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Oneonta Wilber Lake loop trail

Fotos de la ruta

Foto deOneonta Wilber Lake loop trail Foto deOneonta Wilber Lake loop trail Foto deOneonta Wilber Lake loop trail

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Fecha de subida
29 de diciembre de 2019

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Fotos de la ruta

Foto deOneonta Wilber Lake loop trail Foto deOneonta Wilber Lake loop trail Foto deOneonta Wilber Lake loop trail

Descripción del itinerario

Wilber Lake is a 89 acre, 0.75 mile long reservoir in the town of Oneonta, NY. The lake is open for fishing and hiking but not swimming or boating.

This trail (former Upper Cross Rd) on the north side of Wilber Lake crosses from East St to Wilber Lake Rd. A second trail follows the south shore from Wilber Lake Rd. to the dam.

Note as of Dec. 2019 the bridge across the north side of Wilber Lake is under repair and not crossable (unless you wade or balance on a guardrail).
Map drawn based on tracks recorded on iP4, iP6, 191228.

Puntos de interés

IconoLago Altitud 487 m

Lake view

Good view across Wilber lake to the south.

IconoIntersección Altitud 473 m

Intersection

A trail leads west here to the end of the peninsula

IconoPuente Altitud 475 m

Bridge

A bridge crosses Wilber Lake here.

IconoPuente Altitud 490 m

Bridge closed

The bridge across the north side of Wilber Lake is closed for culvert repairs as of winter 2019-2020.

IconoRío Altitud 486 m

Creek

A small creek (3-4 ft wide) crosses the road here. Some people will be able to jump across.

IconoAparcamiento Altitud 499 m

Trailhead for NW side

Parking area for trail on northwest side of Wilber Lake.

IconoRío Altitud 483 m

Creek

The half-mile-long west branch of Oneonta creek flows under Wilber Lake Road here into the reservoir..

IconoAparcamiento Altitud 485 m

Trailhead for S side

Roadside parking for trail on south side of Wilber Lake. Note that the "No trespassing" signs here are misleading. The dam is public property, and while the city wants visitors to stay out of the reservoir, the trail is open for public use.

IconoAparcamiento Altitud 472 m

Trailhead NE side

Parking area for trail on northeast side of Wilber Lake.

IconoWaypoint Altitud 469 m

Parking

IconoWaypoint Altitud 467 m

Oneonta Creek

Hikers can walk across the edge of the dam or can cross the creek just where it exits the dam.

Wet area

Avoid the marshy area below the dam.

IconoIntersección Altitud 470 m

Trail continues by water

The trail in the section is unmaintained and hard to find after some logging in this area. One trail continues north close to the shore. Another heads uphill to the road

IconoWaypoint Altitud 473 m

Wet area

Wet sedge meadow.

IconoAparcamiento Altitud 473 m

Trail to lake

Parking area. An unmaintained trail leads steeply down to the lake.

IconoFoto Altitud 466 m
Foto deNo tresspassing sign

No tresspassing sign

Note that the "No trespassing" signs along the trail on the south side of Wilber Lake are misleading. The dam is public property, and while the city forbids visitors from entering the reservoir itself, the trails by the lake are open for public use.

IconoWaypoint Altitud 475 m

View

Trail overgrown

The maintained trail ends at the dam. The trail in this section is overgrown and hard to follow after logging. If you lose the trail, just head uphill to East St.

Dam

This dam was built in 1937 to increase the size of Wilber Lake, a main drinking water source for the City of Oneonta along with the Lower Reservoir downstream. The Daily Star reported in August 2019 that the city's water system serves 15,954 people who live in the City of Oneonta, and parts of the Town of Oneonta. The maintained trail ends at the dam. Although swimming in Wilber Lake is illegal, the dam remains a popular local swimming spot.

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