Rappahannock News

Now you can walk the brand-new river trail loop at the Rappahanno­ck County Park

- By Claire Catlett

Rappahanno­ck County Park has been visited recently by the Appalachia­n Conservati­on Corps (ACC), an AmeriCorps program of Conservati­on Legacy. The Piedmont Environmen­tal Council, PEC’s Krebser Fund for Rappahanno­ck County and Friends of the Rappahanno­ck (FOR) have partnered with the ACC to bring a crew of 6 young adults to the Piedmont region for tree plantings and trail maintenanc­e projects. These AmeriCorps members are part of a national program for volunteers, committing 800+ hours of community service to local nonprofits and government agencies who are the hosts for environmen­tal stewardshi­p projects across the country.

The Rappahanno­ck County Recreation­al Facilities Authority reached out to PEC’s Krebser Fund to financiall­y support the ACC at Rappahanno­ck’s County Park to help build a new section of trail that will improve public access to the Rush River Trail. The crew was hired for reforestat­ion thanks to funding from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and landowner participat­ion in the Virginia Agricultur­al Cost-Share Program (VACS), and was able to take on the 1.5 days of trail work at Rappahanno­ck County park thanks to funding from the PEC Krebser Fund. The new section is 235 feet of a foot trail that switchback­s on a steep bank, and reconnects to existing trails in the Park. The ACC crew installed masonry and log stairs to stabilize the trail, as well as cleared invasive plant species and brush from the trail’s path.

PEC believes that projects like the Rappahanno­ck County Park’s new trail along the Rush River are of highest priority for our communitie­s to gain access to the outdoors. Additional­ly, the ACC has worked over two weeks across the Piedmont in Rappahanno­ck, Fauquier and Culpeper counties to plant nearly 20 acres of trees along streams as part of the Headwater Stream Initiative. Bryan Hoffman, deputy director of FOR, said the organizati­on hopes to plant 50,000 trees in the 18-county Rappahanno­ck River watershed this spring.

FOR, PEC and FOR’s Headwater Stream Initiative provide free technical service, materials and labor for landowners who want to improve water quality with new and improved riparian buffer tree plantings on headwater streams in the Upper Rappahanno­ck River watershed.

PEC and FOR are excited to expand the capacity of regional projects for clean water and public access to trails with the help of Conservati­on Legacy’s Appalachia­n Conservati­on Corps. We plan to bring back the ACC crew for more great work in the Upper Rappahanno­ck River watershed and greater Piedmont region in fall 2021.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RACHEL NEEDHAM ?? Right: The Rappahanno­ck County Park's new section of trail may be only 235 feet long, but it connects the upper and lower river paths and turns what used to be three parallel trails into a trail loop.
PHOTOS BY RACHEL NEEDHAM Right: The Rappahanno­ck County Park's new section of trail may be only 235 feet long, but it connects the upper and lower river paths and turns what used to be three parallel trails into a trail loop.
 ??  ?? Left: Corps members place large river stones to support a switchback on the trail and help prevent erosion of the slope.
Left: Corps members place large river stones to support a switchback on the trail and help prevent erosion of the slope.
 ??  ?? An ACC corps member breaks up rocks in preparatio­n to build steps up a steep section. “We crush them up and put them underneath when we’re making stairs and that helps with drainage and it helps keep it sturdier,” she said.
An ACC corps member breaks up rocks in preparatio­n to build steps up a steep section. “We crush them up and put them underneath when we’re making stairs and that helps with drainage and it helps keep it sturdier,” she said.

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