In mid-September 2013, we drove out to Ashland City, Tennessee to ride our bicycles on the paved half of the eight mile Cumberland River Bicentennial Trail. We started at the Mark's Creek trailhead just west of town. A small paved parking area is located just off of Chapmansboro Road about 700 feet southwest of the intersection with TN 12 or North Main Street. The trail follows the route of the abandoned Tennessee Central Railroad.
The trail is wide and paved |
The Turkey Junction comfort station is about one mile from the Mark's Creek trailhead |
The bridge at Turkey Junction is one of several timber trestles spanning creeks in the area |
At about 3 inches, this is likely the worst transition from bridge to asphalt |
Another bridge along the route |
An embayment that flows into Sycamore Creek |
Bridge over Sycamore Creek |
Looking downstream at Sycamore Creek |
Parking at Sycamore Harbor trailhead |
On the return trip to Mark's Creek, I recorded some very amateurish video with a camera mounted on the handlebars of my bike. The first video shows the trail approaching and crossing Sycamore Creek. While I had not met a single person on the mile approaching the bridge, I met eight people on the bridge. The second video is just a bit further along and shows the long trestle and one of the many picnic tables along the route. Even though this was a beautiful Sunday afternoon in mid-September, we didn't meet anyone along the route of the second video. At about 90 seconds each, these are both fairly long videos for a blog post.
The trail website is http://www.cumberlandrivertrail.org.
Thank you for sharing information on the Cumberland River Bicentennial Trail. There are now four trailheads. Mark's Creek, Sycamore Harbor, Eagle Pass and Cheatham Dam Trailhead. 7.1 miles plus two more miles at Cheatham Dam connected.
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