A trail is usually a path, track or unpaved lane or road. In the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland path or footpath
is the preferred term for a walking trail. The term is also applied, in
North America, to routes along rivers, and sometimes to highways. In the US, the term was historically used for a route into or through wild territory used by emigrants (e.g. the Oregon Trail). In the USA "trace" is a synonym for trail, as in Natchez Trace.
Some trails are single use and can only be used for walking, cycling,
horse riding, snowshoeing, and cross-country skiing; others, as in the
case of a bridleway in the UK, are multi-use, and can be used by
walkers, cyclists and equestrians. There are also unpaved trails used by
dirt bikes and other off-road vehicles and in some places, like the Alps, trails are used for moving cattle and other livestock.
Usage
In Australia, the term track can be used interchangeably with trail, and can refer to anything from a dirt road to an unpaved pedestrian path.
In New Zealand, the terms track or walkway are used almost exclusively except in reference to cross-country skiing:
"walkways vary enormously in nature, from short urban strolls, to
moderate coastal locations, to challenging tramps [hikes] in the high
country [mountains]". Walkway is used similarly in St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada, where the "Grand Concourse", is an integrated walkway system.
In the United Kingdom, the term trail is in common usage. Longer
distance walking routes, and government-promoted long distance paths,
collectively known as National Trails, are also frequently called ways; as in the Pennine Way and South Downs Way. Generally the term footpath is preferred for pedestrian routes, including long distance trails, and is also used for urban paths and sometimes in place of pavement. Track is used for wider paths (wide enough for vehicles), often used for hiking. The terms bridleway, byway, restricted byway are all recognised legal terms and to a greater or lesser extent in general usage.
The increased popularity of mountain biking
has led to a proliferation of mountain bike trails in many countries.
Often these will be grouped to form larger complexes, known as trail
centers.
In the early years of the 20th century, the term auto trail
was used for a marked highway route, and trail is now also used to
designate routes, including highway routes, designated for tourist
interest like the Cabot Trail, Nova Scotia, Canada and the Quilt Trails in the US. The term trail has also been used by developers and urban planners for a variety of modern paved roads, highways, and boulevards,
in these countries, and some highways continue to be officially called a
trail, such as the Susquehanna Trail in Pennsylvania, a designation
that varies from a two-lane road to a four-lane freeway. A particularly
unusual use of the term is in the Canadian province of Alberta, which has multi-lane freeways called trails.
Types
Segregated trail
Trail
segregation, the practice of designating certain trails as having a
specific preferred or exclusive use, is increasingly common and diverse.
For example, bike trails
are used not only on roads open to motor vehicles, but also in trail
systems open to other trail users. Some trails are segregated for use
by both equestrians and mountain bikes, or by equestrians only, or by
mountain bikes only. Designated "wilderness area" trails may be
segregated for non-wheeled use (hence permit backpacking and horses but
exclude mountain bikes and motorized vehicles).
Often, trail segregation for a particular use is accompanied by
prohibitions against that use on other trails within the trail system.
Trail segregation may be supported by signage, markings, trail design
and construction (especially selection of tread materials), and by
separation between parallel treads. Separation may be achieved by
"natural" barriers including distance, ditching, banking, grading, and
vegetation, and by "artificial" barriers including fencing, curbing, and
walls.
Bicycle trail
Bicycle trails encompass a wide variety of trail types, including shared-use paths used for commuting, off-road cross country trails and downhill mountain bike trails.
The number of off-road cycle trails has increased significantly, along with the popularity of mountain bikes.
Off-road bicycle trails are generally function-specific and most
commonly waymarked along their route. They may take the form of single
routes or form part of larger complexes, known as trail centres.
Off-road trails often incorporate a mix of challenging terrain, singletrack, smooth fireroads, and even paved paths. Trails with an easy or moderate technical complexity are generally deemed cross-country trails, while trails difficult even to experienced riders are more often dubbed all-mountain, freeride, or downhill. Downhilling is particularly popular at ski resorts such as Mammoth Mountain in California or Whistler Blackcomb in British Columbia, where ski lifts are used to get bikes and riders to the top of the mountain.
EuroVelo bicycle routes are a network of (currently 14) long-distance cycling routes criss-crossing Europe in various stages of completion, more than 45,000 km (27,962 mi) was in place by 2013.
