Internet Yellow Pages
 

S.C. State Parks Acquire Crucial Piece of Blue Ridge

Published Jul 27, 2007

COLUMBIA, SC – Seventeen acres of woodlands high atop the Blue Ridge have been purchased by the S.C. Department of Parks, Recreation & Tourism (SCPRT), helping to protect the view and the integrity of one of the state’s most beloved hiking trails.

Caesars Head and Jones Gap state parks comprise the Mountain Bridge Wilderness Area, which now encompasses 11,130 acres of mountain vistas, forest coves, hiking trails and pristine trout streams along the Blue Ridge Escarpment, where the mountains fall sharply off to the piedmont, creating such dramatic features as Raven Cliff Falls.

For more information on Caesars Head State Park and Raven Cliff Falls, visit

www.SouthCarolinaParks.com

at (803) 734-1370 or medmonds@scprt.com.or contact Marion Edmonds, SCPRT director of communications,

Now part of Caesars Head State Park, the land includes frontage on U.S. 276 (Geer Highway) and is adjacent to the Raven Cliff Falls hiking trail, a 2.2-mile hike through the forest to the tallest waterfall in South Carolina.

The property was purchased from Greylogs LLC of Chapin, a private landowner. The transaction was made possible through the joint efforts of the landowner, Naturaland Trust, The Nature Conservancy, businessman and conservationist Ben Geer Keys of Greenville and the S.C. State Park Service, part of SCPRT.

“Securing this property for the people of South Carolina ensures that one of our most distinctive landscapes and picturesque views will remain intact,” said SCPRT Director Chad Prosser.

An estimated 20,000 people a year take the walk to the 420-foot falls. The newly acquired land lies just north of the Caesars Head State Park headquarters and Raven Cliff Falls trail head and includes ridge line and level mountaintop property. Residential development has been accelerating along U.S. 276.

“Acquiring this small piece of land will make a huge difference in keeping the trail and the land around it just the way they are for generations to come.” said Phil Gaines, director of the S.C. State Park Service. “There are 139 trails covering 354 miles in our state parks, but none more critical than the trail to Raven Cliff Falls.”

The purchase does not include the Greylogs homestead itself. The landmark building and three surrounding acres remain in private hands.

Funding for the $763,456 purchase of the 17 acres surrounding the homestead came from the Recreation Land Trust Fund, which provides state-funded reimbursable grants that can only be used for the acquisition of land for the purpose of public recreation



Want More info? - Submit Request
    Question:
*  Full Name:
*  Telephone:
*  Your email address:
*  Zip Code:

Add a Comment

Please be civil.

( Use Markdown for formatting.)

( )

The following challenge question is asked as a deterrent to spam robots:









Top Local News