🐾 Kids at the Dog Park: Real Stories, Safety Risks & Smarter Solutions
If you’ve spent time at an off-leash park, you’ve probably seen it:A parent strolls in with a stroller 🚼 or […]
Buford’s Knoll Walking Trail in Elkwood, Virginia, is a scenic, pet-friendly destination ideal for dog owners who love exploring the outdoors with their furry companions. This 1.5-mile out-and-back trail offers easy, flat terrain, making it suitable for walkers of all ages including children and families. Along the trail, visitors will discover open fields, wooded areas, and unique historic sites, including a lovely old house and the remnants of slave quarters, providing both beauty and a touch of history to your adventure.
Dog owners will appreciate the welcoming atmosphere as dogs are allowed on-leash throughout the park. While there is no designated dog park or off-leash area, the trail offers plenty of space for enjoyable leashed walks. Nature lovers can observe a variety of local plant life, and aviation enthusiasts might spot planes taking off from the nearby airport. If you’re looking for a quiet, scenic walk with your dog on pet-friendly trails in Elkwood, Buford’s Knoll is a peaceful and enjoyable choice.
Great place to walk! Lovely old house to see with historic markers around
Quiet walk with pups & beautiful open spaces. About 1.5 miles round-trip from parking lot, up the hill and the historical building. Flat walking trails.
Nice mile walk up to Buford’s Knoll. Some helicopters and airplanes because of the airport nearby. A lot of poison ivy and some persimmon trees, pokeweed, bitter dock, plantain/plantago, mulberry, raspberry, blackberry, wild grape, autumn olive, sumac, rose hips. Signs are all deteriorated for the walking tour, except the first one.
This is a nice park and trail , not too strenuous, for a walk. As a bonus there is the airport next door where you can see planes taking off and landing if that’s your thing. One thing about the battlefield markers — they’re clearly written by confederate sympathizers, given the confederate point of view and euphemisms of servicing history etc etc.
Perfect for my wife and boys from a hiking perspective. More of a walk through a field for me. If you are looking for a challenge, this isn’t it. I’m a big history nerd though and we are going to Gettysburg next weekend, so I thought this would be nice to visit before as it was towards the beginning of the Gettysburg campaign. Not a ton in the way of historical markers or explanations. There are some though. Interesting old house and slave quarter ruins towards the end. I think they do guided tours which would have been more fun.