It is envisaged that the network will be substantially complete by 2020
and when finished, the EuroVelo network's total length will exceed
70,000 km (43,496 mi). EuroVelo is a project of the European Cyclists' Federation (ECF).
EuroVelo routes can be used for bicycle touring across the continent, as well as by local people making short journeys. The routes are made of both existing national bike routes, such as the Dutch LF-Routes, the German D-Routes, and the British National Cycle Network, and existing general purpose roads, together with new stretches of cycle routes to connect them.
Off-road cycling can cause soil erosion and habitat destruction
if not carried out on established trails. This is particularly so when
trails are wet, overall though, cycling may have only as much impact as
other trail users
Cross-country skiing trail
In cross-country skiing a trail is also called a track or piste.
Recreational cross-country skiing is also called touring, especially in
Europe. Some skiers stay out for extended periods using tents
and equipment similar to bushwalkers and hikers, whereas others take
relatively short trips from ski resorts on maintained trails. In some
countries, organizations maintain a network of huts for use by
cross-country skiers in wintertime. For example, the Norwegian Mountain Touring Association
maintains over 400 huts stretching across hundreds of kilometres of
trails which are used by hikers in the summer and by skiers in the
winter.
Equestrian trail
Horse riding and other equestrian uses of trails continue to be a popular activity for many trail users.
Horses can usually negotiate much the same grades as hikers, but not
always, although they can more easily clear obstacles in the path such
as logs.
The Bicentennial National Trail (BNT) in Australia is the longest marked multi-use trail in the world, stretching 5,330 kilometres from Cooktown, Queensland, through New South Wales to Healesville, Victoria. This trail runs the length of the rugged Great Dividing Range through national parks, private property and alongside of wilderness areas. One of the objectives was to develop a trail that linked up the brumby tracks, mustering and stock routes along the Great Dividing Range, thus providing an opportunity to legally ride the routes of stockmen and drovers who once travelled these areas with pack horses. This Trail provides access to some of the wildest, most remote country in the world. The Bicentennial National Trail is suitable for self-reliant horse riders, fit walkers and mountain bike riders.
Within the United States National Trail Classification System,
equestrian trails include simple day-use bridle paths and others built
to accommodate long strings of pack animals on journeys lasting many
days. Trail design parameters for these uses include trail base width
and material, trail clear width, trail clear height, access to water
suitable for stock (not human) use, and trail routing.
Footpath
A footpath is a type of thoroughfare that is intended for use only by pedestrians, not other forms of traffic such as motorized vehicles and horses.
They can be paths within an urban area, or rural paths through the
countryside. Urban footpaths are usually paved, may have steps, are
called alleys, lanes, steps, etc., and may be named. Other public rights of way, such as bridleways, byways, towpaths, and green lanes are also used by pedestrians.
In some regions of the United Kingdom, such as England and Wales, there are rights of way on which pedestrians have a legally protected right to travel. National parks, nature preserves, conservation areas and other protected wilderness areas may have trails that are restricted to pedestrians.
Footpaths can be connected to form a long distance trail or way, which can be used by both day hikers and by backpackers. Some of the trails are over one thousand miles (1,600 km) long.
In the US and Canada, where urban sprawl
has begun to strike even the most rural communities, developers and
local leaders are currently striving to make their communities more
conducive to non-motorized transportation through the use of less
traditional trails. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has established the Active Living by Design program to improve the livability of communities in part through developing trails, The Upper Valley Trails Alliance has done similar work on traditional trails, while the Somerville Community Path and related paths, are examples of urban initiatives. In St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada the "Grand Concourse",
is an integrated walkway system that has over 160 kilometers (99 mi) of
walkways, which link every major park, river, pond, and green space in
six municipalities.
Footpaths can be located in different settings for various uses. These can include:
- Disability and wheelchair accessible paths in sensory gardens and all the above settings.
- Gardens and designed landscapes: in private gardens and in public areas; and at park visitors centers as natural history interpretive nature trails in designed wildlife gardens.
- A type of trail that was quite popular in the 1970s and 1980s but is less popular today is the exercise trail (also known as trim trail), which combines running with exercise stations.
- Jogging or running paths. Many runners also favor running on trails rather than pavement, as giving a more vigorous work-out and better developing agility skills, as well as providing a more pleasant exercise environment.
