New Mercer County Hike Honors ‘Poor’ History 

Mercer County leaders have repurposed 23 acres of woodland, once used for forestry research, into a recreational area. And its two miles of trails offer more than hiking. They also have a lot of history and learning opportunities.

Mercer County leaders have repurposed 23 acres of woodland, once used for forestry research, into a recreational area. And its two miles of trails offer more than hiking. They also have a lot of history and learning opportunities.

Jessica Lilly
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
A bridge covers a small creek along the Gardner Trails in Mercer County.

The trailhead of the Gardner Center’s network of hiking trails is located less than a mile off of Interstate 77 at exit 14. The property was once used as a U.S. Forest Service’s Forestry Sciences Laboratory.

“The foresters just like to get out in the woods,” Mercer County Commissioner Bill Archer said. “Since it was a federal government entity, you know, they spared no expense as far as rock lining all the trails out through there that are open.”

While the trail in the forest had a good foundation, Archer said the county still had to work to prepare the site for the public. The county worked to clear debris, modernize some of the signs found along the trail identifying some of the trees and soften the rock lined paths.

“We had a lot of excess wood, and we leased a wood chipper and ground [the wood] into wood chips, and my late wife recommended that we put that on the trails,” Archer said. “If we had them we might as well use them to make a nice soft trail to walk, on and it’s very safe.”

The site also has a building, once used by the U.S. Forest Service; it’s the only building in the country dedicated to honor President John F. Kennedy before he was assassinated.

Jessica Lilly
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Mercer County worker Everett Cole built the new horseshoe pits from excess wood along the trail.

Jeff Palmer takes care of the trails.

“I think, probably around 1911,” Palmer explains standing by the Poor Farm Cemetery trail head, “the county acquired this property, and it became what was called the Mercer County Poor Farm. People who could not support themselves for one reason or another, they ended up here. And what happened was when people would pass away, they were buried in the cemetery up here, which is now called the Poor Farm Cemetery.”

Along the right side of the trail is a set of horseshoe pits. Once overgrown, they are now restored for additional recreational use. The pits around the old iron pegs were also made from excess wood while clearing the trails.

“Here in southern West Virginia, that seems like the route,” Palmer said. “Recreation is a big thing now, and so as many [recreational] opportunities that we can offer to anybody, we try to take advantage of that opportunity.”

There are also picnic tables, disc golf and even brief botanical lessons available to visitors.

Along the hike are rectangular signs strategically perched in front of trees and elements of the forest.

“This right here is one of my favorite trees, that’s the black gum,” Palmer said. “The way I can tell it’s black gum is by the bark. The chunks of gum protrude out so far.”

Jessica Lilly
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Along the Gardner Hike Trails, trees and forest elements are labeled with a rectangle sign.

At one time, the forest was used to highlight the timber and types of woods that could be used for furniture after World War II. Hikers can find even more information by logging onto the website, even while they hike.

“A lot of history here and we’re working to preserve that history,” Palmer said. “When we have hikers coming up here, we encourage them to go onto our website and as they hike, they can just look at the history of this whole place.”

The interactive map and other details are available at their website.

The Mercer County Commission is working to connect another section of trails. Palmer expects the section will be open before spring 2023.

Jessica Lilly
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Jeff Palmer stands at one of the trail access points.

Tourism Progress Stalled By Landownership In Southern W.Va. 

The hope for the Great Eastern Trail is to relieve some of the foot traffic on the iconic Appalachian Trail which hosts about three million visitors each year.

In 1948, a hiker named Earl Shaffer came up with the idea of an alternative to the Appalachian Trail (AT). It would be a trail that stretches from the deep south to New England, just west of the AT. It wasn’t until 2007 that the Great Eastern Trail Association was created and parts of the trail started to open up to hikers. But when hikers get to southern West Virginia, they find a trail that is incomplete.

Still, in 2013 Joanna “Someday” Swanson and “Hillbilly” Bart Houck completed the first thru hike of the Great Eastern Trail (GET).

“A new trail system like this just doesn’t pop up every year,” Houck said before attempting the hike. “To actually try to be one of the first to hike this trail and to showcase it and to bring it into light is actually a very humbling experience.”

The hope for this trail was that it would relieve some of the foot traffic on the iconic Appalachian Trail which hosts about three million visitors each year.

“It also is going to be an economic boost for this area that needs a boost other than coal,” Houck said. “I’m not against coal. Actually, I have a lot of friends that are in the coal industry. But this is a way to showcase southern West Virginia in a different light.”

Nearly a decade later, what is the impact of the Great Eastern Trail in southern West Virginia?

Back Out On The Trail 

Tim McGraw is president of the TuGuNu Hiking Club, which maintains and promotes the Great Eastern trail in southern West Virginia. McGraw got involved with the project because of his love for the experience of being outdoors in southern West Virginia.

Jessica Lilly
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Tim McGraw along the Great Eastern Trail in Mercer County.

