1 the north country national scenic trail its blue blazes someday will stretch 4,600 miles from new...

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1 The North Country National Scenic Trail Its blue blazes someday will stretch 4,600 miles from New York to North Dakota.

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1

The North Country National Scenic Trail

Its blue blazes someday will stretch 4,600 miles from New York to North Dakota.

Already half-finished. The NCT will become America’s longest hiking trail,

dwarfing the Appalachian, Continental Divide and Pacific Crest Trails.

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National Park Service

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North Country Trail Association

The trail links 10 national forests and shows old growth giants in the Chippewa National Forest in Minnesota...

…or dark cedar swamps in Upper Michigan’s Hiawatha National Forest.

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Throughout its length, the trail encounters

Historicand

familiarlandmarks

Some examples…

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Fort Stanwix National Monument in Rome, NY, and three other national park areas…

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Dayton Aviation Heritage National Park and Wright Brothers Memorial in Ohio

Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore in the Upper Peninsula

…and the Saint Croix National Scenic River Waterway in Wisconsin, made up of the Namekagon (left) and the Saint Croix Rivers.

The trail links many other historic and scenic landmarks.

Among them…

12McConnel’s Mill in Pennsylvania

13Miami Canal in Ohio and the Erie Canal in New York State

In Michigan, Fort Custer National Cemetery…

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…the Showboaton the Flat River here in Lowell, site of the Association’s national headquarters…

Covered bridge in Fallasburg Park in Ada Township

17Fort Michilimackinac on the Straits of Mackinac

Father Marquette National Memorial in St. Ignace

19AuSable Lighthouse in the Upper Peninsula

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Flora and Fauna add spice for the trail’s hikers..

21Chipmunk peers warily out of his lair.

22Suspicious snake risks a look from its hiding place.

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Wild columbine,a showpiece of the Northern forests.

Showy lady slipper along the trail in Michigan’s Wilderness Park.

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Mushroom breaks through an acorn-littered sod…

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…and shelf fungi cling to an hospitable oak.

It’s late Spring along the trail in the Lower Peninsula: the season for Canada geese to introduce their offspring.

The Manistee River is a premier trailside habitat, a fine spot for spotting a Bald Eagle on patrol high above the River…

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…or a dying Salmon that had come up the River to spawn.

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Enormous White pine in Taquamenon State Park would provide enough lumber for five houses.

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Starting from the East

In New York State

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The current Eastern Terminus: Crown Point, NY, on Lake Champlain.

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Along the present route in New York State, the spectacular Watkins Glen State Park is one of the reasons the trail was named the North Country National Scenic Trail.

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Much of the route, like this section in Hoffman’s Notch, follows the Finger Lakes Trail.

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Next: the Northwest Corner of Pennsylvania

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Blue blazes mark the trail throughout as here where it crosses into Pennsylvania.

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View of Kinzua Creek from the North Country Trail in the Allegheny National Forest.

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Through hikers can overnight at our cabin in Davis Hollow State Park.

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Ohio

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Old Man’s Cave State Park, a favorite stopover on the Buckeye Trail section of the North Country Trail.

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Two sections of the Wayne National Forest mark the southernmost portion of the Buckeye Trail section.

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An abandoned railroad bridge provides a crossing in northern Ohio.

43This is actually a modern bridge, built by Ohio trail volunteers.

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Michigan has the

most completed

miles

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Downtown Lowell, site of the North Country Trail Association’s national headquarters, marks the approximate halfway point between New York and North Dakota.

Out on the trail, Winter doesn’t stop

activity.

…or on foot.

Whether on snowshoes…

There’s warm shelter in the old Birch Grove School near White Cloud.

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The historic schoolhouse, built in the lumbering era and restored by the Western Michigan Chapter, serves as an overnight stop, training facility and jumping off point for many favorite day hikes along the trail.

50Back on the trail, along Highbanks Lake in Newaygo County…

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…and Conlon Lake, another among the scores of lakes in the Manistee National Forest, visited by the trail.

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Farther north, bench in the High Rollaways section, high over the Manistee River Valley, was built by volunteers…

…and this is their view of the River.

54The route finds peaceful wetlands in the Lower Peninsula…

…and enters the Valley of the Giants in the Pere Marquette State Forest.

The valley was never logged and quite wet so the giants survived Michigan’s great forest fires in the early 1900s.

The valley is populated mostly by old growth red and white pines and this one giant oak. Foresters estimate its age between 500 and 600 years.

