The Hickory Creek Wilderness is a 8,663-acre (3,505.8 ha) wilderness area located in the Bradford Ranger District of the Allegheny National Forest in Warren County, Pennsylvania.[1] It is one of only two designated wilderness areas in the forest and was created in October 1984.
Topography
Elevation in Hickory Creek Wilderness ranges from 1,273 feet (388 m) where East Hickory Creek exits the wilderness to a plateau at 1,900 feet (580 m). The gentle to moderate terrain is drained by East Hickory Creek and Middle Hickory Creek.[1][2]
The Hickory Creek Wilderness contains several unofficial and unblazed trails, largely on old railroad grades, mostly along the scenic Middle and East Forks of Hickory Creek, though a 1985 tornado has made some sections impassable.[3] The area also includes the maintained Hickory Creek Trail, an 11.6-mile loop, which mostly traverses high ground between the two branches of the creek. While maintained by volunteers, that trail is left in a largely primitive state per the rules of the federal Wilderness Area.[4] A short segment of the Tanbark Trail crosses the eastern corner of the wilderness area.[5]
^ Bruce Sundquist, Carolyn Yartz and Jack Richardson, Allegheny National Forest Hiking Guide, 4th Edition, p. 101, Allegheny Group, Sierra Club, Pittsburgh, PA, 1999
^Mitchell, Jeff (2007). Hiking the Allegheny National Forest. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. p. 157. ISBN9780811733724.