“I like to be out in nature, particularly I like to be up on the ridges in southern West Virginia,” McGraw said. “For me, it’s kind of a spiritual experience. To be in the woods, I just want to share what I feel when I’m in nature. I want to share that with other people.”

The GET runs from Alabama to New York west of the Appalachian Trail, but portions of it are incomplete, especially in southern West Virginia. McGraw says the biggest challenge to completing the trail here is private land ownership. Trailblazers tried to keep the trail on accessible land by mapping it to connect public lands. Those lands include R.D. Bailey Lake Wildlife Management Area, Bluestone State Park and Twin Falls Resort State Park.

Scott Durham worked as superintendent of Twin Falls State Park in Wyoming County for 42 years.

“We let them co-designate some of our existing trails at Twin Falls as pieces of the Great Eastern Trail,” Durham said. “That designation has gone away, not because they’re not welcome, but because they’ve just been inactive.”

The proposed route for the Great Eastern Trail inevitably crosses private property to reach public lands like Twin Falls. According to a study from 2013 Wyoming County has the highest concentration of outside land ownership of any county in the state. In fact, Durham says Twin Falls was donated to the state by a private company,

“All the land around three quarters of the boundary of Twin Falls is corporate land,” Durham said.

Corporate landowners have a reason for not granting access to hikers – liability. For Durham and many residents in southern West Virginia, it’s a familiar story.

“I have worked in southern West Virginia for my whole career,” Durham said. “I’ve been involved in any number of economic development efforts, the real hard part of trying to create economic development in southern West Virginia always comes back to having access to buy land and own land.”

Durham says the Great Eastern trail would mean more than economic development to the region.

Jessica Lilly
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WVPB
Great Eastern Trail in Mercer County

“It brings a stamp of approval too,” Durham said. “If you go to someplace in Virginia, North Carolina, and they say well, ‘the Appalachian Trail runs right through here. That gives you an image of what that place is and the quality of the outdoor experience at that place.”

“It’s gonna bring hikers but it’s gonna bring other people too because it’s part of the package of what people are looking for when they’re going outdoors.”

There is a way around the roadblocks. Private landowners could open their land to hikers and the state could take on the liability. That’s how the nearby Hatfield McCoy ATV trail system was made possible. For now that’s not happening for the Great Eastern Trail.

If somehow hiking clubs found a way to complete the GET in southern West Virginia, what would a completed trail do for the economy in southern West Virginia? Well, there’s a hint at what’s possible further down the trail in Narrows, Virginia.

Welcome To The General Douglas MacArthur Hotel 

The General Douglas MacArthur Hotel was purchased by Narrows native Alan Neely in 2008.

Jessica Lilly
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Allen Neely stands at the front door of the General Douglas MacArthur Hotel in Narrows, Va.

He has an award winning mustache and a passion for his hometown.

“Narrows Virginia is a National Trail town, because it’s the only town in the United States where two major hiking drills trails? intersect,” Neely said. “The Great Eastern Trail and the Appalachian Trail intersect on top of that mountain.”

After working as the lead construction contractor at Virginia Tech, he retired and rescued this historic hotel from demolition. Now about a quarter of his business is hikers.

“They’re (hikers) actually from all over the world really,” Neely said. “We had people from Brazil and Britain and Spain. They come through and they go back to their hometowns wherever it might be and tell of the little town that they love. You know, we’ve even had some people that hike through here, and they’ll come back and buy houses to move here. I mean, not one or two. I mean several.”

The vision for many coal and railroad towns in southern West Virginia also includes restoring a historic hotel or building and growing a tourism industry.

Jessica Lilly
/
WVPB
Allen Neely in the lobby of the General Douglas MacArthur Hotel.

So what will it take to get the Great Eastern trail completed in West Virginia? Scott Durham says to start, it’ll take initiative.

“There needs to be people who step up,” Durham said. “But there are serious hikers here. It may just take that one person who cares.”

The state did create the first non motorized trail authority cooperating with private landowners in 2019. The Mountaineer Trail Network Recreation Authority is meant to highlight the best of northern West Virginia’s trails for biking and boating. The authority represents 15 counties in the northern part of the state.

Mon EMS Joins Forces With Mountaineer Area Rescue Group

Mon EMS and the Mountaineer Area Rescue Group (MARG) are combining resources to improve emergency medical service access to remote areas.

Monongalia EMS and the Mountaineer Area Rescue Group (MARG) are combining resources to improve emergency medical service access to remote areas.

After nearly 18 months of planning Mon EMS, in Monongalia County, has forged a partnership with MARG to improve patient care.

MARG and Mon EMS will combine emergency medical services with wilderness search and rescue skills using state of the art medical equipment to reach people who are hurt or sick in remote places like Mason Dixon Park, Coopers Rock State Forest, Snake Hill Wildlife Area and the headwaters of Cheat Lake.

Mon EMS Executive Director Forest Weyen said the two agencies will still remain separate entities.

