The Day

Hiking during a pandemic: Single file, no selfies or shared gorp

- Steve Fagin

As our small group stepped well off a narrow, winding trail earlier this week at Hartman Park in Lyme to allow an approachin­g couple to pass, the man nodded in appreciati­on.

“Greetings, fellow quarantine escapees,” he declared.

After rejoining the path, we resumed our social-distancing hiking formation: single file, spaced at least six feet apart.

Hup-two-three-four…

“If anybody gets too close, I’ll jab him with my trekking pole,” I warned, waving the telescopin­g implement around like a sword.

Welcome to the new protocols for perambulat­ing in the coronaviru­s era: No touching, no sharing gorp, no helping hands, no group selfies.

While it may be true that many officials have recommende­d the public hunker down for a couple weeks to slow the spread of COVID-19, there’s been a mixed message regarding outdoor activities. People initially were encouraged to venture out for fresh air and healthy exercise, but after throngs of self-centered, clueless college kids whooped it up on Florida beaches during spring break, and the number of new coronaviru­s cases continued to spike, authoritie­s had a change of heart.

We now are governed by a confusing, conflictin­g set of rules, further muddled by contradict­ions between a president eager to ease restrictio­ns in order to halt an economic freefall, and his medical advisers warning of catastroph­ic casualties unless everybody self-isolates.

Here in Connecticu­t, Gov. Ned Lamont ordered all non-essential businesses to shut down, starting this past Monday through April 22.

He then authorized several, seemingly reasonable exemptions for those considered too mission-critical to close, including grocery stores, pharmacies, defense manufactur­ers and gas stations. But the

initial list of those allowed to keep working also includes dog groomers, pool service employees, bicycle repair workers, liquor store owners and gun dealers. Huh? Anyway, I talked it over with my hiking companions — who included a retired emergency room physician, a nurse-turned veterinari­an and a retired pharmaceut­ical researcher/veterinari­an — and we agreed it was legally, socially and morally acceptable to hike together in very small groups of six or fewer under certain conditions:

— We would pick a locale off the beaten path to avoid big crowds, such as those that have been swarming to such popular destinatio­ns as Bluff Point and Haley Farm state parks in Groton, and Harkness

State Park in Waterford.

— We would drive separately — environmen­tally wasteful but medically advisable.

— We would maintain a safe distance from one another at all times.

— We would be especially careful not to tumble off a cliff or otherwise incur significan­t injury, because the worst thing now would be to wind up in the emergency room.

Maggie Jones, executive director emeritus of the Denison Pequotsepo­s Nature Center in Mystic, who joined us, suggested Hartman Park, and it proved to be the perfect refuge.

The 302-acre parcel on the east side of Gungy Road in the northeast corner of Lyme, donated to the town by John and Kelly Bill Hartman in 1988, is a wonderland of dense forests, steep ledges, waterfalls, streams, beaver ponds, glacial boulders, colonial-era farm vestiges and stone enclosures dating back to the 1600s.

With subsequent acquisitio­ns by the Lyme Land Conservati­on Trust of the contiguous Walbridge Woodlands and Philip E. Young preserves, the protected property now comprises 422 acres that includes some 12 miles of hiking, biking and equestrian trails.

The park also connects to trails in Nehantic State Forest,

which spreads out over 5,062 acres in Lyme, East Lyme and Salem, making it an ideal corridor for short rambles or extended sojourns. It is part of some 3,000 acres in Lyme, roughly half the entire town, permanentl­y preserved and open to the public.

Our group opted for a modest hike of about five miles that took us up and over ridges with grand views of the undulating terrain, which Maggie described as “rich and rugged.” Now in early spring, the forest has yet to fully come alive, and without leaves on the trees, we could take in broad expanses of terrestria­l contours.

Maggie kept up a running commentary of the various flora and fauna: striped winterberr­y, partridge berry, sweet fern, sweet pepper bush, umbilicari­a lichen, hairy woodpecker­s, eastern phoebes, painted turtles, peeper frogs …

During this outing of more than three hours, we encountere­d fewer than a dozen fellow hikers.

I eventually hope to revisit Hartman Park to tramp over the remaining trails, but in the meantime, until someone orders me otherwise, I plan to spend the upcoming weeks cautiously exploring other lesser-known nature areas in the region, as well kayaking in ponds, lakes and rivers. I will continue to adhere to social-distancing protocols.

Let me know if you have any suggestion­s for worthy destinatio­ns, either by adding an online comment to this column or by emailing me at s.fagin@theday. com.

Stay safe, everybody, and hike smart so authoritie­s don’t decide to shut down parks and preserves during this crisis.

 ?? PHOTO BY BETSY GRAMHAM ?? A small group steps off a winding trail earlier this week at Hartman Park in Lyme.
PHOTO BY BETSY GRAMHAM A small group steps off a winding trail earlier this week at Hartman Park in Lyme.
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 ?? PHOTO BY BETSY GRAMHAM ?? Hartman Park in Lyme
PHOTO BY BETSY GRAMHAM Hartman Park in Lyme

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