- Parks: including public spaces, urban parks, neighborhood parks, linear parks, botanic gardens, arboretum, and regional parks.
- Sculpture gardens and open-air museums, as sculpture trails and historic interpretive trails.
Urban pedestrian footpaths or trails are sometimes called alleys or lanes and in older cities and towns in Europe and are often what is left of a medieval street network or right-of-ways or ancient footpaths. Similar paths also exist in some of the older North American towns and cities, like Charleston, South Carolina, New Castle, Delaware, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Such urban trails or footpaths are narrow, usually paved and often
between the walls of buildings. This type is usually short and straight,
and on steep ground can consist partially or entirely of steps. Some
are named. Because of geography steps are a common form of footpath in hilly cities and towns. This includes Pittsburgh (see Steps of Pittsburgh), Cincinnati, Seattle, and San Francisco in the United States, as well as Hong Kong, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada, and Rome. Stairway trails are found in a number of hilly American cities. This includes the Stairway Trails in Bernal Heights, East San Francisco.
Motorized trail
Motorized trail use also remains very popular with some people. Such
terms as ORV, four-wheeling, all-terrain vehicle, and others actually
have highly specific meanings. In the United States, this sport remains
very popular. The Recreational Trails Program defined as part of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 mandates that states must use a minimum of 30 percent of these funds for motorized trail uses.
Off-road vehicle use on public land has been criticized by some members of the US government and environmental organizations including the Sierra Club and The Wilderness Society. They have noted several consequences of illegal ORV use such as pollution, trail damage, erosion, land degradation, possible species extinction, and habitat destruction which can leave hiking trails impassable.
ORV proponents argue that legal use taking place under planned access
along with the multiple environment and trail conservation efforts by
ORV groups will mitigate these issues. Groups such as the Blueribbon
Coalition advocate Treadlightly, which is the responsible use of public
lands used for off-road activities.
Noise pollution is also a concern, and several studies conducted by Montana State University, California State University, University of Florida and others have cited possible negative behavioral changes in wildlife as the result of some ORV use. Some US states have laws to reduce noise generated by off-road and non-highway vehicles. Washington is one example.
Water trail
Water trails, also referred to as blueways or paddling trails, are marked routes on navigable waterways such as rivers, lakes, canals and coastlines for people using small non-motorized boats such as kayaks, canoes, rafts, or rowboats. Some trails may be suitable for float tubing
or developed in concert with motorized use. They include: signs and
route markers; maps; facilities for parking, boat ramps or docks, and
places to camp and picnic. There are also state programs and other
promotion for water trails. The American Canoe Association has compiled a database of water trails in the United States. The National Park Service
Rivers, Trails, and Conservation Assistance Program has compiled a list
of water trail resources, success stories, and statewide contacts for
water trails.
Shared
use may be achieved by sharing a trail easement, but within it
maintaining segregated and sometimes also separated trail treads. This
is common in rail trails.
Shared use may also refer to alternate day arrangements, whereby two
uses are segregated by being permitted on alternate days. This is
increasingly common in long-distance trails
shared by equestrians and mountain bike users; these two user
communities have similar trail requirements but may experience
encounters with each other on the trail as difficult.
The Trans Canada Trail can be used by cyclists, hikers, horseback riders, and walkers, as well as cross country skiers, snowmobilers and snowshoers in winter.
In Belgium RAVeL, French for réseau autonome de voies lentes (autonomous network of slow ways), is a Walloon
initiative aimed at creating a network of itineraries reserved for
pedestrians, cyclists, horse riders and people with reduced mobility.
The network makes use of towpaths on river banks and disused railway or vicinal tramway lines. Old railway lines have been leased by the Walloon Government for 99 years using emphyteutic lease contracts. Where necessary, new paths are created to link parts of the network.
In England and Wales a bridleway is a trail intended for use by equestrians, but walkers also have a right of way, and Section 30 of the Countryside Act 1968
permits the riding of bicycles on public bridleways, though the act
says that it "shall not create any obligation to facilitate the use of
the bridleway by cyclists". Thus the right to cycle exists even though
it may be difficult to exercise on occasion, especially in winter.
Cyclists using a bridleway are obliged to give way to other users on
foot or horseback.
The seawall in Stanley Park, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada is popular for walking, running, cycling, and inline skating.
