Five-Star Trails: Asheville. Jennifer Pharr Davis

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Five-Star Trails: Asheville - Jennifer Pharr Davis


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book contains a concise and informative narrative of each hike from beginning to end. The text will get you from a well-known road or highway to the trailhead, through the twists and turns of the hike route, back to the trailhead, and to notable nearby attractions, if there are any. Each profile opens with the route’s star ratings, GPS trailhead coordinates, and a lineup of other key information. Below is an explanation of the introductory elements that give you a snapshot of each of the 35 routes in Five-Star Trails: Asheville.

      STAR RATINGS

      Five-Star Trails is the Menasha Ridge Press series of guidebooks geared to selected US urban areas such as Asheville, North Carolina. Authors for the series are locally based, experienced outdoors writers. For research, they personally hike a variety of trails—often creating unique routes by marrying sections of different trails.

      To determine worthy selections for this series, authors assess the qualities of each route in the five categories shown below. Each trail must average high ratings among the five categories; or it must be outstanding in one or more of these categories. For example, the author may award a trail only one star for “Condition” but five stars for “Scenery” and include it in the book. Why? Because, based on the author’s own trek, it is well worth hiking the “rocky, overgrown, or often muddy” path in order to witness and savor its “unique, picturesque panorama.”

      Following is the explanation for the rating system of one to five stars in each of the five categories.

      images Unique, picturesque panoramas

      images Diverse vistas

      images Pleasant views

      images Unchanging landscape

      images Not selected for scenery

      FOR TRAIL CONDITION:

      images Consistently well maintained

      images Stable, with no surprises

      images Average terrain to negotiate

      images Inconsistent, with good and poor areas

      images Rocky, overgrown, or often muddy

      FOR CHILDREN:

      images Babes in strollers are welcome

      images Fun for anyone past the toddler stage

      images Good for young hikers with proven stamina

      images Not enjoyable for children

      images Not advisable for children

      FOR DIFFICULTY:

      images Grueling

      images Strenuous

      images Moderate (won’t exhaust you, but you’ll know you’ve been hiking)

      images Easy, with patches of moderate

      images Good for a relaxing stroll

      FOR SOLITUDE:

      images Positively tranquil

      images Spurts of isolation

      images Moderately secluded

      images Crowded on weekends and holidays

      images Steady stream of individuals and/or groups

      GPS TRAILHEAD COORDINATES

      As noted in “Trail Maps”, I transmitted data from a handheld GPS unit to the publisher’s cartographers. In addition to its use in creating this book’s maps, that information verified the GPS coordinates—the intersection of the lines of latitude (north) and longitude (west)—to place you at the trailhead.

      In some cases, you can drive to a parking point within viewing distance of that trailhead. Other hikes require a short walk to reach the trailhead from a parking area. Either way, the trailhead coordinates are given from the point where you will begin hiking.

      Pertinent to visualizing the GPS coordinates, the latitude and longitude grid system is likely quite familiar to you, but here is a refresher:

      Imaginary lines of latitude—called parallels and approximately 69 miles apart from each other—run horizontally around the globe. Each parallel is indicated by degrees from the equator (established to be 0°): up to 90°N at the North Pole and down to 90°S at the South Pole.

      Imaginary lines of longitude—called meridians—run perpendicular to latitude lines. Longitude lines are likewise indicated by degrees: starting from 0° at the Prime Meridian in Greenwich, England, they continue to the east and west until they meet 180° later at the International Date Line in the Pacific Ocean. At the equator, longitude lines are approximately 69 miles apart, but that distance narrows as the meridians converge toward the North and South Poles.

      GPS coordinates are shown in varying formats, and they often are given in degrees, minutes, and seconds. But the popular format used in this book is degrees–decimal minutes.

      As an example of the degrees–decimal minute format, regard the GPS coordinates for Hike 1, the Arboretum Explorer Loop: N35° 30.052’ W82° 35.940’. This tells you that the trailhead is at a latitude of 35 degrees, 30.052 minutes, and at a longitude of 82 degrees, 35.940 minutes.

      For more on GPS technology, visit usgs.gov.

      DISTANCE & CONFIGURATION

      The distance shown is for the complete hike from start to finish, as recorded with the GPS unit. As the mileage is for the total hike, it is always measured round-trip. (Unless otherwise specified, the profile opener’s mileage does not factor any options to shorten or extend the hike, but such segues are addressed in the hike description.)


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