If you go
The Amy Weingartner Branigin Peninsula Preserve is at 7466 E. Rush Ridge Road off Ind. 446 just north of the Lake Monroe causeway. There is an eight-vehicle lot where people can park. There is no parking allowed along the street, and no overnight parking. The preserve is open from dawn until dusk.
From the parking lot, a woodchip path leads to the trailhead. The trail is 1.1 miles each way.
For more about this preserve and Sycamore Land Trust, go to sycamorelandtrust.org.
Visitors to Sycamore Land Trust’s newest preserve will discover scenic views of Lake Monroe from a trail along a wooded ridge down to the water.
The 48-acre Amy Weingartner Branigin Peninsula Preserve opens to visitors Monday. An eight-vehicle parking lot is ready for hikers, bird watchers and others who want to walk through the hardwood forest.
Just north of the causeway on Lake Monroe, the preserve is a small portion of what was once Indiana University Alumni Association’s Shawnee Bluffs camp, which encompassed 164 acres. The camp was sold in 2003 and was developed into residential sites. The new preserve is nestled among the residential properties on Rush Ridge Road off Ind. 446.
The land trust acquired the property in 2015 with help from funds from three families, the Bicentennial Nature Trust, the Community Foundation of Bloomington and Monroe County and members of Sycamore Land Trust. Volunteers with the Hoosier Hikers Council built a trail of about a tenth of a mile that connects the parking lot area to an old road that travels along a ridge down to the point of a peninsula along the shore of Lake Monroe.
Although the land was acquired a year ago, getting it ready for the public to use takes time. The reasons include ensuring neighbors are comfortable with people traveling to and using the property, making sure the animals and plants that live on the land are healthy enough to sustain human traffic and preparing trails and parking lots for public use.
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