Orange County NC Website
•Initial focus in Seven Mile Creek area / develop draft Master Plan for Preserve? <br /> •A long-term project providing opportunities and assistance to achieve other short-term <br /> County conservation objectives <br /> •Potential partnerships <br /> —Friends of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail <br /> —State Trails Program (NCDENR and trust funds) <br /> —OWASA <br /> —Town of Hillsborough <br /> —Eno River State Park <br /> —Private landowners! <br /> Attachment 1 <br /> NC Mountains-to-Sea Trail Corridor through Orange County <br /> Key Questions and Decision Points <br /> Background <br /> The North Carolina Mountains-to-Sea Trail (MST) is a planned 1,000-mile trail that will traverse <br /> the state from the Great Smoky Mountains in western North Carolina to the Outer Banks on <br /> the Atlantic coast (Attachment 2). The MST trail corridor has been defined in the eastern and <br /> western parts of the state for some time now, but the route through the more-populous eastern <br /> Piedmont had not been identified until recent years. <br /> In 2007, the State Parks office approved a proposed corridor for the "Eastern Piedmont" <br /> section of the MST as shown on the map (Attachment 3). The primary trail route would <br /> connect Haw River State Park north of Greensboro to Falls Lake in Wake County. In <br /> Alamance County the trail would follow the Haw River to the Alamance/Orange county line. <br /> The trail would then turn northeast along Cane Creek through OWASA-owned land at Cane <br /> Creek Reservoir, and then continue northeast through the County's Seven Mile Creek <br /> Preserve to Occoneechee Mountain State Natural Area. From Occoneechee Mountain the trail <br /> would follow the Eno River along Hillsborough's Riverwalk and through Eno River State Park <br /> into Durham County. The general route for the MST corridor through Orange County is shown <br /> on Attachment 4. <br /> The proposed MST from Hillsborough east is largely through public lands and private <br /> conservation lands along the Eno River. Eno River State Park has already identified a specific <br /> MST route through the park. West and south of Hillsborough, however, the specific trail route <br /> is uncertain and complicated by the fact that more land is in private ownership. <br /> It is important to point out that all MST trail segments are considered "planned" or"proposed" <br /> routes until the trail is already constructed and formally designated part of the State Trail <br /> system. A government agency must submit a formal application for designation. Alamance <br /> County had one section of trail designated MST in 2008 and another section that is pending. <br />