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Summer VILLAGE: Exploring the link between unstructured outside playtime and healthy childhood development

Inside a gigantic twig nest, 5-year-old Colter Vincenti flaps his arms.

“Help me find food,” he trills.

Colter and his mom, Leora Vincenti, have come for the first time to Wildrock, a new nonprofit nature “playscape” located in northwestern Albemarle County.

“It’s pretty simple,” says Vincenti. “Kids are boiling with energy and nature can absorb it.”

By the gurgling creek that runs through the bottom of Wildrock’s 28-acre property, Colter folds his “wings” and watches the current intently.

This is just what Wildrock’s founder, Carolyn Schuyler, hoped for when she envisioned an intentional space for outdoor play. Schuyler’s background as a psychotherapist informs her organization’s mission to foster a healing connection between kids, their families and nature.

Ivy Creek's 215-acre preserve offers family programs, natural and cultural history talks, open barn days and a twice-monthly Little Naturalists program. Photo: Cramer Photo
Ivy Creek’s 215-acre preserve offers family programs, natural and cultural history talks, open barn days and a twice-monthly Little Naturalists program. Photo: Cramer Photo

“Nature is a lifelong source of resilience,” she says. “I’ve worked for many years supporting people who’ve had some kind of traumatic incident, and I’ve noticed that it really helps when they have a reservoir of happy memories in nature.”

Wildrock’s two-acre playscape was carefully designed based on the research of David Sobel, a professor at Antioch College who traveled the world looking for common themes in child’s play. He found a universal fascination for certain themes, like secret passages and caring for animals. Wildrock incorporates as many of these concepts as possible into its structures and spaces, with an aim of supporting all stages and facets of childhood development. In addition to the giant nest, kids can stage performances in the music and drama playhouse, explore, problem-solve and meditate while walking the stone-lined labyrinth, cook up make-believe meals in “Nature’s Kitchen” or retreat to the safety of a child-sized hobbit house.

But the unadorned stream is what first inspired Schuyler. After witnessing how her own kids were so drawn to playing along its banks, she thought: “All kids deserve to have a similar experience.”

“Every child should have lots of memories of being free to be themselves, to explore nature and make it their own,” she says.

Nature Deficit Disorder

In 2008, humanity reached an important tipping point; for the first time in history, more people lived in cities than in rural environments.

“Our physiology is still evolved for being in nature,” says Schuyler. “There’s a lot of research now that shows that living in urban settings is a risk factor for anxiety and depression; it’s hard on our nervous system and sets us off for symptoms.”

The consequences of decreased time in nature, especially for kids, have been documented by journalist Richard Louv, who coined the term Nature Deficit Disorder in his book Last Child in the Woods. Though not meant to be a medical diagnosis, Nature Deficit Disorder describes the increase of anxiety, inability to focus and other problematic childhood behavior he argues is associated with insufficient time outdoors.

This same concern inspires the work of Jenny Roe, professor at the University of Virginia in the department of urban and environmental planning. Roe researches the link between greenspace and mental, physical and social well-being. She has found that in addition to reducing levels of childhood obesity, access to the outdoors also improves attention and self-discipline and promotes better stress regulation.

UVA professor Jenny Roe researches the link between greenspace and mental, physical and social well-being. Photo: Dan Addison/UVA University Communications
UVA professor Jenny Roe researches the link between greenspace and mental, physical and social well-being. Photo: Dan Addison/UVA University Communications

“Kids that engage with nature in the outdoor classroom in school show improved memory recall from learning tasks outside as compared to those tasks done indoors,” Roe says. They also show improved social behavior and cooperation.

Access to digital technology changes the way children learn and develop.

“Screen time is a very stimulating input that is highly structured,” says Beverly Ingram, long-time English as a Second or Other Language teacher and founder of Go Into Nature, through which she leads workshops, classes and individual sessions in nature-based therapy.

“What nature provides is a chance for kids (and adults) to learn how to function when they’re not having stimulus coming at them that was crafted by someone else,” she says.

Not only does nature encourage creative and intuitive expression, it also balances the intensity of urban and technological overstimulation.

“Nature is gentler,” Ingram says. “It’s slower and calming and rhythmic. It gives kids a chance to see what happens in their own bodies and minds.”

Imagination, mindfulness and social development

Though now more focused on her work with adults, Ingram’s 15-plus years of experience with children has taught her that nature can be a powerful ally for fostering healthy development. Ingram finds that working through the senses and the body is the best way to quickly connect.

