Five-Star Trails: Charlotte. Joshua Kinser

Five-Star Trails: Charlotte - Joshua Kinser


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Reed Gold Mine

       28 Kings Mountain National Military Park: Battlefield Trail

       29 Kings Mountain State Park: Historic Farm Trail

      Best for Scenery

       4 Little Sugar Creek Greenway

       5 Jetton Park: Loop 1

       6 Jetton Park: Loop 2

       8 South Mountains State Park: High Shoal Falls Trail

       12 Morrow Mountain State Park: Fall Mountain Trail

       13 Morrow Mountain State Park: Sugarloaf Mountain Trail

       16 University of North Carolina at Charlotte Botanical Gardens

       25 Crowders Mountain State Park: Lake Loop

       26 Crowders Mountain State Park: Trail Combo

       27 Daniel Stowe Botanical Garden

      Best for Seclusion

       13 Morrow Mountain State Park: Sugarloaf Mountain Trail

       18 Uwharrie National Forest: Birkhead Mountains Wilderness Trail

       30 Kings Mountain State Park: Trail Combo

      Best for Wildflowers

       4 Little Sugar Creek Greenway

       7 Latta Plantation: Piedmont Prairie Trail & Mountain Island Lake Loop

       9 South Mountains State Park: River Trail

       12 Morrow Mountain State Park: Fall Mountain Trail

       15 Reedy Creek Nature Preserve: Dragonfly Pond Loop

      Best for Wildlife

       8 South Mountains State Park: High Shoal Falls Trail

       9 South Mountains State Park: River Trail

       12 Morrow Mountain State Park: Fall Mountain Trail

       13 Morrow Mountain State Park: Sugarloaf Mountain Trail

       18 Uwharrie National Forest: Birkhead Mountains Wilderness Trail

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      AN ARTFULLY CONSTRUCTED TRAIL WINDS THROUGH THE ROCK GARDEN AT UNC CHARLOTTE’S BOTANICAL GARDENS.

      Introduction

      About This Book

      Five-Star Trails: Charlotte provides route details, maps, elevation profiles, and photographs for 32 of the best hikes in this city and the surrounding region. Charlotte offers urban hikes in the heart of downtown as well as a variety of paved and unpaved greenways that spread out around the greater metro area. Those routes connect neighborhoods, parks, business districts, and green spaces for residents and visitors alike. Surrounding Charlotte is a variety of terrain ranging from mountains and Piedmont foothills to flatlands and small natural prairies.

      While none of the hikes in this book get five stars in every ratings category, each will have one, two, three, or four stars in one or more of them. A hike might merit inclusion in this book because its scenery is spectacular, while another hike with two-star scenery is selected because it’s considered five-star when it comes to taking children along. The star-rating system offers a simple and quick way to find the type of trail that’s right for you.

      Greater Charlotte’s Geographic Divisions

      The hikes in this book encompass five geographic regions. Each region has its own particular attraction, and they include star destinations such as urban greenways, South Mountains State Park, Crowders Mountain State Park, Uwharrie National Forest, McDowell Nature Preserve, the Latta Plantation, and much more.

      Center City covers the urban core. Most of the hikes here utilize Charlotte’s greenway system—one of the longest and most developed in the United States. Downtown and much of the metro area offer level topography, compared with the land around it, offering easy strolls through the city, parks, and leafy neighborhoods. These routes are best for short strolls and for nature trails through urban areas and small parks.

      North encompasses the most diverse landscapes in the book. Many of the trails in this region are centered near or on Lake Norman. Or take an easy day hike on a mostly level greenway through University Research Park. An hour to the northwest, as you get closer to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, you find dramatic mountain terrain, rocky creeks, and waterfalls in South Mountains State Park.

      East includes the University of North Carolina at Charlotte area, where you’ll find an easy stroll through the university’s botanical gardens. Within the Charlotte Beltway, Reedy Creek Nature Preserve is just far enough north of the city to have hilly terrain. As you head farther west in this eastern section, the terrain becomes more mountainous, and you will find great hiking in Morrow Mountain State Park and in the 50,640-acre Uwharrie National Forest.

      South stretches down to Waxhaw, North Carolina, and includes trails around the towns of Fort Mill, North Carolina, and Lake Wylie, South Carolina, in the entries for Cane Creek Park, McAlpine Creek Park, and McDowell Nature Preserve. The terrain is less challenging in this region than in many others. But these trails are especially good for light hiking, running, and after-work or short day excursions.

      West covers the area from Mount Holly, North Carolina, just beyond the Charlotte Beltway, to Blacksburg, South Carolina. Similar to the North region covered in this book, the West region becomes increasingly more mountainous as you get closer to the main ridge of the Appalachian Mountains. Here more than any region herein, you can experience a variety of trails, including the historic and fascinating monuments and farms in Kings Mountain National Military Park and State Park and the outdoor-adventure complex of the U.S. Whitewater Center, where you can not only hike and bike the hilly trails but also raft down rapids on a man-made river and fly down high-elevation zip lines through a beautiful forest. All the way to the west, Crowders Mountain State Park has mountain terrain and challenging trails in a park bordering the Yadkin River.

      How to Use This Guidebook

      The following information walks you through this guidebook’s organization to make it easy and convenient for planning great hikes.

      Overview Map, Map Key, & Map Legend

      The overview map on the inside front cover shows the primary trailheads for all 32 hikes described in this book. The numbers shown on the overview map pair with


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