There are two paths, one for skaters and cyclists and the other for
pedestrians. The lane for cyclists and skaters goes one-way in a
counterclockwise loop.
Foreshoreway (also oceanway) is a term used in Australia for a type of greenway that provides a public right-of-way along the edge of the sea open to both walkers and cyclists.
Forest road
A forest road is a type of rudimentary access road, built mainly for the forest industry, although in some cases they are also used for backcountry recreation access.
There is open access to most Forestry Commission roads and land in Great Britain
for walkers, cyclists and horse riders and, since the Countryside Bill
of 1968, it has become the largest provider of outdoor recreation in
Britain. The Commission works with associations involved in rambling, cycling, mountain biking and horse riding
to promote the use of its land for recreation. The trails open to the
public are not just forest roads and a notable example of the
Commissions promotion of outdoor activity is the 7stanes
project in Scotland, where seven purpose built areas of mountain bike
trails have been laid, including facilities for disabled cyclists.
Holloway
A Holloway (also hollow way) is a sunken path or lane,
i.e., a road or track that is significantly lower than the land on
either side, not formed by the (recent) engineering of a road cutting
but possibly of much greater age. Various mechanisms have been proposed
for how holloways may have been formed, including erosion by water or
traffic; the digging of embankments to assist with the herding of
livestock; and the digging of double banks to mark the boundaries of
estates. These mechanisms are all possible and could apply in different
cases.
Rail trail
Rail trails
or paths are shared-use paths that make use of abandoned railway
corridors. They can be used for walking, cycling and horse riding. They
exist throughout the world and the following is a description of trails
in Australia:
-
- Following the route of the railways, they cut through hills, under roads, over embankments and across gullies and creeks. Apart from being great places to walk, cycle or horse ride, rail trails are linear conservation corridors protecting native plants and animals. They often link remnant vegetation in farming areas and contain valuable flora and fauna habitat. Wineries and other attractions are near many trails as well as B&B's and other great places to stay.
Most trails have a gravel or dirt surface suitable for walking, mountain bikes and horses. In the USA the 27 mile/43 km long Cheshire Rail Trail, in New Hampshire, can be used by hikers, horseback riders, snowmobilers, cross-country skiers, cyclists, or even a dogsledders.
In Canada, following the abandonment of the Prince Edward Island Railway in 1989, the government of Prince Edward Island purchased the right-of-way to the entire railway system. The Confederation Trail
was developed as a tip-to-tip walking/cycling gravel rail trail which
doubles as a monitored and groomed snowmobile trail during the winter
months, operated by the PEI Snowmobile Association. A considerable part
of the Trans Canada trail
are repurposed defunct rail lines donated to provincial governments by
CP and CN rail rebuilt as walking trails. As such, much of the Trans
Canada Trail development emulated the successful Rails-to-Trails
initiative in the United States, The Trail is multi-use and depending
on the section may allow hikers, bicyclists, horseback riders, cross
country skiers and snowmobilers.
Towpath
A towpath
is a road or path on the bank of a river, canal, or other inland
waterway. The original purpose of a towpath was to allow a horse, or a
team of human pullers to tow a boat, often a barge.
They can be paved
or unpaved and are popular with cyclists and walkers, and some are
suitable for equestrians. In Scotland equestrians have legal access to
all towpaths, and there is a campaign for similar rights in England and Wales. In snowy winters in the USA they are popular with cross-country skiers and snowmobile users.
In Britain, most canals were owned by private companies, and the
towpaths were deemed to be private, for the benefit of legitimate users
of the canal. The nationalisation of the canal system in 1948 did not
result in the towpaths becoming public rights of way, and subsequent
legislation, such as the Transport Act of 1968, which defined the
government's obligations to the maintenance of the inland waterways for
which it was now responsible, did not include any commitment to maintain
towpaths for use by anyone. However, some ten years later British Waterways
started to relax the rule that a permit was required to give access to a
towpath, and began to encourage leisure usage by walkers, anglers and
in some areas, cyclists.
The British Waterways Act of 1995 still did not enshrine any right of
public access, although it did encourage recreational access of all
kinds to the network,
although the steady development of the leisure use of the canals and
the decline of commercial traffic had resulted in a general acceptance
that towpaths are open to everyone, and not just boat users.