“Even the most ADHD kid will slow down in nature because they get intrigued with something. They’ll be focused and interested in exploring it. That is mindfulness for a child.”

Something she sees outdoors more often than in the classroom is the prevalence of creative play.

A new 28-acre playspace in northwestern Albemarle, Wildrock encourages kids to interact with nature—with a giant nest, a hobbit house, a stone-lined labyrinth and more. Photo: John Robinson
A new 28-acre playspace in northwestern Albemarle, Wildrock encourages kids to interact with nature—with a giant nest, a hobbit house, a stone-lined labyrinth and more. Photo: John Robinson

“One of my biggest concerns has been seeing these children with no aptitude for imagination,” she says. In groups, children who are more comfortable with creative play model for the others. But, Ingram says, they need unstructured time to develop this skill. The diversity of nature encourages creativity in a way that half an hour of recess on the playground cannot.

Ingram has noticed that kids like to find a place in the woods and settle, wanting to return and develop it as their home.

“This reflects how we think as humans, how we develop our ideas of roles in society and how we develop a sense of safety and comfort in the homes we create.”

George Mackaronis, environmental education and PE teacher, recounts how this same phenomenon takes place at Free Union Country School. There, students have created a town in the woods named Creativity-ville.

“At recess, everyone runs down to their self-built homes, shops, businesses, court houses, restaurants and stores. Houses move, menus change, smaller towns are created, conflicts arise, clay pots are made and traded, currency is exchanged, pine cones are traded for dried fruit and the imaginations of these kids literally run wild.”

Mackaronis believes that the social and emotional learning that the children experience in Creativity-ville is something that even expert teachers could not replicate.

“I don’t think it could happen in any other setting than nature,” he says.

Fifteen-year-old Charlottesville High School freshman Edie Aten puts it this way: “When I go outside, I feel like I am part of something bigger than myself, something beautiful that I may never truly understand.” Aten attended summer camp at the Living Earth School (see sidebar) at the ages of 9, 11 and 13. She likes to explore trails and unwind after school by the stream near her home in Charlottesville’s Greenbrier neighborhood.

“Having that wonder [in nature] from a very young age has made me who I am.”

This toy appropriate for all ages

Despite its proven benefits, taking the time and space to be in nature remains a challenge for many parents, teachers and childcare providers. Demands of work, school and extracurricular activities often means busy, structured and goal-oriented lifestyles. But perhaps the biggest barrier is the discomfort many adults feel being in nature themselves. Ingram and Schuyler both argue that developing a relationship with nature can be simple for anyone.

“Parents who didn’t have the advantage of growing up with nature or don’t feel comfortable just have to create the intention of having a curious, slow time together. They can discover things with their kids, side by side,” says Ingram.

Schuyler agrees. “I’m a totally frazzled mom and I don’t always do what I preach, but if I take my daughter out, we both benefit. It’s not only her,” she says. “If I’m slowed down, and I’m happier, then she’s happier. So you don’t only do it for your kids, you do it for yourself.”

The enthusiasm with which she and Ingram do their work reflects the power and joy that springs from their own deep relationships with nature.

“If we take the time and space to encourage kids to have that kind of unhurried wonder in even what seems ordinary,” says Schuyler, “they’re going to find out that the ordinary is extraordinary.”

As for a 5-year-old’s take on things?

“Meow!” says Colter. “I like Legos!”

Only an adult would think to interrupt valuable play time with a question like “Why do you like being in nature?”

But later, as clouds gather in the sky and drops begin to fall, Colter captures what Schuyler might call the extraordinary. He stills his body, cocks an ear and proclaims: “Listen! When it rains the trees rattle.”

Pro tips

Here’s how to get outdoors with your kids, according to the folks behind a few of Charlottesville’s most nature-focused programs.

Beverly Ingram, founder, Go Into Nature

Know that you as the adult are just presenting an opportunity. Nature is the teacher. Trust that nature has everything your child needs. Don’t feel like you have to do or plan very much.

Allow the timelessness of childhood wonder to happen in yourself. If it happens in yourself, you don’t have to worry whether it will happen for the child. It will.

Carolyn Schuyler, founder, Wildrock

Remember that children are wired to love nature. They only learn from us (adults) not to.

There is no need to make a big deal about going into nature. Find one tree somewhere in your area. Visit it regularly so your child gets to know it. Watch how it changes through the seasons. Invite observational questions like “What do you notice? What are you curious about?”

