“My” park is less famous than Yellowstone or Yosemite, but it’s every bit as much a national park, just smaller. I grew up in Washington DC. My teenage years, in the early 1960s, were very difficult, both at home and at school. I developed an interest in hiking at the age of 12. It was a great way to get away from my house. Lacking a car or a license, I was pretty much restricted to trails reachable by bus or a short ride from my dad.
In northwest Washington DC, that was not a problem. There is an amazing network of stream valley parks and greenways, with interlocking trail systems in that part of the city. (Administratively, they are all part of Rock Creek Park).
I quickly explored these, and moved on to Rock Creek Park itself at 13. I fancied myself as another Hernando DeSoto or Meriwether Lewis, fearlessly entering uncharted wilderness (a bit of exaggeration, but hey, I was a kid). Rock Creek Park quickly became a place of refuge and comfort for me. I was able to leave my troubles behind for a few hours on weekends. Even after more than 50 years, I have clear memories of some of those hikes. I did a great deal of my initial exploration of the park in the late winter and early spring of 1962, on six consecutive Saturdays. I can still recall walking under leaden skies through a stark, black and white landscape of bare trees. In a couple of years, I’d hiked every trail in the park, including unofficial ones.
I continued hiking in Rock Creek Park as an adult, until I retired to Southwest Virginia in 1999. The town I live in now is surrounded by the Jefferson National Forest, and there are enough trails there to keep me busy for the rest of my life. Nonetheless, whenever I go back to Washington, I make an effort to visit Rock Creek Park, particularly if it’s winter
Sincerely,
Rock Creek Park
An oasis of green in busy Washington, DC, Rock Creek Park is an expansive natural oasis in the middle of the city preserving the Rock Creek Valley. The park has many public facilities, including an outdoor concert and theater venue, a tennis stadium, a planetarium, a nature center, paved bicycle paths, and foot and horse trails along the creek and through the woodland. The park has an equestrian center that offers horseback riding lessons and guided trail rides. There is also a boat center that rents bikes, kayaks, canoes, sailboats and rowing shells. The park also provides a haven for birds and other urban wildlife.
State(s): District of Columbia
Established: 1890
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