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Shenandoah National ParkLike a giant searchlight, sun rays shed light on Shenandoah's mountains and trees.
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Shenandoah National Park
Wilderness Weekend
 
Visitors saw a log using a traditional two-man saw during Shenandoah's annual Wilderness Weekend.
NPS Photo
 
WILDERNESS WEEKEND 2008
October 18-19
 

Special Ranger Programs:
Learn more about the meaning and significance of wilderness during a 20-minute ranger program.
Saturday and Sunday, 11.:30 and 3:30, Byrd Visitor Center (milepost 51)

Traditional Tool Demonstration
Learn about the traditional tools used to maintain wilderness trails and try using a traditional cross-cur saw.
Saturday and Sunday, 9:30-4:00, Byrd Visitor Center (milepost 51)

 

Shenandoah National Park Celebrates Wilderness!

Celebrate America’s wilderness heritage during Shenandoah National Park’s annual Wilderness Weekend, held the third weekend of October. One of the largest wilderness areas in the Eastern United States, Shenandoah’s wilderness offers opportunities for solitude, scenic views, wildlife sightings, and glimpses into the past. Experience Shenandoah’s wilderness by hiking through it or looking into it from Skyline Drive.

Special events take place at Byrd Visitor Center, milepost 51 on Skyline Drive. Shenandoah National Park Trail Crews and PATC volunteers share their expertise in the traditional tools used to maintain trails in wilderness. Visitors can try their hands at using these tools and gain insight on the important role trail maintenance plays in protecting wilderness for future generations. Short talks by rangers during the day explore the history and values of Shenandoah’s wilderness.

Wilderness Weekend is a partnership between Shenandoah National Park, the Shenandoah Park Association, and the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club (PATC). PATC volunteers are at several overlooks along Skyline Drive to share information about Shenandoah’s wilderness with visitors enjoying the park’s fall foliage.

Shenandoah’s wilderness was designated by Congress in October 1976. Forty percent of the park, almost 80,000 acres, is wilderness and represents one of the largest wilderness areas in the eastern United States. Areas preserved as wilderness provide sanctuaries for human recreation, habitat for wildlife, sites for research, and reservoirs for clean, free-flowing water. Wilderness areas have been designated on public land across the United States. Today more than 106 million acres of public land are protected in the National Wilderness Preservation System.

Learn about Shenandoah's Wilderness
Wilderness
Learn about Shenandoah's Wilderness
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Learn more about Shenandoah Wilderness at wilderness.net
Wilderness.net
Learn more about Shenandoah wilderness
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Learn about the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club (PATC)
Potomac Appalachian Trail Club (PATC)
Learn more about our partner volunteer trails organization.
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Lear more about Hiking in Shenandoah National Park
Hiking
Plan your hike!
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The green sharply serrated leaves of chestnut shoots can be found throughout the park.  

Did You Know?
American chestnut trees, whose trunks were killed off by a fungus blight long ago, still send up shoots that you can see along many of Shenandoah National Park’s trails.

Last Updated: October 15, 2008 at 09:38 EST