Be okay with some clothes getting muddy.

If you’re really busy, which most families are, five minutes in nature is better than nothing. Work with what you have and find joy in what you have, even if it’s a window box.

Bruce Gatlin-Austin, education programs coordinator, Ivy Creek Natural Area

Spend regular time outside without a plan. Go barefoot. Listen. Count butterflies. Draw birds at a bird feeder. Be silent and see how far and how much you can hear. Enjoy hot, cold, damp and dry weather. Smell rain. Sit safely on a covered porch and experience the passing of a thunderstorm. Walk through puddles. Teach kids that being outdoors is wonderful, not by telling them or watching a video out about it, but by letting them experience it.

George Mackaronis, environmental education and PE teacher at Free Union Country School; co-founder, Greenstone Adventures

Cultivate curiosity in your children. Be a student with them, and discover new things as they do. Sharing that excitement will not only inspire them, but it will create a shared experience that you and they will never forget!

Hub Knott, co-founder, Living Earth School

Kids naturally gravitate towards different activities like climbing trees, playing in mud, skipping rocks, hiding, building a fort or making fire. Watch for these and/or set the stage for them to happen, then step back and let the fun begin. When you notice the energy starting to wane or kids getting tired, change the activity or head home. “Pull it at the peak” we call it. Then next time, they’ll be stoked to go outside.

Tell them a story the night before in bed. Tell them there is a spot you want to show them. Plant seeds of what they might see, that there is a magical kingdom out there full of all these cool things. Make it seem special and not routine. Be excited with them. Leave the iPhone in the car and be present. Model enthusiasm and engage with nature and your kids.

Photo: Courtesy Living Earth School
Photo: Courtesy Living Earth School

Play places

A sampling of local organizations making the kid-nature Connection.

Wildrock

Wildrock opened in April of 2017 as a grass-roots nonprofit committed to promoting nature play for health and happiness. With an outdoor “play-scape” intentionally designed to promote childhood development, as well as trails and open meadows, Wildrock invites families and children to have positive and formative experiences in nature. Wildrock aims to host all Charlottesville City School preschoolers, as well as private groups, families and kids of all ages. Available by appointment for groups of 19+ on weekdays and to the public by reservation every Saturday. Wildrock is located in northwestern Albemarle County on Rt. 810. wildrock.org

The Living Earth School

The Living Earth School combines traditional wisdom and modern techniques to help kids develop a deeper connection with nature. Children that attend Living Earth School programs learn wilderness survival skills, Coyote mentoring, naturalist skills, animal tracking, and develop a sense of awareness, place and community within nature. Best known for their summer camp programs in Sugar Hollow, the Living Earth School also hosts year-round programs and classes for both children and adults in the Charlottesville and Afton area. livingearthva.com

Greenstone Adventures

Greenstone Adventures offers outdoor immersion backpacking trips to 7th-12th graders in Central Virginia with the goal of inspiring critical thinking, problem solving, cooperative communication, confidence and independence in nature. Co-founders George Mackaronis and Andrew Eaton draw on their combined backpacking and educational backgrounds to provide youth with meaningful and challenging experiences in the Shenandoah National Park and George Washington and Jefferson National Forests. greenstoneadventures.com

SEED Camp

Located on the campus of Mountaintop Montessori School, Summer SEED camp offers kids the opportunity to explore local ecology hands-on, get dirty cultivating the school garden and taste the fruits of their work through cooking classes and fresh garden-grown meals. The SEED program encourages kids to develop their understanding of nature through art, games, garden chores, science experiments and more. mountaintopmontessori.org/summer_seed/

Ivy Creek Foundation and Natural Area

Ivy Creek Natural Area hosts field trips for area schools and for programs such as Scouts and the Boys and Girls Club. In 2016, over 1,500 students experienced Ivy Creek’s 215-acre preserve, learning about the site’s natural history, and getting more familiar with local ecology through specifically-themed tours. Ivy Creek, located on Earlysville road on the outskirts of Charlottesville, offers family programs, natural and cultural history talks, open barn days and a twice-monthly Little Naturalists program. Ivy Creek has six miles of trails and is open to the public every day from 7am to sunset. ivycreekfoundation.org

Go Into Nature

Founder Beverly Ingram combines ecotherapy, mindfulness and stress-trauma training with her long-time experience as an elementary teacher to provide healing programs and nature-based therapy in the Charlottesville area. Though she previously specialized in youth programs, she is moving towards more adult-centered work, with the awareness that an adult’s healthy relationship with nature is the first step towards fostering that same connection in children. She offers one-on-one nature-based mindfulness sessions, leads group classes and workshops and works as a consultant with teachers and facilitators of nature-based learning. gointonature.com

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Take a hike: Locals share tales from the trails

Early-morning light catches a tinge of red on the edges of the maple leaves. The air is crisp after a cold fall night in early October. Chris Saunders steps onto the Blackrock Summit Trail with the confidence and speed of someone who has been there before.