The concept of free access to towpaths is enshrined in the legislation
which transferred responsibility for the English and Welsh canals from
British Waterways to the Canal & River Trust in 2012.
Not all towpaths are suitable for use by cyclists, but where they
are, and the canal is owned by British Waterways, a permit is required.
There is no charge for a permit, but it acts as an opportunity to
inform cyclists about safe and unsafe areas to cycle. Some areas
including London are exempt from this policy, but are covered instead by
the London Towpath Code of Conduct and cyclists are required to have a
bell, which is rung twice when approaching pedestrians. Parts of some
towpaths have been incorporated into the National Cycle Network, and in most cases this has resulted in the surface being improved.
In France it is possible to cycle, rollerblade, and hike along the banks of the Canal du Midi. A paved stretch of 50 km (30 miles) from Toulouse to Avignonet-Lauragais and another 12 km (7 miles) between Béziers and Portiragnes are particularly suited to cycling and rollerblading. It is possible to cycle or walk the entire Canal des Deux Mers from Sète to Bordeaux.
Other French canals provide walkers "with many excellent routes, as
they are always accompanied by a towpath, which makes a pleasant
off-road track, and have the added virtues of flatness, shade and an
abundance of villages along the way", though walking a canal can be
monotonous, so that "a long trip beside a canal is better done by
bicycle".
Urban trail
An
urban trail is a citywide network of non-motorized, multi-use pathways
that are utilized by bicyclists, walkers and runners for both
transportation and recreation. Urban trails average ten foot in width
and are surfaced with asphalt or concrete. Some are striped likes roads
to designate two-way traffic. Urban trails are designed with connections
to neighborhoods, businesses, places of employment and public transport
stops.
Trail system layout
Linear-trail system
A linear trail goes from one point to another without connecting trails. These trails are also known as "out-and-back" or "destination" trails. Rail trails and long-distance trails
are examples of linear trails. Linear trails usually follow long
distances. A shorter linear trail is a spur trail, which takes a user to
a particular point-of-interest, such as a waterfall or mountain summit.
Looped-trail system
A looped trail allows a user to end up where they started with either minimal or no repeating parts of the trail.
Looped-trail systems come in many permutations. A single-looped trail
system is often used around lakes, wetlands, and other geological
features.
A series of looped trails is a stacked-loop trail system. A stacked
loop trail system has several, interconnected looped trails. This
creates an efficient, compact design with many route options. In a
multiple-loop system, each loop extends from a single trailhead.
Trail systems often combine linear trails with looped trails. In a
spoked-wheel system, linear trails connect a central trailhead with an
outer loop. In a primary-and-secondary loop system, a linear trails
connect a primary loop with secondary loops. Last, a maze system
incorporates both loops and linear trails. Maze systems provide users
many choices; however, some users may find navigation difficult.
Administration
Europe
An important network of long distance paths in Europe the Via Alpina was created by a group of public and private organisations from the eight Alpine countries in 2000, receiving EU funding from 2001 until 2008. It was initiated by the Association Grande Traversée des Alpes in Grenoble, which hosted the Via Alpina international secretariat until January 2014, when it was transferred to the International Commission for the Protection of the Alps
CIPRA, in Liechtenstein. There are national secretariats (hosted by
public administrations or hiking associations) in each country. Its aim
is to support sustainable development in remote mountain areas and
promote the Alpine cultures and cultural exchanges.
The Grande Randonnée (French), Grote Routepaden or Lange-afstand-wandelpaden (Dutch), Grande Rota (Portuguese) or Gran Recorrido (Spanish) is a network of long-distance footpaths in Europe, mostly in France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Spain. Many GR routes make up part of the longer European walking routes
which cross several countries. In France alone, the trails cover
approximately 60,000 kilometres (37,000 mi). In France, the network is
maintained by the Fédération Française de la Randonnée Pédestre (French Hiking Federation), and in Spain by the Spanish Mountain Sports Federation.
UK and Ireland
In England and Wales many trails and footpaths are of ancient origin and are protected under law as rights of way. In the Republic of Ireland, the Keep Ireland Open organization is campaigning for similar rights. Local highways authorities, in England and Wales, (usually county councils or unitary authorities)
are required to maintain the definitive map of all public rights of way
in their areas and these can be inspected at council offices. If a path
is shown on the definitive map
and no subsequent order (e.g. a stopping up) exists then the right of
way is conclusive in law. But just because a path is not on that map
does not mean that it is not a public path, as the rights may not have
been recorded. The Countryside Agency estimated that over 10% of public paths were not yet listed on the definitive map. The Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000
provides that paths that are not recorded on the definitive map by 2026
and that were in use prior to 1949 will automatically be deemed
stopped-up on 1 January 2026.
