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Blue Ridge Rail Trail

Description

Elevation: 638 ft.

Piney River is one of the most recent towns in Virginia to convert their disused rail bed into a nature trail. The trail is still being developed, starting at the refurbished train depot in Piney River and heading east through a varied landscape of evergreen and deciduous forest mixed with brush land and open areas. The woods along the trail are alive with birds throughout the year. Residents such as blue jay, northern cardinal, Carolina chickadee, tufted titmouse, and red-bellied and downy woodpeckers are joined in winter by numerous yellow-rumped warblers, ruby-crowned kinglets and yellow-bellied sapsuckers. Check the trailside brush piles for song, white-throated and the occasional white-crowned sparrow. During migration the area should be checked for neotropical migrants such as warblers, vireos, tanagers and orioles, while summer should be good for a variety of dragonflies and butterflies.

Wildlife Sightings

Birds Recently Seen at Blue Ridge Rail Trail:

    117 species have been reported at this site to date.

    Recent Checklists:

    Date# of SpeciesSubmitted By
    27 Nov 20251Kate W
    20 Nov 202515Justin Cober-Lake
    5 Oct 202541Michael Boatwright
    25 Sep 202512emily seawell
    9 Aug 20258Daniel Hinnebusch

    See more recent checklists…

    Amenities & Accessibility Considerations

    Site Amenities

    • On-site Parking
    • No Fee or Permit/Pass Requirement

    Other Site Amenities: Bike Trails, Hiking Trails

    Maps & Directions

    View on Google Maps

    From Mill Creek Park, return to the intersection of Rt. 610 and Rt. 778; turn right onto Rt. 778 and continue north for 2.0 miles to Rt. 665. Turn right on Rt. 665 and follow this road 3.5 miles to SR 151. Turn left on SR 151 and go 0.7 miles into the Town of Piney River. The Blue Ridge Rail Trail starts next to the train depot on the right.

    Site Information

    Managed By:

    • 0

    Access Requirements:

    Contact Information:

      Sites, or portions of sites, can be closed periodically for management activities. Please always check the site’s website for additional information prior to visiting.

    About the VBWT

    The Virginia Bird and Wildlife Trail is a network of over 600 greenspaces and blueways throughout the Commonwealth selected for their wildlife viewing potential. Walk a nature trail, paddle a river, or enjoy a scenic overlook and you’ll soon see why Virginia is a premier destination for birding and wildlife viewing.

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