“I’ve hiked it five or six times,” he says. “Last time I was here for the sunrise.” He hikes in black jeans and a sweatshirt. His thin frame moves fast through the trees. He swipes at his face and laughs.

“My fiancee always makes me go in front to catch all the spiderwebs,” he says.

It’s not only spiderwebs and sunrise hikes that define Saunders’ relationship to these mountains. In April, he completed his goal to hike every trail within the Shenandoah National Park. That’s 509 miles of trails, including 101 miles of the Appalachian Trail.

“One day I was looking on the available hiking maps on SNP’s website, and I just realized, ‘Wow, I’ve done almost all of these,’” he says. It was then he decided to make it a goal to hike every one.

Saunders, a 24-year-old marketing manager for Roy Wheeler Realty Company, grew up in Charlottesville. He first learned about Shenandoah in the halls of Charlottesville High School, when he overheard a friend talking about hiking in the park the previous weekend.

“As soon as the weekend came, I grabbed some clothes, packed some dog food and two blankets, set out Friday evening with my dog and just went,” he says. “Had no idea what I was doing.” Saunders chose a trail near Loft Mountain Campground and slept on blankets on the ground. He woke up covered in bug bites, walked some more, and his love for hiking was born.

Chris Saunders, 24, who recently hiked all 509 miles in Shenandoah National Park, started hiking as a student at Charlottesville High School. Photo by Natalie Jacobsen
Chris Saunders, 24, who recently hiked all 509 miles in Shenandoah National Park, started hiking as a student at Charlottesville High School. Photo by Natalie Jacobsen

“It quickly evolved into a way to get away from school, people, the city, the noise. I was somewhat of a quiet kid. I still am that way,” he says. “I never really had a goal in mind, I just kept going and going, always wanting to try different trails to see different things.”

For Saunders, hiking all the trails in Shenandoah happened bit by bit, over many years. Sometimes he hikes with his fiancée, Maddy Rushing (they got engaged while hiking in Yosemite National Park). Sometimes he hikes with his two dogs. Sometimes he hikes alone.

“The views, the wildlife, the serene sounds and smells, it’s just a completely different world once you get on the trail,” Saunders says. He pauses by a dead tree that rises starkly against the blue sky. The tree looks like a sculpture, stripped of bark and with woodpecker holes carved into the trunk.

“I’ve never noticed this tree before,” he says, bemused. “Every time there’s something new.”

Park place

Each year more than 1 million visitors flock to Shenandoah National Park, just 30 minutes west of Charlottesville, to hike and take in the views from the overlooks along Skyline Drive. This year, which marks the centennial celebration of the National Park Service, visitation is up 35 percent, says Susan Sherman, president of the Shenandoah National Park Trust.

“Shenandoah National Park is remarkable in that it is the protector of wild lands and wildlife—and also the rich history of this region,” says Sherman.

Most of Shenandoah’s 500 miles of trails were built in the Depression era as part of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal project. The 10,000 men enlisted within Shenandoah as part of the Civilian Conservation Corps worked for $30 a month, $25 of which they were required to send home to their families. Over the course of nine years, the CCC men planted trees and built roads, facilities and the trails now enjoyed by hikers and visitors from all over the country and world.

Founded in 1935, the park is also rich with the history of the homesteading families who lived there before being forced to leave their lands for Shenandoah’s establishment. Visitors can see historical relics such as cabins and grave sites that stand as evidence of these old settlements. Gnarled apple and fruit orchards still dot the landscape.

Thanks to the original efforts of the CCC and subsequent management over the years, says Sherman, “Shenandoah is now a hiker’s paradise and offers extraordinarily diverse landscapes, from mountaintops to stream valleys to open meadows to secluded hollows.”

