing
and scraping and gouging the land as they retreated. Their handiwork
can be seen in the Finger Lakes, 11 elongated parallel lakes
in the center of the state. Surrounding the lakes are hundred
of gullies and gorges, seven of which have been developed as
New York state parks. Much of the work building trails and overlooks
in these parks was done during the Great Depression of the 1930s
by the Civilian Conservation Corps, the "tree army"
put to work by President Franklin Roosevelt.
Most of these gorge trails are closed
in the winter and often the ice lingers in the cool shadows of
the gorge walls into May so this is a good time to consider visiting
with your dog. Gorges can be dangerous places to hike (the Ithaca
Fire Department has many a sad tale to tell of a gorge rescue)
but stay on marked trails and don't cross barriers where trails
are closed and you will be fine. Here is a survey of the the
seven Finger Lakes gorge parks:
WATKINS GLEN STATE PARK (Franklin Street/Route
14 in town of Watkns Glen at south shore of Seneca Lake)
Let's start with the most famous and least appealing for your
dog - Watkins Glen. Watkins Glen is the only gorge your dog cannot
hike through. Dogs are allowed on the South Rim Trail
and Indian Trail above but views are few and far between.
Watkins Glen was the first gorge to open when newspaperman Morvalden
Ells received permission to charge admission to the series of
wooden walkways and bridges built for workers to access a mil
in the glen. The grand opening was July 4, 1863. History buffs
might recognize that date as one of America's most important.
On that day Lee's invasion of the North was stopped at Gettysburg,
insuring the South would never win the Civil War and at the same
time the critical river town of Vicksburg, Mississippi was surrendering
to Ulysses S. Grant, winning the West for the Union. Chances
are the opening of a private concession in a New York gorge was
not front-page news.
LETCHWORTH STATE PARK (Exit 7, Mount
Morris) off I-390)
The biggest and most popular of the parks is a bit west of Conesus
Lake, the westernmost of the Finger Lakes. The Genesee River
attracts plenty of spectators to gawkat its hydrospectaculars
in the "Grand Canyon of the East" so, if you can, come
early with your dog to hike the Gorge Trail. You can certainly
escape the crowds on the park's more than 70 miles of trails
behind the museum on the Mary Jemison Trail where you'll
learn about the woman kidnapped by marauding Seneca Indians as
a child who the lived more than 70 years among the Iroquois.
In the northern expanse of the park, around the cmapground, are
several isolated trails that lead to gorge views.
BUTTERMILK FALLS STATE PARK (Route 13 south of Ithaca)
Buttermilk is the shortest, narrowest and most intimate of the
gorges. You will feel like you are being squeezed through the
gorge with the water as you lead your dog into this chasm. Ther
eis only one rim trail, on the north side and it climbs steeply
to complete your loop. The plunge basin of Buttermilk Falls is
a fine place for a doggie swim if the pool is not open.
ROBERT H. TREMAN STATE PARK (Route 327
off Route 13, west of Ithaca)
This is the biggest canine gorge hike with the Gorge Trail
and both rims trails clocking in at about two miles. The park
is named for New York banker Robert H. Treman and Buttermilk
Falls in the 1920s. This spot in Enfield Glen was Treman's favorite.
He served as the first Finger Lakes state park commisioner in
1924 and helped shape these public treasures. At Treman you will
probably enter in the Upper Park and I would suggest taking the
Rim Trail down Enfield Glen, rather than plunging right into
the gorge. Delaying your pleasure does two things: one, you will
be hiking through the gorge upstream that affords longer views
of such cataracts as the 120-foot Lucifer Falls and two, your
dog will be going down the amazing Cliff Staircase instead
of trudging up it. Dogs are not allowed in the swimming area
in Enfield Creek but she can slip in for a refresher from both
sides on the Gorge Trail and the Rim Trail, which
gives you an idea of the ups and downs waiting for you on the
rim.
FILLMORE GLEN STATE PARK (Route 38, south
of Moravia)
The park is named for the 13th President of the United States,
Millard Fillmore, who was born in a log cabin about five miles
from here. Fillmore was the first unelected President, ascending
to office when Zachary Taylore died mid-term. Filmore then served
without a Vice-President of his own, the only chief executive
to do so. After taking the Gorge Trail through this pretty
glen, the favored return route is on the North Rim Trail
that rolls through a rich hemlock forest. The South Rim Trail
mainly connects picnic areas.
TAUGHANNOCK FALLS STATE PARK (Route 89,
north of Ithaca)
This park is the opposite of its gorge park sisters - the Gorge
Trail here is the gentle, benign hike. So easy in fact, that
it remains open all year long. Only 3/4-mile through a flat,
wide opening between 400-foot walls, your destination is 215-foot
high Taughannock Falls, the second highest single-drop waterfall
in America east of the Rocky Mountains and three stories higher
than Niagara Falls. The two rim trails can be combined for a
sporty canine hike of about an hour.
STONY BROOK STATE PARK (I-390 Exit 4
south on Route 38)
Stony Brook glen was developed as a resort in the late 1800s
- you can still see the massive concrete supports in the gorge
from a high railroad brdge that once brought tourists to a train
station where the campground is today. Your dog will be going
about one mile into the gorge, passing three major waterfalls
along the way.
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