Ohio’s Buckeye Trail could become a National Scenic Trail; meeting Wednesday

The 1,400-mile trail wraps all the way around Ohio, running through Warren, Greene, Montgomery and Miami counties
The Buckeye Trail is being designated a "National Scenic Trail", which includes both the Xenia Station and Yellow Springs Station. MARSHALL GORBY\
STAFF

The Buckeye Trail is being designated a "National Scenic Trail", which includes both the Xenia Station and Yellow Springs Station. MARSHALL GORBY\ STAFF

Ohio’s Buckeye Trail, which loops the entire state and winds all across the Miami Valley, is one step closer to receiving a National Scenic Trail designation.

The National Park Service will hold a series of public meetings next week on whether or not to designate the Buckeye Trail as a National Scenic Trail. The local meeting will be at the Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park, at 16 S. Williams St. in Dayton, from 4-7 p.m. Wednesday.

“It’s been talked about around the campfire for decades,” said Buckeye Trail Association Executive Director Andrew Bashaw, adding that the effort didn’t get off the ground until 2021.

The designation would make the Buckeye Trail the fifth largest in the nation, as well as the only circumferential trail, or a trail that loops an entire state.

“We’re the longest loop trail in the country,” Bashaw said. “You’re never further than 90 minutes away in the state of Ohio from the Buckeye Trail.”

The Buckeye Trail, which runs through Caeser Creek State Park and Five Rivers MetroParks, is seeking a National Scenic Trail designation, with public meetings scheduled in Dayton for Jan. 15.

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There are 11 National Scenic Trails in the U.S. to date, including the Appalachian Trail and the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail. The most recent trail designation is the Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail in 2009.

“What’s special about the Buckeye Trail is all the local, regional and nationally significant things that you get to experience by going that route ... from the the black and sandstone cliffs of Hocking Hills to the beaches of Lake Erie to the Great Black Swamp in northwest Ohio, there’s all those natural gems that we get to experience,” Bashaw said.

The National Park Service is conducting a feasibility study, approved by Congress in 2022. The meetings all across the state this week are part of that.

The recognition would unlock increased federal support, enhanced visibility, and expanded opportunities for economic development across Ohio.

“The point of getting any dollar, though, is really in support of the mission,” Bashaw said. “So the end goal, or the end tangible result, is the Buckeye Trail will be more invested in for improved maintenance, construction, preservation and promotion.”

“The indirect (result) that relates to that is just the designation is a recognition that the Buckeye Trail itself is a nationally significant asset to not only the people of Ohio, but all that come to visit.”

The Buckeye Trail is seeking a National Scenic Trail designation, with public meetings scheduled in Dayton for Jan. 15.

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The full list of meetings on the topic is as follows:

  • Monday, Jan. 13, from 4-7 p.m. at Cuyahoga Valley National Park – Hines Hill Conference Center, Peninsula;
  • Tuesday, Jan. 14, from 4-7 p.m. at Henry County Hospital Heller Community Room, Napoleon;
  • Wednesday, Jan. 15, from 4-7 p.m. at Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park, Dayton;
  • Thursday, Jan. 16, from 4-7 p.m. at Digital Futures Building, Cincinnati;
  • Friday, Jan. 17, from 3-6 p.m. Athens Community Center, Athens;
  • Thursday, Jan. 23, from 5:30-6:30 p.m., virtual meeting; to participate, visit the National Park Service meeting notice page: https://bit.ly/3DQYIE8.

If interested parties are unable to attend a public meeting, they can leave comments at the National Park Service’s project page: https://bit.ly/3WfGPFg.

The Buckeye Trail — as it winds through Dayton and the rest of the state — is designated by a series of blue blazes. CONTRIBUTED

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