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Fishing Creek is an 11.5-mile-long (18.5 km) [1] tributary of the Susquehanna River in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. [2]Fishing Creek flows west through West Hanover and Middle Paxton townships [3] and joins the Susquehanna River at the unincorporated community of Fort Hunter.
Kocher Park, with Fishing Creek in the background. The Fishing Creek Watershed Association plans to open a public section of the creek that stretches for 6,500 feet (2,000 meters), with a park of 92 acres (37.2 ha). There are other tracts of public property along the creek, one of which, called the Power Dam, is 2 miles (3.2 km) upstream of Benton.
Stillwater is 13 miles (21 km) northeast of Bloomsburg, the county seat, via Pennsylvania Route 487, which continues north 3.5 miles (5.6 km) to Benton and beyond. Fishing Creek, a tributary of the Susquehanna River, runs southward through Stillwater. Stillwater is flat in the middle, with rolling hills in the east and west.
Pennsylvania Route 282 Alternate Truck was a truck route around a weight-restricted bridge over the East Branch Brandywine Creek in Eagle, Pennsylvania. It followed Moore Road, PA 100 and PA 113. Along PA 100, it ran concurrent with PA 401 Alternate Truck. The route was signed in 2013, but it was decommissioned in 2019 following a bridge repair.
The creek starts in Suplee near Honey Brook, and joins the West Branch Brandywine Creek in Lenape. From its source, the creek flows east, then southeast, passing through the borough of Downingtown. The creek starts at an elevation of 660 feet (200 m) above sea level drops to an elevation of 174 feet (53 m) at its confluence with the West Branch ...
The trail head is located on Dorlan Mill Road, just north of the Downingtown Borough on Pennsylvania Route 282. [2] For most of its distance, the trail follows the East Branch of the Brandywine Creek. [3] The Struble Trail is maintained by the Chester County Facilities and Parks Department.
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Sweetwater became an official state park in 1972, driven in great part by the work of the Georgia Conservancy, an environmental organization that was formed during a meeting at Sweetwater Creek in 1967. The park features wooded walking and hiking trails, the George Sparks Reservoir, a visitor center, a bait shop, and a gift shop, as well as the ...