Nat'l Recreation Area
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- National Recreation Area
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- Operator:703-339-8009
- Email:blm_es_meadowood@blm.gov
About
Imported descriptionThe Meadowood Special Recreation Management Area (SRMA) offers 13.4 miles of hiking trails, 7 miles of horseback riding trails and 6.6 miles of mountain biking trails. It is the site of 2 fishing ponds (one of which is universally accessible), 800 acres of forest and meadows, environmental education programs, equestrian facilities, geocaching, and bird watching. Meadowood provides year-round environmental education and Jr Ranger programs for homeschoolers, public and private schools, local 4-H groups and community youth agencies. Test your biking skills on our three single track trails with their own flavor and style: Yard Sale (known as our downhill pump track) is a fast and flowing rhythm with table tops; Stinger is a rustic and narrow, predominately hand built trail with natural obstacles; and Boss is a chunky flow trail with rock gardens, drop offs, and three-dimensional wooden features like rolling boardwalks and banked turns. These trails are geared toward the intermediate skilled rider, with options for beginners and experts alike. This landscape mosaic contains a variety of terrains and vegetation types. These include gently sloping open meadows, mature hardwood forests along steep slopes and floodplains, and riparian areas, freshwater ponds and streams. Red and white oak, beech, sweet gum, Virginia pine, and persimmon, which are common sights in mid-Atlantic woodlands and appear throughout the forests at Meadowood. The ponds, streams and riparian areas in the SRMA host a wide variety of insects, fish and other wildlife. BLM and the State of Virginia survey the population in the fishing ponds periodically and restock them when needed. Grass-eating carp are among the species stocked in the ponds; they cannot reproduce, and they eat invasive aquatic weeds, which would otherwise overwhelm small ponds. In addition to stocked species, the American eel appears in the area’s ponds and streams and serves as attractants to the local Bald eagles. Migrating waterfowl such as various duck species, Canada geese, and herons commonly occur at water features. Songbirds, dragonflies and butterflies are abundant not only in the ponds and meadows, but within the myriad acres of edge habitat. Whitetail deer, fox squirrels, and red fox abound throughout Meadowood. The North American beaver makes the occasional appearance in the floodplains of Thompson Creek, Giles Run, and South Branch, as well as at Enchanted Pond. Flickr Album
Source: recreation.gov
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Hunting in this park
Hunting is generally prohibited in this National Park Service unit
Verify current park-specific rules with the National Park Service before planning any hunt. See NPS regulations
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