Old Rag is the park’s most popular hike. Sherman calls it “Shenandoah’s Half Dome,” referring to Yosemite’s famous rock formation. Old Rag attracts thousands of visitors each year for its strenuous ascent, rock scramble and panoramic views from the top.

Other popular hikes are Stony Man, Limberlost and Hawksbill, which is the highest peak in the park.

The Shenandoah Park Trust works to protect Shenandoah’s 200,000 acres. As a philanthropic partner to the park, Sherman sees the nonprofit organization as a vehicle that allows people who love and use the park to take responsibility for it.

“It belongs to all of us here in Charlottesville, but it’s true that with ownership comes responsibility,” she says. “We who live in the Charlottesville area are incredibly lucky to have this remarkable national treasure in our backyard, and we shouldn’t take it for granted.”

Climb every mountain

Saunders is not the only local person who’s hiked all 500 miles of Shenandoah’s trails. Eric Seaborg also recently completed the feat. Seaborg, who has been to the highest points of 49 states, thought hiking the Shenandoah 500 would be another fun goal.

“Once I got the idea, I just thought, ‘Wouldn’t that be interesting to do?’” says Seaborg, a freelance writer and avid hiker who lives in Charlottesville with his wife, Ellen Dudley. “I got some maps and studied them to see which trails I had done and which I hadn’t.”

Seaborg is no stranger to committed hiking. He and Dudley scouted the first American coast-to-coast trail in 1990-91, an endeavor that took them 14 months. Dudley recalls with a shiver the cold winter they spent that year hiking through the Midwest.

“I have one picture of a lightboard in Kansas showing the temperature at minus 8 degrees,” she says. They hiked from Point Reyes National Seashore in California to Cape Henlopen State Park in Delaware on what is now called the American Discovery Trail. The couple later wrote the book American Discoveries: Scouting the First Coast-to-Coast Recreational Trail about their experience.

Both Seaborg and Dudley grew up hiking.

“My parents used to make me hike,” says Dudley. “I remember scuffing along through the leaves, thinking, ‘This is boring.’”  But her relationship with hiking has since changed. “It’s so pretty to be out there,” she says.

Husband-and-wife Eric Seaborg and Ellen Dudley both grew up hiking; together they scouted the first American coast-to-coast trail in 1990-91. Photo by Eze Amos
Husband-and-wife Eric Seaborg and Ellen Dudley both grew up hiking; together they scouted the first American coast-to-coast trail in 1990-91. Photo by Eze Amos

Seaborg grew up in Washington, D.C., and visited Shenandoah as a kid. “It was my father’s method of relaxation from his high-pressure jobs and he would take me along,” he says.

The love of getting outside stuck. As for how long it has it taken Seaborg to complete all the trails in Shenandoah? “It took 50 years!” he laughs, pointing out that he counts the hikes he did with his father as a kid.

The experience of hiking every trail in Shenandoah got Seaborg out to new and unexpected places.

“He went to all these obscure little trails,” says Dudley, who couldn’t hike with him because of a knee injury. She helped Seaborg keep track of his progress with maps and lists. “He never would’ve hiked on some of those normally.”

Seaborg says that it was worth the extra effort. “There’s no hike I did that I didn’t think, ‘Oh that was worth doing.’ There’s usually something: a great forest or a graveyard or something that made it worthwhile.”

Seaborg is a member of the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, which has been maintaining and advocating for more than 1,000 miles of trails in Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and West Virginia since 1927. As a PATC volunteer, Seaborg maintains a 1.5-mile section of the AT at Simmons Gap.

“There are studies that have shown that exposure to nature lowers blood pressure and helps your health in lots of ways,” Seaborg says. “I love to hike because I love the beauty. I love to see the stuff; I love the way it makes me feel; I like the exercise and being out there with my dog.” Seaborg notes that Shenandoah is one of only two national parks in the U.S. that allows dogs on the trails.

“Fall is also a great time to be in the park because there’s no hunting within the boundaries,” he says.

For many years, Seaborg and Dudley lived within walking distance of the park boundary at Simmons Gap, and Dudley kept records of the peak fall colors.

“October 24 is the special date,” she says. Seaborg recommends taking trails in the fall that go up ravines and along streams. “That’s where the colors are, the red maples, the tulip poplars,” he says.

But those who miss the foliage shouldn’t despair, says Seaborg. The trails in Shenandoah never close.

