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Get trail ready in Chilhowie PDF Print E-mail
Smyth County News
Jun 02, 2009
By Dan Kegley/Staff

In a month to 45 days—weather permitting, this wetter-than-usual spring—Chilhowie will join the growing list of communities boasting recreational trails.

Town officials and citizens broke ground Monday in an almost impromptu ceremony, itself scheduled when sunshine finally figured prominently in the forecast, according to Kelly Spencer-Hill, the town’s parks and wellness department director.

Almost 45 people gathered in Chilhowie’s park along the river where orange lines marked the path for the first phase of the H.L. Bonham Tourism Center Trail. Among them were the town’s mayor, Gary Heninger, and his staff and town work crews.

Many, ironically, sought shade from the bright sun that seemed intent on making up time lost to frequent rains in the last several days.

The event included a ribbon-cutting and the ceremonial plunging of shovels into the ground, breaking it to signal at last a start for construction of the long-planned trail. That start is imminent for a project that finally cleared years of study, design and redesign hurdles to Virginia Department of Transportation requirements.

The new trail is the first phase of a project that will see trails on both sides of the Middle Fork of the Holston River. The phase ready for construction loops through the park along the river from the ball field to just east of Pine Avenue, then along Railroad Avenue with a swing to the south around the basketball courts.

In a later phase, a bridge will span the river to link the park to a trail to be built between the river and Interstate 81 and link the tourism center to the trails. The date of the start of that work remains unknown, according to Heninger.

Kyra Bishop, president of Chilhowie Organization for Art, Community and History, told the group she hoped the trail would inspire less active people to take up walking and running.

Chilhowie joins Marion and Saltville with their respective Riverwalk and Salt Trail, and Abingdon with the Virginia Creeper Trail that links to Damascus and the Appalachian Trail, in a club of communities in the region boasting trails promoting health and exposure to the outdoors.

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