The and are urging hikers to avoid the Long Trail and Appalachian Trail in Vermont as volunteers and staff assess damage to infrastructure following disastrous floods earlier this month.
From July 8-9, a rainstorm dropped more than 8 inches of precipitation on parts of the state, swelling waterways, flooding streets, and inundating some of the state鈥檚 best-loved trail mileage. The storms, which killed one person in Barre City, caused an estimated $3 to $5 billion in damage according to and prompted a federal emergency declaration from President Biden. In a statement, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) called it the worst natural disaster to hit the state since the Great Vermont Flood of 1927, which killed 84 people.
As the flood waters began to crest, both the ATC and the GMC published statements asking hikers to get off trail or stay home.
鈥淔lood waters brought catastrophic destruction to areas of New York and Vermont, and the condition of the Appalachian Trail in Vermont is unknown at this time,鈥 the ATC wrote on its Facebook page on Tuesday. 鈥淲idespread road closures and washouts in Vermont may make accessing the Trail impossible in some areas of the state. Hikers should postpone their hikes in Vermont until emergency management officials advise that leisure travel can begin again and conditions improve.鈥
In an email on Thursday, July 13, Chloe Miller, communications director for the Green Mountain Club, said that hikers should plan on staying off the Long Trail and the state鈥檚 stretch of the AT for at least a few more days.
鈥淲e鈥檙e still actively in the middle of a severe weather outlook, so folks would be putting themselves鈥攁nd our state鈥檚 already-stressed emergency crews鈥攁t risk if they decided to go hiking right now,鈥 Miller wrote. 鈥淲e will have a better sense of our guidance for hikers early next week.鈥
Crews from the GMC began a preliminary assessment of their local trails on Wednesday, July 12. A page on the club鈥檚 site detailed the damage they had found: The Long Trail was closed between Bamforth Ridge and the Winooski River footbridge due to flooding and downed live wires from electric fences. The Lamoille River suspension bridge was closed due to flooding, as were the Forest City Trail bridge and a bridge near the Peru Peak shelter. A number of road access points were still impassible.
Still, the news wasn鈥檛 all bad. While a full assessment of the trails鈥 conditions will take time, Miller said that the trails they managed hadn鈥檛 lost any bridges or other 鈥渕ajor infrastructure鈥. That鈥檚 a contrast from 2011鈥檚 Tropical Storm Irene, which washed out crossings and caused large-scale blowdowns.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been aware of and planning around intense rain events for some time, and adapting trail management strategies to account for them, so it鈥檚 a testament to the value of those durable trail structures like checksteps, staircases, and waterbars,鈥 Miller wrote. 鈥淎lso a testament to our crews and volunteers who keep the trail maintained.鈥
国产吃瓜黑料 of Vermont, the storm closed New York鈥檚 Bear Mountain State Park, a point of interest for AT hikers, and . Heavy rains earlier this summer temporarily closed the Kennebec River鈥檚 canoe ferry and .
Hikers can find the latest updates on Vermont trail damage and reroutes .