Mohawk Hudson Bike/Hike Trail

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Mohawk Hudson Hike/Bike Trail
Location Little Falls to Albany, NY
Length 86 miles
Trailheads Little Falls, Fort Plain, Canojaharie, Fultonville, Amsterdam, Patterson, NY Route 5 Park and Ride, Schenectady County Community College, Blatnick Park in Niskayuna, Mohawk View Park in Colonie, 4th Street Park in Watervliet, Corning Preserve in Albany
Use Bike, Inline Skating, Walking, Cross Country Skiing
Difficulty Mostly easy, level, ADA accessible, with isolated steep grades and occasional on-road sections.
Surface Stone dust, asphalt
Hours Dawn to dusk, year-around
Amenities Benches, Picnic Facilities, Bathrooms, Parking
Bathrooms Rotterdam Kiwanis Park, Niskayuna Lions Park (seasonal), Corning Preserve

The Mohawk Hudson Hike/Bike Trail is a 86-mile (138 km) trail in New York's Mohawk Valley and Capital District. It is also the easternmost segment of the New York State Canalway Trail.

former Niskayuna Railroad Station along the trail, March 2010
File:Hudsonpath.jpg
The Corning Tower on the City of Albany skyline, as seen from Hudson River section of the trail.

It starts on the west bank of the Hudson River in the Albany's Erastus Corning City Preserve, and travels northward to Watervliet. From there, an on-street bike route connects through Watervliet, Green Island and Cohoes to the Mohawk River section. The trail continues west along the Mohawk River and New York State Barge Canal, with occasional on-road segments, ending in the Pattersonville section of Rotterdam.

After a 5.7 mile gap, the trail resumes near Amsterdam, and continues through the communities of Fultonville and Canojaharie, ending near Little Falls. After a 26-mile gap, the Canalway Trail resumes in Utica.

Much of the MHBHT is a rail trail, created from portions of the Schenectady and Troy Railroad,[1] which was taken out of service on January 15, 1965.[2] Most of the portion from the Northway to Schenectady was still owned by the Penn Central railroad as of 1973.[3]

There are a few gaps in the trail where it leaves the former railbed and follows local roads. One such section crosses under the Thaddeus Kosciusko Bridges, which carry Interstate 87 over the Mohawk River, and another travels through the city of Watervliet and the Village of Green Island, where the width between the Hudson River and Interstate 787 is insufficient for a trail.

It is generally regarded as the Capital District's premier linear park, and is the most heavily used, based on a 2007 survey of trail users. An estimated 241,000 individual user sessions per year occur on the trail.[4]

References

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External links


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