In Scotland, a right of way is a route over which the public has been able to pass unhindered for at least 20 years. The route must link two "public places", such as villages, churches or roads. Unlike in England and Wales there is no obligation on Scottish local authorities to signpost or mark a right of way. However the charity Scotways, formed in 1845 to protect rights of way, records and signs the routes. There is no legal distinction between footpaths and bridleways
in Scotland, as there is in England and Wales, though it is generally
accepted that cyclists and horseriders may follow rights of way with
suitable surfaces.
The Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003
established a general presumption of access to all land in Scotland,
making the existence of rights of way less important in terms of access
to land in Scotland. Certain categories of land are excluded from this
presumption of open access such as railway land, airfields and private
gardens.
Northern Ireland
has very few public rights of way and access to land in Northern
Ireland is more restricted than other parts of the UK, so that in many
areas walkers can only enjoy the countryside because of the goodwill and
tolerance of landowners.
Northern Ireland shares the same legal system as England, including
concepts about the ownership of land and public rights of way, but it
has its own court structure, system of precedents and specific access
legislation.
In England and Wales a National Trails system also exists of long distance footpaths, which are administered by Natural England and the Countryside Council for Wales, statutory agencies of the UK government. These include Hadrian's Wall Path, the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, the Pennine Bridleway (bridleway), the South West Coast Path (South West Way) (the longest), and the Thames Path, and many more. Together these are over 4,000 kilometres (2,500 mi) long.
In Scotland, the equivalent trails are called Long Distance Routes and are administered by Scottish Natural Heritage. The first, and probably the most popular, is the West Highland Way, which is 95 miles (153 km) long and was opened in 1980.
Sustrans is a British charity that promotes sustainable transport, and it works on projects to encourage people to walk, cycle, and use public transport, so as to give people the choice of "travelling in ways that benefit their health and the environment". Sustrans' flagship project is the National Cycle Network, which has created over 14,000 milesof signed cycle routes throughout the UK.
United States
In 1968, the United States created its National Trails System, which includes National Scenic Trails, National Historic Trails and National Recreation Trails. The most famous American long trails are The Appalachian National Scenic Trail, generally known as the Appalachian Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail. The Appalachian Trail is a marked hiking route in the eastern United States extending between Springer Mountain, Georgia and Mount Katahdin, Maine. The trail is approximately 2,200 miles (3,500 km) long. The Pacific Crest Trail is a long-distance hiking and equestrian trail closely aligned with the highest portion of the Sierra Nevada and Cascade
mountain ranges, which lie 100 to 150 miles (160 to 240 km) east of the
US Pacific coast. The trail's southern terminus is on the US border
with Mexico, and its northern terminus on the US–Canada border on the
edge of Manning Park in British Columbia, Canada; its corridor through the US is in the states of California, Oregon, and Washington.
It is 2,663 mi (4,286 km) long.
The rules and regulations for a trail are written and enforced by
the land management agency in charge of the trail. A trail may be
completely contained within one administration (e.g. a State Park) or it
may pass through multiple administrations, leading to a confusing array
of regulations, allowing dogs or mountain bikes in one segment but not
in another, or requiring Wilderness Permits for a portion of the trail, but not everywhere.
In the United States agencies administering trails include the National Park Service, the US Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management,
State Park systems, County Parks, cities, private organizations such as
land trusts, businesses and individual property owners.
New trail construction by an agency must often be assessed for
its environmental impact and conformance with State or Federal laws. For
example, in California new trails must undergo reviews specified by the
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).
Universal-access trails
All
trails and shared use paths—indeed, any areas open to pedestrians—that
are owned or operated by a public or private entity covered by the
Americans with Disabilities Act are subject to federal regulations on
Other Power-Driven Mobility Devices (“OPDMDs”). These rules potentially
greatly expand the types of vehicular devices that must be permitted on
trails, shared use paths, other routes, and other areas open to the
public. This publication discusses ways to manage access by these
vehicles.
