Donut Hole Trail

Donut Hole Trail
Length 89.7 mi (144.4 km)
Location Sproul State Forest, Pennsylvania, United States
Trailheads West: Jericho, Pennsylvania
East: Farrandsville, Pennsylvania
Use Hiking
Hiking details
Season Year-round
Hazards Severe Weather, Poison ivy, Bears

The Donut Hole Trail (DHT) is a long-distance backpacking trail paralleling the West Branch of the Susquehanna River through Sproul State Forest. It is one of the most remote and challenging of the state's backpacking trails and is for seasoned hikers only, with numerous steep ascents and unbridged stream crossings. Bridges were recently constructed or replaced over Cooks Run, Drury Run, Seven Mile Run, and Paddy Run. Extensive relocations have been made in the Bull Run, Seven Mile, and Merrimam Hollow areas, eliminating many stream crossings. The biggest remaining challenge of the orange-blazed DHT is a deep-water ford of the very wide Kettle Creek that should not be attempted during high water. A yellow-blazed side trail provides a lengthy detour around this crossing.

After extensions were added to both ends of the trail by Keystone Trail Association crews in the mid-1990s, the DHT now extends 89.7 miles (144.4 km) from Jericho (near the intersection of Pennsylvania Route 120 and Pennsylvania Route 872 in Cameron County) to Farrandsville (outside of Lock Haven). Access to the middle sections of the DHT is also available at Kettle Creek and Hyner Run State Parks.

At Jericho, the backpacker can walk about a mile west into Sinnemahoning to reach the Bucktail Path, or walk over the river bridge and to a side street in the village of Wyside to access the Quehanna Trail System, via the Old Sinnemahoning Road Trail. In the early 2000s, this extensive interconnected trail network was expanded with the construction of the T-Squared Trail, which leads from the eastern section of the Donut Hole Trail to the Black Forest Trail. The Jack Paulhamus/Garby Trail also links the DHT at Hyner Run State Park with the Chuck Keiper Trail high on the plateau on the other side of the Susquehanna. Camping permits are required if you plan to stay more than one night at a specific spot.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.