Gulf News

The quietly popular Cuyahoga Valley

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Towpath trail along the Ohio and Erie Canal in Cuyahoga Valley National Park. It’s America’s 11th most-visited national park, but it’s also a place many people have never heard of: Cuyahoga Valley National Park in Ohio.

Nearly 2.3 million people visited Cuyahoga in 2015, putting it right behind better-known parks like Glacier National Park in Montana and Acadia National Park in Maine. But if you’re not from Ohio or nearby, you’d be forgiven for knowing a lot less about Cuyahoga than you do about Grand Canyon or Yellowston­e.

And while Cuyahoga doesn’t have the dramatic features that typically draw visitors to national parks — no volcanoes, glaciers or geysers here — it does offer something that can be hard to find: an opportunit­y to immerse yourself in nature just minutes from densely populated cities.

“We’ve got this amazing, peaceful, beautiful area carved out and protected between these large urban areas, Cleveland and Akron,” said Deb Yandala, CEO of the Conservanc­y for Cuyahoga Valley National Park, which raises several million dollars a year for the park.

“I think when people hear ‘national parks,’ they think of the big Western parks,” she added. “But not everyone is going to get out to Yellowston­e or Glacier or Zion. For us to have a national park right in our backyard is amazing.”

In general the park is both also extremely safe and heavily used, despite an incident in which a shooting victim was found in the park over the July Brandywine Falls at Cuyahoga Valley National Park in Sagamore Hills, Ohio. Fourth weekend. Police described that as an isolated incident.

Cuyahoga Valley became a national recreation area in 1974 and a national park in 2000. The park has 160km of trails across 33,000 acres, including 32km of a restored towpath, perfect for biking, that follows the Ohio & Erie Canal. (The towpath was originally laid as a pathway for horses towing barges.)

ON THE AGENDA

The park is also home to restored historic farms and a large farmers’ market, both connected to the Cuyahoga Valley’s history as an agricultur­al region supplying food to Cleveland and Akron. Other activities and attraction­s include concerts, a historic railroad that offers scenic tours and a variety of other programmes. The park is often mentioned as a top spot for autumn foliage, and one of its loveliest spots is Brandywine Falls, a 65-foot waterfall.

But Cuyahoga has not always been associated with outdoor recreation and scenic beauty: The river was so polluted in the 20th century that it repeatedly caught fire, including two major fires in 1952 and 1969. News coverage of the 1969 blaze helped spur clean-up efforts. “We’re now doing kayaking on the Cuyahoga River ...,” said Yandala. If You Go ... Free admission. The Conservanc­y for Cuyahoga Valley National Park lists 100 things to do at conservanc­yforcvnp.org.

—AP

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Photos by AP

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