Walk this way

The Appalachian Trail (AT) extends along the East Coast from Georgia to Maine, and every year thousands of hikers (known as thru-hikers) walk the entire distance. The trail is marked, for the most part, with white strips of paint on trees along the path. 

Sometimes, as is the case now in Falls Village and Salisbury, there is a trail detour — such as the one caused by the demolition of the old iron bridge across the Housatonic River, that connected Salisbury and Falls Village. The bridge had reached a point where it was no longer safe for automotive traffic. It has been closed to cars for several years, although hikers and other perambulators could still walk across it. 

On July 9, the old bridge was cut in half and removed. A new bridge built to replace it could be done by December. 

Normally, hikers coming from the south emerge from the woods at the intersection of routes 7 and 112, in the Lime Rock section of Falls Village. From there they would normally cross the cement bridge into Falls Village and walk through town to the old iron bridge, where they cross the river again and enter the Amesville section of Salisbury.

While the bridge is out, hikers will now emerge on Route 7 and walk back toward Trinity Church in Lime Rock, then proceed down Dugway Road until they reach the canoe portage across the river from the power plant.

There they pick up the trail again and walk along the shoreline of the Housatonic River, heading north into Salisbury.

The detour is marked by large orange signs, saying, “Appalachian Trail Detour.” There are also small, rectangular orange signs with white rectangles in them. A solid white rectangle means “continue straight ahead.” When there are two rectangles, it indicates a change in direction. If the white rectangle on the right is higher than the one on the left, it means “head right.”

Silvia Cassano, who is a trail management assistant for the Appalachian Trail Conservancy, sent a note with some information on this year’s AT. The length of the trail changes slightly each year depending on, for example, whether there are detours. 

“The mileage changes yearly and is currently 2,189 miles,” she said. The Connecticut section of the trail is currently 51 miles. It mainly runs through Salisbury, Falls Village and Kent. A shift is being planned now that would take the trail off Schaghticoke Indian lands in Kent. 

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