“There are lots of places where you can see views in the winter that you can’t see otherwise because the leaves have fallen,” he says. “When people go out into nature and come back they talk about coming back to the ‘real world.’ But really, when they’re going into nature they’re going into the real world.”

The view from the top

After only 15 minutes of hiking through trees, the trail at Blackrock Summit opens wide. A jagged rock scramble spills down the mountainside and Saunders leads the way up. The purple-gray rocks are streaked with rusty red and covered in chalk-green lichen. They shift and tip as we climb. Saunders’ shadow stretches out long behind him as he faces the strong morning sun. He chooses a high ledge of rock and we turn to take in the view.

The “real world” stretches out before us: rolling mountains, playful edges of yellow and red on the high-altitude leaves; a turkey vulture passes overhead with a rhythmic whoosh of wings. The Shenandoah Valley lies far below like a quilt, patterned with farms, silos and small towns. An immense quiet settles over us. The rocks warm as the sun rises higher and the air hardly stirs.

“The feeling of a grand view is complete satisfaction mixed perfectly with the most relaxing, stress-relieving experience you can imagine,” says Saunders. “It will make you forget whatever problems and background noise you have going on in your life. Even if only for a few seconds, it never fails to clear your mind and remind you that you’re alive.”


Great hikes close to home

“I like to combine the slogans ‘Get outside’ and ‘Just do it,’” says JoAnn Dalley, who has lived in Charlottesville for 36 years. She gets outdoors as often as she can, whether its in the Blue Ridge Mountains or on one of the many trail systems in town. Even if you’re not an experienced hiker, being outside is good for health and a sense of connection with nature, she says.

“The bottom line is that we live in such a rich environment,” Dalley says. “Hiking and walking outdoors is a great way to appreciate that environment and learn from it.”

“If you can walk to a place, that’s the best,” she says. “If you can drive within half an hour, that’s second best.”

Dalley and her husband, David, a longtime Charlottesville dentist, have section-hiked the Appalachian Trail from Mountain Lake to Leesburg. This means their feet have walked every bit of the trail within Shenandoah’s limits, though not all the way through at one time.

“We often hike the same hikes over and over again,” says Dalley, “because they’re convenient and familiar.”

Dalley has served as a Girl Scout leader and is an active volunteer with Charlottesville Area Tree Stewards and Rivanna Master Naturalists. She has a thick folder of maps of area hikes, as well as REI checklists for what to bring along on a hike (water, sunscreen, wind protection, food, first-aid kit). She even has a printout of the forage rules for Shenandoah, which describe the amount of edible items such as apples, mushrooms, berries and nuts a person is allowed to take out of the park.

JoAnn Dalley has served as a Girl Scout leader and is an active volunteer with Charlottesville Area Tree Stewards and Rivanna Master Naturalists. She and her husband, David, have section-hiked the Appalachian Trail from Mountain Lake to Leesburg. Photo by Eze Amos
JoAnn Dalley has served as a Girl Scout leader and is an active volunteer with Charlottesville Area Tree Stewards and Rivanna Master Naturalists. She and her husband, David, have section-hiked the Appalachian Trail from Mountain Lake to Leesburg. Photo by Eze Amos

But some of her favorite experiences in nature happen close to home. She loves to go for walks around Charlottesville with her dog, Rachel.

“If you take the same route over and over, you can really see the change of seasons,” she says.

Here are some of Dalley’s favorite close-to-home hikes:

The Rivanna Trail Network

The Rivanna Trail Foundation maintains around 20 miles of trail that loop around the city of Charlottesville. Though the circuit is not entirely contiguous (much of the trail is in easement through private property, presenting ongoing accessibility challenges), the trail makes for an amazing natural oasis right in the middle of the city. Popular sections include the paved trail running from Riverview Park in the Woolen Mills neighborhood to Darden Towe Park, the Greenbrier neighborhood trail and the section that curves by Observatory Hill near UVA. Other sections offer wooded meanders along Moore’s and Meadow creeks and travel through both residential and commercial areas with many access points. Used by runners, mountain bikers, hikers and open to dogs, the Rivanna Trail has something for everyone.

Ivy Creek Natural Area

Jointly owned by the city and Albemarle County, Ivy Creek is a 219-acre preserve managed by the Ivy Creek Foundation with at least six miles of trails. These include paved, handicap-accessible trails. Ivy Creek is a great birder’s paradise because bikes, jogging and dogs are all prohibited. “I’ve spent 15 minutes on these trails and seen something like 20 bird species,” says Dalley. In the fall, Ivy Creek hosts nighttime hikes to watch the nighthawk migration. Its diversity of landscapes, including fields, woods and wetlands, makes for a unique and quiet escape.

