Starting the Emerald Necklace traverse at the western edge of Franklin Park. Estimated journey to Boston Common will be roughly 9 miles. I’m not keeping track of mileage in real time but I am taking plenty of photos and trying to remember to hydrate just as often.
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Arborway Part 1. The first half was nice and shaded, but the rest will be a lot more pleasant to stroll when the saplings planted along the walkway get bigger. I’m not loving the car centric nature of this section, but good things lie ahead...
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Arnold Arboretum, baby. The Las Vegas of Boston green spaces. Everyone is here to chase their most bucolic weekend dreams. Even the Willow Path, typically quieter, is bustling today. The pebbly streams are looking really fine. 😍
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Arborway Part 2. More cars, unfortunately, but the arbors here are much more prominent. Plus, some of the most opulent houses in JP round out the landscape here. I almost want to ring a doorbell, just to see who lives in these things.
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Jamaica Pond. Closest thing I have to a house of worship. (I live pretty close to here.) Walking through here on a Saturday reminds me of the park sequence in Mary Poppins, or the Altamont documentary Gimme Shelter. Sometimes both. It varies.
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I really love this nameless (?) section of woodland between Jamaica Pond and Olmsted Park. Lots of stone stairs, bridges, and streams. It feels like a piece of the Middlesex Fells transplanted on the nexus of JP and Brookline.
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Chilling by the water in Olmsted Park for awhile, as goslings run about nearby. You don’t have to embellish these things when you’re on the Emerald Necklace.
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I like that the Emerald Necklace isn’t *just* greenery. There are stretches that remind you that you’re deep in a city, and this little connector between Olmsted Park and the Riverway is a nice example.
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The long corridor of trees and bridges along the Riverway. The way it’s sandwiched between the Longwood medical area and the Riverside Green Line tracks makes the abundance of arbors feel unlikely and special. I barely even noticed the sound of cars on the Jamaicaway nearby.
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A cyclist’s memorial at the Fenway intersection. A grim reminder that the walkable and bikeable nature of the Emerald Necklace, while a treasure, is not the norm in Boston and most US cities. We could have it so much better, for the good of our health, happiness, and safety.
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The Fenway is truly a trove of curiosities, from all the intramural leagues at Clemente Field to the maze of community gardens. These days, I come up here for this stuff more than Fenway Fenway.
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Easily the least Emerald-y part of the Emerald Necklace: connecting from the Fenway to the Comm Ave Mall. When you force pedestrians and cyclists to jockey for tight space like this, bad things can happen.
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Off to a lovely magic hour start on the Comm Ave Mall, but I couldn’t find a way to negotiate the underpass while staying on the greenway. Nor was there an obvious crosswalk for getting to the neighboring sidewalks. Weird. Seems like something that’s easily fixable.
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The Comm Ave Mall gets greener. Boston Common gets closer. My feet are starting to get tender. Emerald Necklace traverse is almost over.
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Another tricky spot along the Comm Ave Mall. Twin crosswalks but no walk signals, plus heavy and constant car traffic that you don’t really want to play chicken with.
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Technically the Boston Public Gardens and the Boston Common are two things, so...some garden scenes to celebrate the penultimate yards of the Emerald Necklace.
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Emerald Necklace traverse: done. 8.85 miles. 10.5 if you count getting to Franklin Park from my house and getting back after taking the T back to JP. Sitting atop the hill at Boston Common at dusk and gulping down water is a nice reward.
But why be a Puritan and stop there?
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County roads
Take me home
To the place
I belooong
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So, Emerald Necklace traverse. Highly recommend it! Great walk, great workout, and scenery so varied and interesting that you don’t even feel like you’re working. We’re very lucky to have these parks in Boston. We should build more of them and connect them via foot/bike path
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It's great to see the Wu administration unveil their plans for expanding Boston's urban forest. Here are a few of my favorite city parks and woodlands along the Walking City Trail that offer the sensation of being deep in the woods...in the middle of a major city. 1/
The Neponset River Greenway and its shaggier, soon to be further developed cousin, the Edgewater Greenway (Mattapan)
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Sherrin Woods, located right next to active train tracks yet improbably quiet and lush (Hyde Park)
To ring in the Fourth of July, I'm going for a midday hike on this little-known pathway through the backyards of mansions in Brookline. The rich people who live there try to keep the path hidden but it's open to the public from dawn to dusk. I'll post photos and a trail map soon.
This hike is actually a combined walk along two paths. The Cottage Street Preserve and the Sargent Beechwood Nature Walk. Weirdly enough, both preserves are listed on the Town of Brookline website but there are no trail maps. INTERESTING.
In any event, I'll be creating a GPS map
Okay, folks! Here’s a detailed rundown of the path, which I’m calling the Secret Brookline Mansion Trail.
First, the link below will take you to an AllTrails map for navigating your way along the route.
If towns in Massachusetts refuse to open their beaches to the general public, the state should not subsidize the cost of managing and restoring these beaches. If a town wants to privatize the coast, they should have to pay for it alone. #mapoli wgbh.org/news/local-new…
There's a *huge* disconnect between Massachusetts' identity as a liberal state and the more conservative ground reality, and I can't think of a more on-the-nose example of this than our mostly-privatized coastline and how hard it is for the public to access beaches in this state.
IMO, the most feasible way to improve public access to Massachusetts beaches in the near term would be for the state to cut off beach upkeep funding for any towns that continue to ban non-residents from accessing their *public* beaches via parking restrictions or permitting rules
I'd like you to meet the WALKING CITY TRAIL: a 25-mile hike through Boston's parks and urban woodlands. The trail is divided into four sections that are accessible by public transit.
Section 1 of the Walking City Trail begins at the Harvest River Bridge, where you'll cross into Boston from Milton and hike through the woods of the Neponset River Greenway to Mattapan center.
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From Mattapan Center, the Walking City Trail passes through a much thicker patch of riverside woods on a more rugged dirt path that will soon be transformed into a more established greenway trail—the Edgewater Greenway!
And here we go! Walking the missing final section of the Emerald Necklace, from Franklin Park to Castle Island (and maybe a little extra, if my feet are up for it.) It’s about an 8-9 mile walk, so...a pretty big missing piece of Olmsted’s grand design!
This is the part of Franklin Park where I began my Emerald Necklace traverse two weeks ago. It’s on the west edge, near Shattuck hospital. Today, we go east through the park, and on to Dorchester and Southie.
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So technically, I’m still on the Emerald Necklace proper, weaving eastward through woods and hollows in the leafy realm of Franklin Park. However, there’s something of an obstacle to clear before you get to the other side, if you’re a pedestrian.
If you live in Massachusetts, this thread is for you:
Our eviction moratorium expires in 1 week. There's a bill in the House that would stop the resultant homelessness crisis. In this thread, I'll cover why that bill is crucial, why it hasn't been passed, and what we can do.
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Back in spring, Massachusetts passed one of the nation's strongest eviction bans. It allowed people to stay in their homes during the pandemic. But there's a problem: renters and small landlords are accruing debt (back rent or missed mortgage payments)
This summer, the Mass. legislators who came up with the eviction ban introduced the Housing Stability Act (H.4878) which not only extends the moratorium well into 2021 but provides several mechanisms of financial support for renters and small landlords malegislature.gov/Bills/191/HD51…
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