There are many types of non-motorized, land-based recreational
trails and shared use paths: hiker and pedestrian trails, mountain
biking trails, equestrian trails, and multi-use trails designed for
several user types. The companion guide to this publication, the 2013
Pennsylvania Trail Design and Development Principles: Guidelines for
Sustainable, Non-Motorized Trails (the “Pennsylvania Trail Design
Manual”), provides a great deal of guidance and detailed information
about the characteristics of the various types of trails and paths.
Readers should use that publication as a primary resource to help
evaluate which specific type of route they want to plan, design,
construct, and manage for their site. The publication Universal Access
Trails and Shared Use Paths: Design, Management, Ethical and Legal
Considerations focuses on the accessibility aspects of the most commonly
constructed types.
The companion guide to this publication, the 2013 Pennsylvania
Trail Design and Development Principles: Guidelines for Sustainable,
Non-Motorized Trails (the “Pennsylvania Trail Design Manual”), provides a
great deal of guidance and detailed information about the
characteristics of the various types of trails and paths. Readers should
use that publication as a primary resource to help evaluate which
specific type of route they want to plan, design, construct, and manage
for their site. This publication focuses on the accessibility aspects of
the most commonly constructed types.
Construction
While most trails have arisen through common usage, the design and
construction of good quality new paths is a complex process that
requires certain skills.
When a trail passes across a flat area that is not wet, brush,
tree limbs and undergrowth are removed to create a clear, walkable
trail. A bridge is built when a stream or river is sufficiently deep to
make it necessary. Other options are culverts, stepping stones, and shallow fords. For equestrian use, shallow fords may be preferred. In wet areas an elevated trailway with fill or a boardwalk
is often used, though boardwalks require frequent maintenance and
replacement, because boards in poor condition can become slippery and
hazardous.
On slopes
Trail
gradient are determined based on a site specific assessment of soils
and geology, drainage patterns of the slope, surrounding vegetation
types, position on the slope of a given trail segment (bottom,
mid-slope, ridgeline), average precipitation, storm intensities, types
of use, volume and intensity of use, and a host of other factors
affecting the ability of the trail substrate to resist erosion and
provide a navigable surface. Trails that ascend steep slopes may use switchbacks, but switchback design and construction is a specialized topic.
Trails accessible to off-road wheelchairs,
have a grade no more than one in ten. Paved trail that are accessible
to all wheelchairs, have a grade of be no more than one in twelve, with
periodic level pull-offs.
On a well constructed trail the slope of the trail from side to
side is never more than one in twelve, because side-sloped trails are
prone to gullying. The ideal path is built almost, but not quite, level in cross-section.
To achieve a proper slope in hilly terrain a sidehill
trail is excavated. This type of trailway is created with the
establishing a line of suitable slope across a hillside, which is then
dug out by means of a mattock or similar tool. This may be a full-bench
trail, where the treadway is only on the firm ground surface after the
overlying soil is removed and sidecast (thrown to the side as waste), or
a half-bench trail, where soil is removed and packed to the side
so that the treadway is half on firm old ground and half on new packed
fill. In areas near drainages, creeks and other waterways, excavation
spoils are taken away in bulk and deposited in an environmentally benign
area. In problem areas trails are established entirely on fill. In such
cases the soil is packed down firmly and the site is periodically
checked to maintain the stability of the trail.
Cycle trails built for commuting may be built to a different set of
standards than pedestrian-only trails and, in some cases, may require a
harder surface, fewer changes in grade and slope, increased sight
visibility, and fewer sharp changes in direction. On the other hand, the
cross-slope of a bicycle trail may be significantly greater than a foot
trail, and the path may be narrower in some cases. The American
Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials recommends
different widths for different types of bicycle facilities.
For example, a shared use path has a recommended one directional width
of 8 feet (2.44 m), while a bidirectional path should be significantly
wider (10 to 12 feet or 3.05 to 3.66 metres) to accommodate
bidirectional traffic and users. The US Department of Transportation
provides additional guidance on recreational bicycle and pedestrian
trail planning and design standards.
A well designed recreational mountain bike path for the exclusive use of bicycles has an average grade of less than 10%, and generally follow a contour line, rather than straight downhill.
Drainage
Mountain bike trails slope out or across the trail 3-5% downhill to encourage water to run off the side, rather than down the trail bed.
