Where: Piermont to Nyack, NY (following the Long Path and
the Old Erie Railroad Bed)
Features: This loop hike traverses historic Rockland Cemetery,
goes through the remains of a pre-World War I rifle range and returns
via a rail-trail with views over the Hudson River.
Length: Ten miles.
Difficulty: Moderate to strenuous.
Time: About six hours.
How to get there:
Take the Palisades Interstate Parkway to Exit 4. Continue on Route 9W north for 2.3 miles and turn left, following the signs for Route 340. Bear right at the bottom of the hill and turn right, at the next traffic light, onto Ferdon Avenue. In 0.7 mile, the road turns sharply left, crosses a stream and becomes Piermont Avenue beyond the next intersection. At the following intersection, bear right onto Gair Street, and park in the municipal parking lot to the left.
Map: Hudson Palisades Trails
Description:
Walk back to 450 Piermont Avenue (the building with a large mural
painted on it) and turn right onto Tate Avenue, a narrow street which
heads uphill, soon curving to the right. You will notice the aqua blazes
of the Long Path, which you will follow for the next six miles. When you
reach a flight of stairs on the left, climb the stairs, and continue
uphill along a footpath that leads to Ash Street at the site of the
former Piermont railroad station. Turn left here and follow Ash Street
uphill as it curves to the right. At the next intersection, turn left
onto Piermont Place, then turn right onto Crescent Road, which soon
curves to the left. When the driveable road ends, continue ahead, then
turn right at a double blaze just beyond a house with a wooden fence,
and reach U.S. Route 9W.
Follow the Long Path as it turns right, briefly following Route 9W.
Almost immediately, it turns left onto Castle Road, which soon curves to
the right. Just past a gate, where the paving ends, the Long Path turns
right and continues through the woods. It soon rejoins the road, which
leads into Rockland Cemetery. At the next intersection, turn sharply
right and follow the paved cemetery road as it climbs to the crest of
the Palisades, making a sharp switchback to the left on the way. After
about half a mile, the road reaches the upper section of the cemetery.
Bear right at the fork in the road, then bear left at the next
intersection. You will pass the monuments marking the graves of Henry
Honeychurch Gorringe, who brought Cleopatra's Needle from Egypt, and of
General John Charles Fremont, the first Republican candidate for
President of the United States (he lost the election to James Buchanan
in 1856).
As the road curves left, you will notice a sign setting forth the
cemetery's rules. Here the Long Path turns right, leaving the cemetery,
and reenters the woods, soon entering Clausland Mountain County Park. In
another 0.7 mile, the Long Path turns sharply left, as an orange-blazed
woods road continues straight ahead uphill. This orange trail leads in
0.3 mile to a parking area on Nike Lane and rejoins the Long Path in 0.6
mile. Follow the Long Path as it descends to cross a stream and then
climbs to its second junction with the orange-blazed trail. Here, the
Long Path turns left and begins a steady descent. At the base of the
descent, it crosses a stream on a wooden bridge and ascends rather
steeply to reach Clausland Mountain Road, 3.3 miles from the start of
the hike.
The Long Path crosses the road and goes through a parking area for
Tackamac Town Park, where it descends on a series of woods roads. Pay
careful attention to the blazes here. It reaches a water impoundment by
an old dam and turns right, following a stream, then turns left and
crosses the stream on a wooden bridge. After crossing paved Marsico
Court in a residential area, the trail enters Blauvelt State Park,
passing through several stands of evergreens.
In another half a mile, the Long Path climbs over an embankment,
descends a short set of wooden steps, and turns right on a woods road.
This embankment is the site of the rifle range of Camp Bluefield, a
pre-World War I National Guard training camp. It was abandoned after
only three years because bullets often landed in the Village of Grand
View, on the eastern side of the ridge! At the end of the embankment,
you will note the entrance to a long concrete tunnel that served as a
safe passage between the target wall and the firing line. The tunnel can
be entered, but extreme caution must be exercised.
The Long Path turns right at a T-intersection, swings left, then
turns left at a four-way intersection (where the blazes may be hard to
find). It descends to a T-intersection, where it turns right to cross a
stream, then climbs steadily to Tweed Boulevard. It crosses the road and
continues uphill to an expansive southwestern-facing viewpoint over the
Hackensack River valley. The Tappan Zee is to the left, and in the
distance, both New York City (to the left) and Newark may be seen on a
clear day. You've now gone 5.3 miles from the start, and this is a good
place to take a lunch break.
The trail continues along the ridge, with some ups and downs. To the
right, there are seasonal views through the trees of the Tappan Zee
Bridge and Nyack. In another half a mile, it begins a steady descent,
finally emerging onto Bradley Hill Road. You will now leave the route of
the Long Path and follow a series of roads downhill to reach the Village
of South Nyack. Turn right onto Bradley Hill Road, then left at the next
intersection. Continue downhill, past the athletic fields of Nyack
College. At the following intersection, continue straight ahead onto
Terrace Drive, then turn sharply left onto Lowland Drive, which
switchbacks to the right and ends at Hillside Avenue (Route 9W). Turn
left and, in about 200 feet, turn right and cross over the New York
Thruway. Bear left at the fork in the road, and make the first right
onto Clinton Avenue.
You will immediately come to the Old Erie Railroad Bed. This is the
route of the Nyack spur of the Northern Railroad of New Jersey, later
the Erie Railroad, which provided passenger service to Jersey City.
Built in 1870, the line was abandoned in the late 1960s and has been
converted into a rail-trail. Turn right and follow this delightful,
nearly level trail for three miles back to Piermont, with intermittent
views to the left over the Tappan Zee Bridge and the river. You will
notice old telegraph poles along the right-of-way and, near Piermont,
you may spot a concrete marker on the left with the inscription "JC
25" -- indicating the distance to Jersey City. When you reach the
old Piermont station, cross the street and follow the footpath down to
Tate Street, then turn right and continue to Piermont Avenue, the start
of the hike.
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