According to InOssining.com

Ossining’s Crawbuckie Park / Nature Preserve is a woodland riverfront park and preserve accessible by car via Beach Rd. Parking is available at the entrance to the park’s trails, at the end of Beach Rd. The preserve is on the edge of Brayton Park, part of the North Village neighborhood.

Take a walk through the Edward M. Wheeler Crawbuckie Nature Preserve! For some beautiful early-morning light, start as much before 9:00 AM as you can muster the troops. Check out some pictures below.

There are 20+ acres of natural Hudson River Valley rain forest (it seriously looks like a rain forest in places) in this preserve. There are lovely trails that wind through the forest, where you will often see the river glimmering at you through the trees, and in some spots a more open Hudson River view. There are trees like cathedrals that are 3 and 4 feet in diameter. Some of these trees date back to when the area was home to Dr. Benjamin Brandreth’s 35-room mansion Glyndon.

A real highlight is the symphony of bird songs. Against the quiet of the woods their calls seem to be played through a loudspeaker. The preserve is populated by numerous bird species due to its huge diversity of trees. Ossining resident Robert Havell Jr. was the engraver for John J Audubon’s seminal work Birds of America (the “world’s most expensive book “). Audobon collected and studied in the Crawbuckie area.

But even though the purpose of my walk was to go to Crawbuckie I would pass much more along the way there and back: abandoned structures, strange festive decorations, an old home once owned by a very famous author. I would stop at a nearby diner for brunch and then continue along an historical trail into town. There I would take a short diversion to one of Ossining’s most famous monuments. By then I was tired and my feet hurt so another stop was in order, this time in a wonderful bookstore where I could sit an rest for a while. From there it was a relatively short, but unfortunately almost all uphill walk home.

Taken with a Sony RX10 IV

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