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The trail, also known under the name Woodland Bay Trail, [2] is the longest in the county. It is approximately 22 miles (35 km) in length [ a ] and begins at the Woodard Bay Natural Resources Conservation Area and runs mostly south to southeast towards its terminus at the intersection of the Yelm-Rainier-Tenino Trail.
The Elgin Branch and Main Stem are part of the 575-mile (925 km) long Grand Illinois Trail in north-central Illinois. On a more local level, the Prairie Path intersects with Kane County's Fox River Trail four times, and the Great Western Trail—a parallel connector between the Main Stem at Lombard and the Elgin Branch.
This page was last edited on 18 December 2024, at 00:35 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
US 150 west / IL 116 east / Illinois River Road north – Peoria, Metamora: Eastern end of US 150/IL 116/Illinois River Road overlap; grade-separated interchange: Washington Township: 141.5: 227.7: US 24 Bus. east / IL 8 west – East Peoria, Washington: Woodford: Cruger Township: 149.4: 240.4: US 24 Bus. west / Ronald Reagan Trail
US 24 east / Illinois River Road north – Banner, Peoria: Begin/end concurrency with US 24/Illinois River Road: Buckheart Township: 61.5: 99.0: IL 100 south – St. David, Lewistown: Eastern terminus of IL 100: Canton: 64.7: 104.1: IL 9 east (East Linn Street) – Banner, Pekin: Begin/end concurrency with IL 9: 65.9: 106.1: IL 9 west (West ...
As of 2023, Villa Park is working on a Tri-Trail connector project which will connect the trail with both the Illinois Prairie Path and Great Western Trail. [4] The project was completed in 2024. [ 5 ]
The Illinois River Road: Route of the Voyageurs is a National Scenic Byway in Central Illinois, United States. It traverses a set of roadways on both sides of the Illinois River, primarily between Ottawa, Illinois to the north, and Havana, Illinois to the south. Along its route are nature areas, cities and towns, museums and other attractions.
The Shabbona Trail is compacted gravel and remarkably well protected from traffic and the elements. There is only one point where a rural two-lane road is crossed. The remainder of the trail is a National Park Service Trail, maintained by the State of Illinois. Trees line most of the trail. Much of the trail is near the Illinois River. You can: