ABOUT THE PARK:
Wye Island NRMA - Maryland Department of Natural Resources
DIRECTIONS:
GPS Coordinates 38.88824, -76.14426
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Large parking lot on Lodge Lane. |
TRAIL MAP:
Wye Island Trail Map - Maryland Department of Natural Resources
Wye Island Trail Guide
HIKE DISTANCE: 13.2 miles
THE HIKE:
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From the parking lot, walk back out to pick up the yellow trail just the other side of those trees on the right. |
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The Yellow Trail |
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Granary Creek |
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Crossing Wye Island Road to continue with yellow on the other side. |
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A massive blow down completely across the trail. |
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We had to bushwhack through thorny stuff to get up on the trunk. |
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I then had to convince Brody to walk along the truck to avoid stepping on more thorns. |
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He did it! |
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A successful blow down navigation. |
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Coming out on Wye Island Road at the end of yellow. |
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At this point the pavement stops and Wye Island Road becomes a multi-use road. |
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When the road turns left, the green trail starts straight ahead. |
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Entering the green trail. |
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To the left a waterfowl blind. |
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But nobody is home, at least not at this end. |
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Continuing on I could see something in the water to the left at the far end ... |
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... but I couldn't get very close before ... |
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... everyone took off. |
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When green meets up with blue, an unmarked trail to the right ... |
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... follows a series of bridges and boardwalks ... |
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... to Grapevine Cove. |
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Coming back off of that unmarked trail, things get kind of confusing. Trails are well-marked with posts but the problem is the posts are at intersections and don't indicate which way to go so we went out and back in a couple of different directions until I got us going in the right direction. |
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Fast forward to the Holly Tree Trail, a continuation of the green trail. |
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And here we are at the 275+ year old holly tree. |
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Snacks under the holly tree. |
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Spring is arriving in Maryland. |
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House shopping for spring nesting? |
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The end of the green at Wye Island Road. |
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It's a short walk on the road to the orange Osage Trail on the right. |
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I believe these are Tundra Swans (they had straight necks unlike the mute swans we normally see) perhaps passing through on their migration to summer breeding grounds in the arctic. |
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Bigwood Cove |
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Coming up on a picnic table ... |
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... at a Wye River overlook. |
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I have been able to manage Brodie's car sickness by only giving him a few tablespoons of wet food before we leave in the morning to get a little something in his stomach. On a full day trip like this one, he needs to have lunch. It's not his normal diet but it's packable and works well for hikes. |
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Wye River |
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Heading back through a hedgerow of gnarly old trees. |
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The orange trail ends at Wye Island Road where we turn right ... |
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... and continue on for about 3/4 of a mile. |
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It's not a bad walk unless a car goes by too fast and leaves you inhaling a cloud of dust. Ugh. Fortunately there weren't many cars and others drove by more slowly. |
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Hanging a right on the red West Corner Trail. The red trail is actually three trails in one. This is the first. |
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An overlook at Wye River. |
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I have never been so happy to see dandelions! Could this winter actually be coming to an end? |
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The West Corner Trail comes out on the road to the Ferry Point Trail parking lot. |
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Second of the three red trails. |
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Right on the Jack-in-the-Pulpit Trail, the third of the red trails. |
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Another Wye River overlook. |
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Things are really turning green over on this part of the island. |
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Back on the Ferry Point Trail a right to ... |
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... a picnic table on the Wye River. |
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Lots of ducks in the Wye River. |
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Returning on the Ferry Point Trail. |
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To the left is the West Corner Trail where we came out but I decided to stay with the road walk since that trail had been pretty wet in spots. |
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Those swans that we saw before? |
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At the end, another parking lot and private property to the right. |
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We turn left. |
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A turkey vulture earlier and now a black vulture. |
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This was a bald eagle that flew right over us but I couldn't hone in on him fast enough for a better picture. |
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Just beyond where we came off of the orange Osage Trail on the left ... |
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... no sign but a white post where we turned on to the white Dividing Creek Trail. |
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Coming up on some activity in the water ... (a Great Blue Heron was flying off to the right somewhere in the distance) |
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... but most of them promptly took off before we could get too close. |
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A handful held out a bit longer before joining the others in the sky. |
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Coming up on Dividing Creek. |
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I was thinking there would be no balloons on this hike when I found this little scrap of one. Couldn't quite count that but I packed it out anyway. |
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The Dividing Creek Trail did not actually have any views of Dividing Creek so we bushwhacked over to get a look. |
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Then on this very last stretch right before the parking lot straight ahead ... |
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Over to the right, yes indeed, a balloon! In a mess of thorns. Since it was so close I put Brodie in the car then went to extract it without getting sliced up on thorns. Success! The ribbon did not fare so well. I got it all but it was shredded to pieces from the thorns. |
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Dog tired after 13.2 miles of hiking. |
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Balloon #28 of the year. |