Guidelines

How long is Alley Pond Park Trail?

How long is Alley Pond Park Trail?

3.2 mile
Alley Pond Park Loop is a 3.2 mile moderately trafficked loop trail located near New York City, New York that features a great forest setting. The trail is rated as moderate and is primarily used for hiking, walking, running, and nature trips.

Does Alley Pond Park have parking?

There are four parking lots available at Alley Pond Park: three in the southern end of the park, and one by Alley Pond Environmental Center in the northern end of the park. If you enter at the northern end of the park, one of the first trails you’ll see is the furrific Yellow Trail.

Is Alley Pond Park Safe?

Alley Pond Park – AP – is a large park with lots of trails. It is usually clean and a good place to take photographs. Lots of benches and room there. Always felt safe.

Is Alley Pond Park free?

We have no admission rate, but are donations are appreciated! The average cost per person per APEC visit is $15. The suggested donation is $5 per person. The building is open 7 days a week, except for major holidays.

Where is the oldest tree in Alley Pond Park?

New York City
The park contains the Queens Giant, a tulip poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera) that is the tallest carefully measured tree in New York City and possibly the oldest living thing in the New York metropolitan area….

Alley Pond Park
Parking 200 spaces

How do you get to Alley Pond Park?

Walk north on Winchester Boulevard towards the Grand Central Parkway overpass. The entrance is on your left underneath the Grand Central Parkway. Walk across the parking lot and soccer field to the Alley Pond Adventure Center.

Are there deer in Alley Pond Park?

Deer are occasionally spotted in Alley Pond Park in Queens and fairly often seen in Van Cortlandt Park and Staten Island parks, but until 2000, there had never been a sighting in Forest Park.

Does Alley Pond Park have grills?

To top it off, Alley Pond Park has all the amenities you’d expect from a neighborhood park–playgrounds, barbeque areas, and courts and fields galore!

What is a GREY giant?

The Grey Giant was one of the first crags in the Wonderland to be developed by several world renowned climbers (e.g. John Long, Tony Yaniro, Tobin Sorenson) in the early 70’s. Other worthy crack climbs include Lithophiliac, Transfusion, The Coliseum, and Dawn Yawn.

Are dogs allowed at Alley Pond Park?

Dogs must be on a leash (no more than six feet long) at all times, except in dog runs and designated off-leash areas at the prescribed times. You must pick up after your dog and dispose of the waste in containers provided throughout the park.

What predators live in NYC?

Life is finding a way in the concrete jungle.

  • White-tailed deer. The feud between New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and Gov.
  • Alligators.
  • Red-tailed hawks.
  • Opossums.
  • Gray squirrels.
  • Black bears.
  • Sasquatch.

Where are the trails in Alley Pond Park?

Numerous trails wind through native hardwood (oak-hickory) forest and kettle ponds. The north end of the park boasts splendid salt marsh views. Alley Pond Park is located in eastern Queens with a unique wetlands environment.

Why is Alley Pond Park in New York important?

The center is home to a non-profit environmental education organization that is dedicated to educating children and adults in the New York metropolitan area, protecting and preserving Alley Pond Park, open spaces, and waterbodies, and advocating for sustainable environmental policies and practices.

Is the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway near Alley Pond Park?

Due to construction, the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway is currently closed from Winchester Boulevard to Springfield Boulevard. Please use these alternate access points [PDF] to and from Alley Pond Park and the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway. For more information about this project, please visit our Capital Project Tracker.

How old is the tree in Alley Pond?

It is estimated to be between 350 and 450 years of age. It was a sapling in the 17th century, when the Dutch West India Company sent a group of Walloon families to Manhattan. It was a well-established young tree when General George Washington passed close by in 1790 on a tour of Long Island.