Observatory Hill

Called “O-Hill” by most, this university-owned property is popular with bikers and hikers, especially those who own dogs (they are allowed off-leash here). O-Hill is situated near campus with many winding and intersecting trails. “O-Hill is a little wild and woolly,” says Dalley, referring to the mountain bikers who might fly by on the trails. It’s high, dry and rocky. In autumn, acorns from the chestnut oaks that dominate the forest there fall in abundance. “I literally have gotten hit on the head with an acorn walking at O-Hill,” Dalley says. Parking is available at the observatory or at a few other locations close to the bottom of the hill.

Saunders Trail and the Secluded Farm Trails

Many people know of the Saunders Trail (handicap accessible) that winds up to the entrance of Monticello and includes a beautiful boardwalk section through the trees (note: No dogs are allowed on this portion of the trail). But fewer are familiar with the Secluded Farm trails, which meander through managed meadows and hilly forest to the south of the start of the Saunders Trail. “This is a great, underutilized network of trails,” says Dalley. Dogs are allowed on-leash.


Get out of here

Along with some classics like Humpback Rocks and Sugar Hollow, here are a few lesser-appreciated hikes within an hour’s drive of Charlottesville that offer views, leaves, rock outcroppings, water features, wildlife and more.

Beagle Gap

(to Bear Den Mountain summit or to Calf Mountain summit)

Distance from Charlottesville: 40-minute drive

Elevation change: 355 to 495 feet

Miles: 1.2 to 2.1

Time: 30 minutes to 2 hours

Difficulty: Easy to moderate

Entrance fee: $20

Access: In Shenandoah National Park. The south entrance is at Rockfish Gap: Route 64, exit 99, then drive 5.9 miles north on Skyline Drive to milepost 99.5.

What to look for: This is a short hike upward to a view. In the gap there is a big meadow with old apple trees. “Earlier in the fall you’ll see butterflies and the meadow changing with the seasons,” says JoAnn Dalley. She goes every year to forage apples for applesauce. “They’re wormy and everything, but they’re fun to forage,” she says. These old apple trees are remnants of orchards that were planted and managed by families that were removed from their lands in the 1930s upon the establishment of the park.

Bear Church Rock

Distance from Charlottesville: 50-minute drive

Elevation change: 2,210 feet

Miles: 8.5 (up and back)

Time: 5 to 7 hours

Difficulty: Challenging

Access: Graves Mill trailhead at the Shenandoah National Park boundary near Madison

What to look for: A lesser-known but picturesque hike south of Old Rag, Bear Church Rock is a favorite for Eric Seaborg, Ellen Dudley and Susan Sherman. It begins along the Rapidan River and makes its way up along the Staunton River Trail past several small waterfalls. Look out for the Jones Mountain cabin on a short side trail to the right. This is one of many cabins maintained by the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club and is available for rent. This hike ends at the Bear Church Rock overlook, which is on a short side trail to the right (the Jones Mountain trail continues up the mountain, but the rocks are the turnaround point for this hike).

Blackrock Summit

Distance from Charlottesville: 1-hour drive

Elevation change: 175 feet

Miles: 1.2-mile loop

Time: 1 hour

Difficulty: Easy

Entrance fee: $20

Access: In Shenandoah National Park: milepost 84.1 on Skyline Drive at Blackrock Summit parking area

What to look for: After only 15 minutes of hiking through the woods, the Blackrock Summit trail opens up to a distinctive rock scramble and stunning 360-degree view. If you love wide vistas, Blackrock offers the most bang for your buck of any trail on this list. The plentiful, jutting rocks at the top make for interesting explorations and test your surefootedness, and it’s a large enough area to find a quiet spot of your own to take in the views in all directions.

Fortune’s Cove Loop

Distance from Charlottesville: 40-minute drive

Elevation change: 1,725 feet

Miles: 5.5

Difficulty: Challenging

Time: 4 hours

Access: Turn right off of Route 29 just before Lovingston onto Mountain Cove Road. After 1.6 miles, turn right on Fortune’s Cove Lane. Parking area is on left after 1.6 miles.

