Hiking the Cascades: Picturesque waterfall well worth the trip

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
The Cascades drop 66 feet on Little Stony Creek in the Cascades Recreation Area of the George Washington and Jefferson National Forest in southwest Virginia. The area is near Pembroke, Va. (MCT News Service)
Buy Sauk Valley Media Photos »

PEMBROKE, Va. – It is an impressive waterfall hidden deep in an Appalachian gorge.

The Cascades drop 66 feet on Little Stony Creek in the Cascades Recreation Area of the George Washington and Jefferson National Forest in southwestern Virginia.

There’s only one way to get to the photogenic falls: hike. It is an easy 2-mile one-way hike along the gurgling stream that begins on Salt Pond Mountain and drains to the New River.

Hiking the Cascades National Recreation Trail was my way to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Weeks Act that greatly expanded the U.S. Forest Service. It also was a good way to celebrate the United Nations’ International Year of the Forest.

In 1911 President William Howard Taft signed the Weeks Act, allowing the government to spend federal funds for conservation for the first time. It was named after Republican Congressman John Weeks of Massachusetts, who led the fight.

The act initially provided $9 million to purchase 6 million acres in the eastern United States. In the past 100 years, it has led to the formation of 52 national forests in 26 Eastern states and the addition of 19.7 million acres of national forests and grasslands in 41 states and Puerto Rico.

“The Weeks Act is one of the most significant natural resource conservation achievements of the 20th century,” U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said on the anniversary.

“This act reminds us of the importance of past conservation efforts that shape our ability to sustain our national forests today and to keep them healthy for the future. The Weeks Act has given us significant economic and environmental benefits, but it’s done more than that. The Weeks Act ensures that all Americans have access to some of the most beautiful places in our country.”

More than 800 miles of the Appalachian National Scenic Trail wind through national forests created because of the Weeks Act.

The first new national forest was the Pisgah in North Carolina in 1916. The most recent were the Uwharrie in North Carolina and the Delta in Mississippi, both in 1961.

The smallest is the 50,000-acre Uwharrie. The largest is the George Washington and Jefferson national forests, that together cover nearly 1.8 million acres.

Previous Page|1||||

Comments


Top Ads


Get Real Deals delivered right to your inbox!

Blogs

» Out Here
Out Here

Why the change? Look at life cycle

Last June, Jessica Russie, 28, and Mary Dunaway, 26, walked into the Whiteside County clerk's office and applied for a civil union license.
» Twin Cities Talk
Twin Cities Talk

Watching a story take off

STERLING – As part of our coverage of the misappropriation of millions in Dixon, a few of us reporters were working on a larger story last week.

Reader Poll

Should Dixon hire a city manager to better monitor its finances?

Yes
No
Not sure
No opinion