Beginning Nov. 29, 2021, First State National Historical Park will be restricting access to the Smith Bridge Parking Lot by closing the right side of the lot to allow for the landscape to recover and maintenance. The left side of the trailhead parking lot will remain open to provide access to the Brandywine Creek Trail that will allow visitors to hike towards Brandywine Creek State Park and other areas of the park. This partial closer will remain in effect until March 1st, 2022.
Over the years the Smith Bridge Picnic Area, accessible from the Smith Bridge Parking Lot, has seen an increase in visitation leading to repetitive trampling of native plants. Native plants help reduce erosion by locking the soil into place and by filtering runoff rainwater. When plants are repeatedly tramples it limits the amount of sunlight, they can capture, causing them to die. Without the plants the soil begins to erode. In the photos below, you can see some of the irreversible erosion damage that has been caused from the lack of vegetation. It is our hope that this space can recover, and the plants will begin to come back by limiting the access to the area.
Tags: first state national historical park
How can you help?
1. Stay on designated trails throughout the park and picnic area to allow the surrounding vegetation to grow and mature. It is also illegal to go off trails within First State NHP.
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Avoid using steep riverbanks to get into the water to prevent further erosion of the soil.
3.
Help educate your friends, community, and family members on outdoor ethics and the Leave No Trace Principles.
1.
Volunteer at park clean-up events or public planting opportunities.
Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service