What to look for: This is a challenging hike located within a 755-acre Nature Conservancy Preserve (no dogs allowed). At the meeting point of the Virginia Piedmont and Blue Ridge Mountain ecosystems, Fortune’s Cove hosts a special diversity of plant and animal life. “There are glades or ravines along the Fortune’s Cove hike that have really unique and rare plant communities,” says Dalley. Views from the back half of the hike look toward the Blue Ridge around Wintergreen.

Humpback Rocks

Distance from Charlottesville: 40-minute drive

Elevation change: 1,240 feet

Miles: 2

Time: 2.5 hours

Difficulty: Challenging

Access: 6 miles south of Rockfish Gap (Route 64, exit 99) on the Blue Ridge Parkway, milepost 6

What to look for: This hike is very popular due to its proximity to the 64 exit at the Rockfish Gap entrance to the Blue Ridge Parkway. It is short, but extremely challenging as it goes straight up for a mile to the summit. The views are worth the climb, however, and it is a well-worn sunset and sunrise hike destination.

Mint Springs Valley Park

Distance from Charlottesville: 30-minute drive

Elevation change: Between 60 and 370 feet

Miles: 5 miles of trails

Difficulty: Easy to moderate

Access: 5-minute drive northwest of downtown Crozet on Mint Springs Road

What to look for: “There’s a high prevalence of spectacular sassafras trees, which provide great color in the fall,” says Seaborg. The sassafras has recognizable leaves that can be three
different shapes: oval, mittened or three-pronged. In the fall, sassafras leaves turns yellow, rosy-red and orange. The fire trail provides beautiful views to the east.

Riprap Hollow Loop Trail

Distance from Charlottesville: 1-hour drive

Elevation change: 2,225 feet

Miles: 9.8-mile loop

Time: 6 to 8 hours

Difficulty: Challenging

Entrance fee: $20

Access: In Shenandoah National Park: milepost 90 on the Skyline Drive at Riprap parking area.

What to look for: This hike includes two beautiful vistas along the ridge of Rock Mountain and at the Chimney Rocks overlook. It also features a 20-foot waterfall and large swimming hole. It can be done as an out-and-back hike or as a circuit using the Wildcat Ridge Trail.

Sugar Hollow and Moormons River

Distance from Charlottesville: 30-minute drive

Elevation change: 360 feet

Miles: 2 to 3

Difficulty: Easy to moderate

Access: Drive out Barracks Road/Garth Road and continue straight through White Hall on Sugar Hollow Road. Parking is located past the Sugar Hollow Reservoir.

What to look for: From the parking area, you can choose two trails. The trail along the north fork of the Moormons River passes a swimming hole, and the beautiful waterfall two miles up and on the left makes for a worthwhile destination. The trail that follows the south fork is the well-known route to Blue Hole, a refreshing place to swim in the summer. Expect brilliant color in the fall from the tulip poplars along both forks of the river.


Get into gear

JoAnn Dalley uses REI’s Day Hiking Checklist before setting out on the trail.

The 10 Essentials

  1. Navigation

Map, compass, GPS (optional), altimeter (optional)

  2. Sun protection

Sunscreen, lip balm, sunglasses

  3. Insulation

Jacket, vest, pants, long underwear, gloves, hat

  4. Illumination

Headlamp or flashlight, extra batteries

  5. First-aid kit

  6. Fire

Matches or lighter, waterproof container, fire starter (for emergency survival fire)

  7. Repair kit or tools

Knife or multi-tool, kits for stove and mattress, duct tape strips

  8. Nutrition

Extra day’s supply of food

  9. Hydration

Water bottles or hydration system, water filter or other treatment system

10. Emergency shelter

Tent, tarp, bivy or reflective blanket

Beyond the 10 essentials: daypack, lunch, snacks, energy beverages or drink mixes, utensils, cups and toilet paper

Categories
Living News

Community gardens are a place of refuge for all

Tucked alongside Moores Creek in Azalea Park, two wide rows of garden plots form a welcoming and fruitful oasis. Canes of blackberries stand tall, bunches of unripe grapes hang from the vine, tasseling corn peeks over the tops of fences and in the far corner, a grove of banana trees rises in a tropical salute.

Each fenced garden beckons with a unique entrance, reflecting, perhaps, the personalities and resources of each gardener: a ladder set to hinges, an old wooden door with a glass pane, a baby gate. Creative shade structures and tool sheds dot the gardens, while wheelbarrows rest upturned. Some plots are neat, with mulched paths and outlined beds, some show an encroachment of weeds and others still are abandoned jungles.