Trail construction requires proper drainage. If trails have
inadequate drainage, three issues may occur: First, water may accumulate
on flat terrain to the point that the trail becomes unusable. Second,
moving water can erode trails on slopes. Third, inadequate drainage may
create local mud spots.
To remedy the first problem, water accumulation on flat terrain,
raised walkways are often built. Raised walkways include turnpikes,
causeways, embankments, stepping stones, and bridges (or deckwalks).
The earthen approaches are often done by cutting poles from the woods,
staking parallel poles in place on the ground, then filling between them
with whatever material is available to create the raised walkway. The
more elaborate option of the deckwalk is by necessity reserved for
shorter stretches in very high-traffic areas. Water accumulation is
particularly common in the North Country of England.
The second problem, water erosion, is caused because trails, by their nature, tend to become drainage
channels and eventually gullies when the drainage is poorly controlled.
Where a trail is near the top of a hill or ridge, this is usually a
minor issue, but when it is farther down it can become a very major
issue.
In areas of heavy water flow along a trail, a ditch is often dug
on the uphill side of the trail with drainage points across the trail.
The cross-drainage is also accomplished by means of culverts,
which are cleared on a semi-annual basis, or by means of
cross-channels, often created by placing logs or timbers across the
trail in a downhill direction, called "thank-you-marms", "deadmen", or waterbars. Timbers or rocks are also used for this purpose to creates erosion
barriers. Rock paving in the bottom of these channels and in the
trailside ditches are also sometimes used o maintain stability. The
creation of water bars, with or without ditching, at major points of
water flow on or along the trail, and in conjunction with existing
drainage channels below the trail is also a technique that is applied.
Another technique that has been adopted is the construction coweeta dips,
or drain dips, points on the trail where it falls briefly (for a meter
or so) and then rises again. These provide positive drainage points that
are almost never clogged by debris.
The third type of problem can occur both on bottomlands and on
ridgetops and a variety of other spots. A local spot or short stretch of
the trail may be chronically wet. If the trail is not directly on rock,
then a mud pit forms. Trail users go to the side of the trail to avoid
the mud pit, and the trail becomes widened. A "corduroy" is a technique
that is used when this area cannot be drained. This ranges from random
sticks to split logs being laid across the path. Some of the early
turnpikes in the United States were log corduroys, and these can still
be found in third-world forested areas. With recreational trails, it is
common the sticks that may be one to three inches thick and laid in
place, close together. Sometimes, a short bridge is used.
Maintenance
Natural
surface, single-track trails will require some ongoing maintenance.
However, if the trail is properly designed and constructed, maintenance
should be limited to clearing downed trees, trimming back brush and
clearing drainages. Depending on location, if the trail is properly
designed, there should be no need for major rework such as grading or
erosion control efforts. However, mountain trails which see both
significant rainfall and human traffic may require "trail hardening"
efforts in order to prevent further erosion. Most of the seemingly
natural rock steps on the mountain trails of the northeast United States
are, in fact, the work of professional and volunteer trail crews.
For long-distance trails, or trails where there is any possibility of anyone taking a wrong turn, blazing or signage is provided (the term waymarking
is used in Britain). This is accomplished by using either paint on
natural surfaces or by placing pre-made medallions or sometimes cairns. Horseshoe-shaped blazes are frequently used for bridle trails. The Appalachian Trail is blazed with white rectangles, and blue is often used for side trails. European long distance walking paths
are blazed with yellow points encircled with red. However, other
walking paths in European countries are blazed in a variety of manners.
Where bike trails intersect with pedestrian or equestrian trails,
signage at the intersections and high visibility onto the intersecting
trails are needed in order to prevent collisions between fast-moving
cyclists and slower moving hikers and horses. Bicycles and horses
can share the same trails where the trail is wide enough with good
visibility. The US Department of Transportation provides standards and
guidelines for traffic control, including signage and striping, for
bicycle facilities.
Classification
A simple colored symbol to classify a trail's difficulty in the USA
was first used for ski trails and is now being used for hiking, bicycle,
other trails.
- Green circle - easy
- Blue square - moderate
- Black diamond - difficult
Other systems may be used in different locations.
In Switzerland, paths are classified by three levels of
difficulties: Hiking paths (yellow markers), mountain paths
(white-red-white markers) and alpine paths (white-blue-white markers).