Stony Valley Rail-Trail

Pennsylvania

65 Reviews

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Stony Valley Rail-Trail Facts

States: Pennsylvania
Counties: Dauphin, Lebanon, Schuylkill
Length: 19.6 miles
Trail end points: 2680 Stony Valley Railroad Grade (Dauphin) and Seigrist Dam (Pine Grove)
Trail surfaces: Dirt, Gravel
Trail category: Rail-Trail
ID: 6017065

Stony Valley Rail-Trail Description

Note: During hunting season, Pennsylvania Game Lands Regulations require ALL non-hunters present on game lands between November 15 and December 15 (excluding Sundays) to wear a minimum of 250 square inches of fluorescent orange material on the head, chest, and back combined, or, in lieu thereof, a hat of the same colored material. Orange material must be visible 360 degrees.

Bicycling is prohibited on game lands from the last Saturday in September to the third Saturday in January during spring turkey season. Check the PA Game Commission website before you embark and heed the signs posted on the trail to avoid citations.

Tucked into the Appalachian Ridge and Valley region, the Stony Valley Railroad Grade makes tracks through a state game land for 19.6 miles past vanished coal boomtowns and tourist resorts. There are no trailside amenities, but there is plenty of quiet for those who enjoy a forested reprieve from the hustle and bustle. A fairly rustic rail trail, the Stony Valley Railroad grade is best suited for hikers and mountain bikers.

The route can be susceptible to ravages of extreme weather, so be prepared for potholes and washouts.

About the Route

Leaving off from the western trailhead, trail users will experience a slight but steady grade for 13.0 miles, and then a downhill journey for the remainder of the route. The route crosses a bridge at 5.7 miles over Rattling Run, which shares its name with an old coal mining town up the hill. At 9 miles, a footpath on the right heads uphill to a deteriorating stone tower.

The Coldspring Road parking area at 11.2 miles marks the approximate location of a former 200-room tourist resort where visitors once soaked in spring waters. It was swept away by a fire in 1900. At mile marker 13.5, the Appalachian Trail crosses the trail and is also the site of the ghost town of Rausch Gap. Stone foundations, as well as a cemetery with a few headstones dating to the 1850s, are visible in the forest here.

The trail passes the Gold Mine Road trailhead in about 17.3 miles and then reaches the eastern trail end at Seigrist Dam another 2.4 miles, where the trail overlooks Lebanon Reservoir, which supplies drinking water to the town of Lebanon.

Trail History

 

Originally named St. Anthony’s Wilderness by Moravian missionaries who arrived in the 1740s to convert the local American Indians, the Stony Creek Valley was a big draw for lumbering and coal mining companies in the 1820s due to its abundant natural resources. The Dauphin & Susquehanna Railroad entered the region in 1854 to haul coal to larger railroads, and it subsequently became the Schuylkill & Susquehanna Railroad in 1859, and then part of the Philadelphia & Reading Rail Road in 1872. The Reading pulled the plug on the money-losing line in 1939 after a bridge burned down.

 

The State Game Commission acquired the 44,000 acres in 1945 and later transformed the railroad corridor into a restricted road through State Game Land No. 211. Hunters come here for deer, squirrels, grouse, and turkeys. The route is closed to nonhunting bicyclists and equestrians in hunting season (the last Saturday in September through the third Saturday in January, and before 1 p.m. from the second Saturday in April through the last Saturday in May). Visitors must wear an orange vest during those periods. It is open one day a year to vehicles between the Ellendale Road and Gold Mine Road trailheads. 

 

 

Parking and Trail Access

The Stony Valley Rail-Trail runs between 2680 Stony Valley Railroad Grade (Dauphin), which offers parking, and Seigrist Dam (Pine Grove).

Parking is also available at Dresden Lake and along Goldmine Rd.

These parking options do not have official addresses, please see TrailLink Map for all parking options and detailed directions.

Stony Valley Rail-Trail Reviews

Nice improvement

Beautiful surroundings, completely shaded. Stones are a little large but nicely compacted. Nice improvement over just maybe two years ago. Saw some wildlife and not many other riders on a Saturday afternoon

Good and not so good 11/24

I rode this trail for the first time in awhile . Resurfaced since last time I rode it . Rode 11 miles out and back . Nice that they resurfaced but stones are too BIG . And it’s crowned in the middle slightly . I noticed a lot of drain culverts along the way . Should help with washouts . The surface isn’t great but it is rideable with a hybrid or gravel bike . Peaceful ride . Didn’t see another human the whole time . Don’t ride in warm weather since I encountered a few rattle snakes previously . If you like hiking you can ride about 3.5 miles in from Goldmine Rd. And pick up the Appalachian trail . Although the signs are incorrect as far as direction . The one marked north goes south and vice versa .

Not for Pleasure-Style Biking - More for Rugged-Style Biking

I used to ride this trail often a couple decades ago on my hybrid bike - it wasn't too bad back then. I revisited the trail10/2024, entering from the Goldmine Rd end. First, I already knew where the parking was for this trail from years ago, but if I was a first-timer trying to find it, I did not see ANY signs or anything at the location of the Goldmine Rd entrance, saying this was the Stony Valley Rail Trail. Matter of fact, having ridden this trail (end-to-end) dozens of times about 20 yrs ago, even though I knew I was at the right place, I kept questioning myself whether I was. I unloaded my bike which has mountain bike width tires on it & started off on the trail. After about a quarter mile I turned around - NO WAY am I riding 35 miles on this rough surface. I am not an expert on grades of stone, but I think the stones making up the trail are what is known as 2B. That is, they were larger gray limestones about 1.5" or more in diameter. I was looking for a quiet, pleasurable ride to enjoy the changing foliage, not a BONE RATTLING ride that required me to hold on to prevent taking a tumble from every stone I was hitting. In addition to the larger/rough stone surface, the sides of the trail were sloped (I don't know the correct term but I think one reviewer referred to it as camber), to the point that I was afraid of sliding off the side of the trail into the water-filled ditch that made up the shoulder of the trial, if I hit a stone the wrong way. I used to love this trail years ago, now, unfortunately, this trail is off my biking list. As I think another reviewer titled their review - this trail is in the NEVER AGAIN category for me. I loaded up my bike & drove into Lebanon (having just a week earlier ridden the nearby Swatara Rail Trail), & rode the Lebanon Valley Rail Trail from Lebanon to Colebrook (a MUCH MORE pleasurable trail with paved surfaces and hard-packed crushed limestone. Geez, I can't help wondering, did someone (non-profit/volunteer or government organizations that are "hunter-friendly") intentionally RUIN the Stony Creek Trail, by surfacing it with larger stones to keep bikes off ???

Never Again

Starting at the East/Lebanon end we walked to Rausch Creek and along the AT for a bit. Round trip was only about 8 miles and the only pleasant part was the AT. The trail is newly covered with large stones and the camber is extreme. The size of the rocks would make for an uncomfortable bike ride, too. We were both pretty miserable by the end. I gave it an extra star for the shade.

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