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Fred Meijer White Pine Trail State Park is a 92-mile (148 km) long linear state park in the U.S. state of Michigan. The trail extends from northern Grand Rapids to Cadillac, and it lies on the path graded for the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad (later absorbed by the Pennsylvania Railroad). The White Pine Trail is a rail trail park. It was ...
White Pine Trail State Park runs through the downtown area of Rockford, next to the Rogue River and the Rockford Dam. [13] Indian Trails provides daily intercity bus service between Grand Rapids, Michigan and St. Ignace. [14]
White Pine Trail at Stegman Creek, W of Summit Ave., Algoma Township, Michigan Coordinates 43°9′57″N 85°34′1″W / 43.16583°N 85.56694°W / 43.16583; -85
Rogue River is designated as "Country Scenic" under Michigan's Natural Rivers Act. [3] It is popular with trout fishers and local youth who have floated the river by innertube since the mid-20th century. It is intersected in parts by the White Pine Trail. It varies from 15 feet (4.6 m) wide in the upper sections to 80 feet (24 m) wide near its ...
The highway crosses Fred Meijer White Pine Trail State Park, a rail trail that runs north through the area. US 10 continues east around the north side of town and runs parallel to the Pere Marquette State Trail, an east–west rail trail that follows the Ludington Division of the Pere Marquette Railway. The highway intersects the business loop ...
In the center of that city, the NCT joins the White Pine Trail (a rail trail) and follows it south for about eight miles (13 km) to downtown Rockford. Here the NCT leaves the rail trail and heads east then south on a series of rural roads. The next points of interest are Canonsburg State Game Area and Seidman County Park.
Lowell is the trail's half-way point, and the national headquarters of the North Country Trail Association is located here. Thornapple Trail, begins in Kentwood and runs southeast through Dutton and Caledonia. White Pine Trail begins in Comstock Park and runs northeast through Belmont, Rockford, Cedar Springs, and Sand Lake.
A fund-raising campaign by the Michigan Nature Association lead in 1973 to the purchase of 200 acres from Universal Oil. Three subsequent acquisitions, between 1989 and 2005, have expanded the sanctuary to 510 acres. The area protects one of the last old-growth white pine (Pinus strobus) stands in Michigan. Two connected loop trails are in the ...