58Farther north still, the trail winds high above the Jordan River…

…and reaches Wilderness State Park in the farthest northwest corner of the Lower Peninsula…

…where it meets Lake Michigan at Sturgeon Bay.

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Upon arriving at the Straits, walking across is permitted just once per year, on Labor Day. For other times, there is a bus.

62The stretch through Pictured Rocks is a favorite among trail hikers.

Too old for the Lake Superior’s big bluffs? Not this veteran hiker.

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Throughout its 320-mile, East to West width, the Upper Peninsula abounds in exciting waterfalls.

65Overlooking Rob Falls in Presque Isle County.

66Sandstone Falls carves a path in the Hiawatha National Forest.

67The Black River is punctuated by falls on its way to Lake Superior.

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The Presque Isle River’s final plunge before emptying into the big lake.

Overlook Falls in Porcupine Wilderness State Park.

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And, of course, mighty Taquamenon Falls, Michigan’s patriarch.

71Two last vistas in Michigan: the Porcupines’ Lake of the Clouds…

72…and the shore of Lake Superior.

The trail heads westward for 200 miles in northwestern Wisconsin. More than 120 are finished and ready to hike.

As in the UP, trailsides in Wisconsin abound in quiet lakes and rushing rivers. Atop, a resting place along a lily pond. At left, the path skirts Upton Lake in the Iron County Forest.

The route also brings the gift of solitude and the evening hush at Morris Pond…

…and follows the Brule River into Minnesota.

In Minnesota, much of the NCT follows the existingSuperior Hiking Trail along the big water and the Kekekabic Trail heading into the Boundary Waters.

Another rushing river, the St. Louis in Jay Cooke State Park greets the North Country hiker.

Trail passes Lake Itabasca, source of the Mississippi River.

Once clear of the Border Route, the Itasca-Moraine section offers rocky challenges on the way to North Dakota.

With 223 miles complete, the trail in North Dakota is just about half finished.

Prairie, grasslands and man-made lakes describe most of the trail in North Dakota.

Fields of sunflowers, waving in the wind, display their blooms along the trail.

The lakes and sloughs dotting the prairie and grasslands provide ample habitat for wildlife as here at Lake Audubon.

The trail’s western end…for now.

The trail is being constructed by the volunteers of the North Country Trail Association.

A trail crew from the Western Michigan, one of 25 chapters and nine affiliate hiking organizations creating and maintaining the North Country Trail.

Like this trail crew from the West Michigan Chapter.

Most of the construction is accomplished with hand tools. Crosscut saws are a favorite even with big logs because U.S. Forest Service rules prohibit the use of chain saws except by certified sawyers.

A significant number of these certified sawyers are women who have completed the Forest Service’s rigorous training program.

Volunteers not only have to build trail but clean up and repair it like in this flood aftermath project...

…or removing eyesores from the trail side like this junker tossed into a ravine in the Lowell State Game Area.

Yet the volunteers persist, even building a bridge through a driving rain storm.

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Partnerships

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NCTA affiliates:

In New York:• Finger Lakes Trail Conference

In Pennsylvania:•Rachel Carlson Trails

Conservancy•Butler Outdoor Club

In Ohio:•Buckeye Trail Association•NW Ohio Rails to Trails

Association In Michigan:

•Friends of the Jordan River HatcheryIn Minnesota:

•Superior Hiking Trail Association•Border Trail Route Association•Kekekabic Trail Club•Parks and Trail Council of

Minnesota

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Source: http://www.hillsdalecounty.info/history0067.asp

Source: http://www.co.hillsdale.mi.us/hc-history.htm

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Source: http://www.hillsdalecounty.info/mapspage0002.asp

Hillsdale County, Michigan

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Lost Nation State Game Area

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Source: Michigan Department of Natural Resources

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Source: Michigan Department of Natural Resources

Source: Michigan Department of Natural Resources

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102Baw Beese Trail

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NCTA Membership

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Chief Baw Beese Chapter Members

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Your help is needed!

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Please join!

Get involved!

Have fun!

Meet some interesting folks!

Photographs by

Dave AlexanderJo Anne BaronClare CainMike DallosMatt DavisTom GilbertPaul HaanJohn HeiamDave KenyonBill MenkeRoger Meyer

Lynn Moore Corey Morse Peggy Muzzall Andrew Mytys Aaron Phipps Sharon Phipps Ryan Sim Bart Smith Candy Stackable Werner Veit Joan Young

Maps by Matt Rowbotham