Sam's Point Preserve
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Pine barrens
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Map of New York
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Location | Ulster County, New York |
Nearest city | Ellenville |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Area | 4,600 acres (19 km2) |
Sam's Point Preserve, or Sam's Point Dwarf Pine Ridge Preserve, is a 4,600-acre (19 km²) preserve in Ulster County on the highest point (2,289 feet/697 m, on the Ellenville / Shawangunk border) of the Shawangunk Ridge in New York. It is owned by the Open Space Institute and managed by Minnewaska State Park Preserve. Its unique environment features dwarf pine trees along the ridgetop. Located within the park is Lake Maratanza, the highest lake on the ridge, and the Ellenville Fault Ice Caves.
History
The name derives from a story that a man named Sam, pursued by Indians, jumped off the cliff to avoid capture and miraculously survived the drop with the trees breaking his fall. Roads throughout the preserve were built as fire roads in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps.
The land was once owned by the nearby village of Ellenville to protect its watershed and partly by a company which offered tours of the ice caves. The Open Space Institute, working with The Nature Conservancy bought it with assistance from the Lila Acheson and Dewitt Wallace Fund for the Hudson Highlands, after the village considered selling the land to developers.
In 2005, the Preserve opened the Sam’s Point Conservation Center with education facilities, exhibits and a gift shop. A parking fee of $10 per vehicle is charged.
Ellenville Fault Ice Caves
The Ellenville Fault Ice Caves is the largest known open fault in the United States with corresponding ice caves. As a result of the cool microclimate, ice is present throughout the year and more northern plants such as black spruce, hemlock, mountain ash, and creeping snowberry, and bryophytes such as Isopterygium distichaceum are able to survive.[1] It was designated a National Natural Landmark in November 1967.[2]
There are hiking trails to the ice caves which are open in the summer, but a permit is required to visit the area.
Trails
The Long Path long-distance hiking trail crosses it, eventually reaching VerKeerderkill Falls. A branch leads to Sam's Point (with a view of land for many miles, sometimes as far as High Point in New Jersey), and another to the ice caves, with solar powered lights. Visitors who want to get to Sam's Point have to go through Cragsmoor. Sam's Point Preserve is near the Mohonk Preserve and Minnewaska State Park Preserve.
Gallery
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SamsAccessRoad.JPG
Looking down the access road, just under the Point
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SamsFireRoad.JPG
A portion of the CCC fire road
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Hiking to Ice Caves.jpg
Hiking to the Ice Caves
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SamsViewSE.JPG
View from the Point, looking to the southeast
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SamsIceCavesTrail.JPG
Along the trail to the Ice Caves
References
- ↑ Significant Habitats and Habitat Complexes of the New York Bight Watershed: Shawangunk - Kittatinny Ridge
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- Protected areas of Ulster County, New York
- Shawangunks
- Wawarsing, New York
- Nature reserves in New York
- Nature centers in New York
- Nature Conservancy preserves
- National Natural Landmarks in New York
- Show caves in the United States
- Ice caves
- Civilian Conservation Corps in New York
- Caves of New York
- Landforms of Ulster County, New York