Summer is a traditional time to go to the beach and be near
the water, and New York City has 14 miles of public beaches where you can contract skin cancer
while being eaten alive by horse flies. I never understood why people would
want to go to a sunny place and let the sun burn them during the hottest time
of the year.
But believe it or not, New York City also has woods and you
would do well to spend some time in the shade this summer. There’s something
immensely satisfying about going for a walk in the woods and knowing you are
still within the five boroughs of New York City.
For more than 10 years I lived in Inwood, the northernmost
neighborhood in Manhattan. I was lucky enough to live right across one of the
wooded sections of Inwood Hill Park, which contains the last piece of natural
forest in Manhattan as well as Manhattan’s last surviving salt marsh. It is
also the highest natural point of elevation in the city.
I moved into Inwood on a Saturday in the summer and the
following Monday went on a jog in the park before going to work. Not familiar
with the park and its paths yet, I became lost. I couldn’t believe it that I
was lost in the woods in Manhattan, but I was. I eventually found my way home
and wasn’t too late to work, but Inwood Hill Park remains a treasure with lots
wooded paths to walk. Even on weekends in the spring and summer when the park
is typically crowded, you can find some solitude in the woods.
Be careful though, there are no shortage of shady characters
who know this as well, and while I was living in Inwood a young Julliard
student named Sarah Fox was murdered in a wooded part of the park one afternoon while she
was jogging.
Inwood Hill Park may be one of the best and most overlooked
wooded parks in the city but it’s not the only place to cool off in the shade.
Now that I am in Queens, I live not far from several
parks that have real woods and wooded trails.
A few weeks ago, my wife and I decided we would go to Alley Pond Park. My wife, who grew up in Queens, knew it as a
place high school students would go to drink alcohol under the cover of
darkness. The park is the second largest public park in Queens (Flushing
Meadows Corona Park, which doesn’t have dense woodlands, is the largest).
Alley Pond Park would be difficult to reach via public
transportation as it is not near any subway lines; you’d have to take the bus
if you don’t have a car or can’t walk or bike there. We found a parking space
in a small parking lot that looks like it overflows during busy times. We put
our twin daughters in a jogging stroller and managed to navigate it through
much of the wooded paths in the park. Of course, being in New York City, the
paths in the park were sometimes paved and sometimes led to steep staircases
that we dared not traverse with a stroller, but we were always able to turn
around and find another suitable path that would let us enjoy the woods a
little more.
We saw lots of birds and even a rabbit. There were plenty of
mosquitoes as we got near swamp areas of the park. We came across other
strollers in the woods but like Inwood Hill Park, one can achieve a certain
solitude in the woods even on days that the park is crowded.
No matter what borough you reside in, there is no shortage
of wooded parks in New York. It will
be cooler and less crowded in the shade.
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