The new trail is like a rustic park but very smooth and clear of brush and debris. It does take some maintenance every year but is well worth the effort to keep it open. We live in a north western coastal rain forest. We get about 60 inches of rain a year. So I have to literally fight back the jungle. Fortunately, it is only a few times a year in the early spring when I have to mow and weedwhip. I look forward to the dry season and grass dying. hahaha
With tractor I can rake and maintain a nice 5 foot wide walking trail. It is like a peaceful meditation. The trail is smooth so your eyes can take in the beauty of the forest, the lake, the wild life and nature. I have created a labyrinth of trails with foot bridges around the property.
I have built 3 different foot bridges spanning water flow areas on the lake trail. Thank heaven for pressure treated wood and screws and bolts. They last for years and years.
The wildlife really love the new trails. They can walk freely and easily around the lake. Last winter I smelled the strong unrine smell of a cougar. Ten or 15 feet farther Janai spotted the foreleg of a deer. In the fall, we occassionaly see foot prints of bear and elk. Many wild things use the lake. It is a major migratory stop in the spring and fall. We have a nice batch of Northern Pond turtle along with other amazing creatures - fox, mink, nutria, bald eagle, heron, hawks. vultures, dragonflies, etc. The lake does have fish - non-natives mainly. I do not fish because they are ravaged by the wild life. This time of the year the lake is really low. In the winter it raises up about 3 to 4 feet and covers about 7 acres.
So after 23 years, it has finally come together.
I will just stream the pics. They are in order and I took an occasional side view of the lake from the trail. Elk Creek is on one side of the lake and runs like a river in the winter.
Enjoy...........................
this is a new land bridge so I can get down when the ground dries up to harvest firewood and keep the trails clear.