State Hiking Series Each guide - Hikes suited to every ability - Accurate directions to popular as well as less-traveled trails - Up-to-date trail descriptions with mile-by-mile directional cues - Detailed trail maps and GPS coordinates - Difficulty ratings, average hiking times, and best hiking seasons for each hike - Trail Finder for best hikes with dogs, children, great views, or wildlife viewing - Information on fees and permits, contacts, events and attractions, restaurants and accommodations, canine compatibility, and more - Zero-impact and wilderness safety tips and techniques *** The year 2010 is the 75th anniversary of the Blue Ridge Parkway, and this new edition of Hiking the Blue Ridge Parkway is an indispensable resource for anyone who uses the Parkway―America's most heavily visited unit of the National Park system―as a portal to the Southern Appalachian experience. Including the best trails in the national forests, state parks, and private preserves that line the 469-mile scenic road, this is a single-volume solution for the serious explorer, whether on foot or in a car.
Randy Johnson’s passion for the outdoors has inspired six books, as well as articles and photography that have appeared in national magazines and newspapers. He’s an internationally traveled photojournalist, author, magazine editor, and trail professional.
This book did not steer me wrong on my seven-day road trip along the entire Blue Ridge Parkway from north to south. The hikes range from 0.2 mile jaunts right off overlooks to possibilities for much longer hikes if you want them. This book and the National Park Service map of the BRP we got at the initial visitor center were the only things we needed to navigate America’s most scenic byway!
Lots of good information in this one. Most every trail has a map, but he also lists where you can get a map, either from the Park office, or the USGS map the trail is in.
I picked up this book as a guide to our road trip on the Blue Ridge Parkway in the fall of 2019, and my main regret is not picking it up earlier in the year! There is a lot in this guide, and you can really use it to make an itinerary for the BRP that really focuses on the natural areas.
There are hike lengths ranging from a mile to multi-day backpacking journeys, and every major stop along the parkway is covered. I did use it to take a couple of short leg stretchers during our drive, but as I said, I wish I'd read it earlier, we would have put more days into driving the parkway and visiting some of these places. Hopefully, we'll get another chance!