Orange Marks A New Path

Paul Bass Photo

Martin Torresquintero stuck a sign in the ground to mark the launch of Edgewood Park’s newest trail.

Once completed — at this week’s end, weather permitting — the Orange Trail” will also include this footbridge.

On Friday, Torresquintero and new Ranger Elizabeth Kaplan (pictured) were hard at work clearing the path, which will eventually run along the east bank of the West River from the Edgewood Park bridge past the park’s Middle Bridge …

… on behind the dog run to the skate park and Coogan Pavilion. They are following up on work volunteers of the Friends of Edgewood Park have been doing along the path for years. Along with volunteers from Youth at Work, the Friends began clearing knotweed and adding wood chips to parts of it so people could walk there, said Friends Green Team Stephanie FitzGerald. Former Ranger Joe Milone cleared a path from the Mid Bridge to the skate park, FitzGerald said; the Friends Green Team and URL Youth at Work cleaned and laid down wood chips” and has continued clearing.

For weeks Torresquintero and Kaplan have been doing similar clearing and clean-ups along paths in East Rock, Lighthouse, Bishop Woods, and West Rock parks, readying oases for Covid-19 lockdown-weary New Haveners ready to roam free in safe nature spots. Back in Edgewood Park, on the west side of the river, they also repaired this boardwalk, which had been damaged by flooding. They removed dumped asphalt that had created a dam. We don’t want asphalt on the wetland” anyway, Torresquintero said. It leaches chemicals.”

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