“Our folks are trained professionals that are on an ambulance and are typically used to dealing with folks in their homes and along roads, not necessarily real far out in the wilderness,” he said.

Weyen said when someone gets hurt in an area or off a trail that is not easy to access, Mon EMS is limited in its ability to respond.

“What ends up happening is our folks are lugging equipment out there,” he said. “We might not have the full spectrum of equipment that those folks might have, water resources, compass, GPS – all those kinds of things.”

The partnership came about after both departments realized there was a need to figure out ways to solve problems before they happen.

Weyen said the two agencies were looking for ways to improve and subsequently identified there is a potential for emergency care to get delayed.

Mon EMS will provide training and competency for the Mountaineer Area Rescue Group.

“They will come to some of our training, our medical director and our clinical team will find them all such providers, these folks are West Virginia licensed EMS providers already, somewhere,” he said.

Weyen called it a “truly symbiotic” relationship. While MARG will benefit from state of the art medical equipment, personnel and first responder resources, in return they will provide land navigation, map reading and other critical skills that will help Mon EMS better handle emergencies in remote outdoor areas.

“The best thing about it is that the patients who live, work and play in Monongalia County, and certainly people in those super remote areas out in the wilderness somewhere, they’re going to have proper EMS care if and when they need it,” he said.

New Trail Offers Quick Hike Just Off I-77

Southern West Virginia has new hiking trails located just minutes off of Interstate 77. The trailhead to the Gardner Center's hiking trails is located less than a mile off of exit 14, or the Athens exit, just behind the former U.S. Forestry Service Building.

Southern West Virginia has new hiking trails located just minutes off of Interstate 77.

The trailhead to the Gardner Center’s hiking trails is located less than a mile off of exit 14, or the Athens exit, just behind the former U.S. Forestry Service Building.

The building currently houses the Mercer County Commission and business space. Remnants of the Forestry Service educational resources remain in the building. Some of this includes a display where visitors can try to identify a tree’s bark.

Outside, the site includes about 23 acres of woodland area, once used for forestry research.

The trails offer a little more than a mile of hiking and are said to take about 20 minutes total to cover. Employees developed a series of rock-lined trails when the building was constructed. Now those six trails are available for visitors to traverse. The Mercer County Commission has also preserved a list of trees to help visitors identify local species while on the short hike including:

  • American Chestnut
  • American Holly
  • Black Cherry
  • Black Gum
  • Black Locust
  • Black Oak
  • Chestnut Oak
  • Crabapple
  • Eastern Hemlock
  • Eastern White Pine
  • Hawthorn
  • Hophornbeam
  • Mountain Laurel
  • Northern Red Oak
  • Poison Ivy
  • Red Maple
  • Red Pine
  • Red Spruce
  • Rhododendron
  • Scarlet Oak
  • Scotch Pine
  • Shagbark Hickory
  • Sweet Birch
  • Yellow Poplar

The Gardner Center Trails include easy and moderate options. Hikers should check the Mercer County Gardner Center website to verify accessibility.

Wildlife Education Center Opens With Guided Hikes, Exhibits

Guided hikes, exhibits and interactive programming will greet guests during the grand opening of the Claudia L. Workman Wildlife Education Center, officials said.

Guided hikes, exhibits and interactive programming will greet guests during the grand opening of the Claudia L. Workman Wildlife Education Center, officials said.

The event on June 4 is being hosted by the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources and the Forks of Coal State Natural Area Foundation. Those who attend the free event in Alum Creek can tour the 9,500-square-foot (883-square-meter) building, explore the 102-acre (41-hectare) property and attend shows presented by the West Virginia Raptor Rehab Center, the the Division of Natural Resources said in a statement.

“We’re looking forward to having everyone come out and experience all that we have to offer, including ‘Touch a Snake’ and ‘Bird ID’ activities,” said Ashley Anderson, the agency’s park activities coordinator.

The opening fulfills the vision of the center’s namesake, Claudia Workman, whose husband donated the land in 2015 so a nature-based education center could be built.

The center has five main areas that include an introduction to Forks of Coal State Natural Area, an aquarium and reptile exhibit, a wildlife manage area, a habitat management area and a wildlife observation area. It will be open Tuesday through Saturday beginning on June 7.

New River Gorge National River Gets National Grant to Promote Outdoor Recreation

The New River Gorge National River in West Virginia will receive a grant to bolster a partnership aimed at getting local residents involved in recreational activities. 

The National Park Foundation on Wednesday announced 20 grants to enhance the country’s national trails and wild and scenic rivers. The grants totaling more than $500,000 are in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the National Trails and National Wild and Scenic Rivers systems.

In southern West Virginia, the Get Active in the Park program provides free, beginner-level instruction in outdoor activities such as yoga, rock climbing, paddle boarding, hiking and fly fishing.

The program is a partnership between the nonprofit group Active Southern West Virginia and the region’s national parks.

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