🐾 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 […]
 
								 
								 
								 
								 
					If you’re searching for a dog-friendly hiking experience in Long Pond, Pennsylvania, the Long Pond Conservation Easement offers scenic pet-friendly trails amidst a beautiful old-growth forest. This accessible preserve features a short, two-mile loop with a mix of crushed gravel and wooded paths, making it ideal for leisurely walks with your dog. The area is known for its pristine natural beauty, unique endemic plant communities, and peaceful atmosphere, making walks here soothing for both pets and their owners.
With mostly level terrain and plenty of shade from mature trees, Long Pond Conservation Easement is perfect for bringing your canine companion along for a calming nature escape. While exploring, you might spot native wildlife like deer or hawks and breathe in the fresh Pocono air. The park is especially notable as an ecologically significant site, preserving rare plants and habitats unique to the Pocono region. Pet owners looking for a quiet slice of nature close to home will love visiting this dog-friendly jewel.

“The Long Pond Macrosite Preserve is also considered to be the most important
site in Pennsylvania for the preservation of rare and endemic species and
Natural Communities. Many of these unique and endemic plant communities are
relics of past glaciations and are typical of the more northern latitudes of northern
New England and Canada. In Pennsylvania, most of these endemic
communities are found only in the Pocono region and are dependent on water
quality and/or hydrology for their continued existence. The Natural Communities
along with seven rare and endemic species that have been identified make this
the highest concentration of rare and endemics in the State (The Nature
Conservancy 1991, updated 1999). “

“The Long Pond Macrosite Preserve is also considered to be the most important
site in Pennsylvania for the preservation of rare and endemic species and
Natural Communities. Many of these unique and endemic plant communities are
relics of past glaciations and are typical of the more northern latitudes of northern
New England and Canada. In Pennsylvania, most of these endemic
communities are found only in the Pocono region and are dependent on water
quality and/or hydrology for their continued existence. The Natural Communities
along with seven rare and endemic species that have been identified make this
the highest concentration of rare and endemics in the State (The Nature
Conservancy 1991, updated 1999). “

“The Long Pond Macrosite Preserve is also considered to be the most important
site in Pennsylvania for the preservation of rare and endemic species and
Natural Communities. Many of these unique and endemic plant communities are
relics of past glaciations and are typical of the more northern latitudes of northern
New England and Canada. In Pennsylvania, most of these endemic
communities are found only in the Pocono region and are dependent on water
quality and/or hydrology for their continued existence. The Natural Communities
along with seven rare and endemic species that have been identified make this
the highest concentration of rare and endemics in the State (The Nature
Conservancy 1991, updated 1999). “

“The Long Pond Macrosite Preserve is also considered to be the most important
site in Pennsylvania for the preservation of rare and endemic species and
Natural Communities. Many of these unique and endemic plant communities are
relics of past glaciations and are typical of the more northern latitudes of northern
New England and Canada. In Pennsylvania, most of these endemic
communities are found only in the Pocono region and are dependent on water
quality and/or hydrology for their continued existence. The Natural Communities
along with seven rare and endemic species that have been identified make this
the highest concentration of rare and endemics in the State (The Nature
Conservancy 1991, updated 1999). “

This is a short, maybe 2 mile loop. The first section is crushed gravel and easy walking. Then you enter the woods. Mostly level and a few roots. Easy. Not much to see although we saw a deer.

This is a short, maybe 2 mile loop. The first section is crushed gravel and easy walking. Then you enter the woods. Mostly level and a few roots. Easy. Not much to see although we saw a deer.

This is a short, maybe 2 mile loop. The first section is crushed gravel and easy walking. Then you enter the woods. Mostly level and a few roots. Easy. Not much to see although we saw a deer.

This is a short, maybe 2 mile loop. The first section is crushed gravel and easy walking. Then you enter the woods. Mostly level and a few roots. Easy. Not much to see although we saw a deer.

Just hiking around on a beautiful day

Just hiking around on a beautiful day