Tag: hike

  • Shequaga Falls — The Waterfall at the Heart of Montour Falls

    Shequaga Falls — The Waterfall at the Heart of Montour Falls

    Shequaga Falls anchors the south end of Main Street in Montour Falls, where approximately 156 feet of water cascade down layered shale ledges into the pool below. A graceful arched pedestrian bridge spans the crest — visible from the viewing area below — and the surrounding area is wired with seasonal lighting that changes the character of the falls across the calendar year. It is not a hike or a destination you need to plan around; it is simply there, at the edge of town, available any time you pass through. Goldenrod Preserve is about a two-minute drive away, and the falls are large enough to be visible in the distance from the property’s Hector-Odessa Rail Trail.

    Why We Recommend It

    The falls are the kind of thing that earns a town its identity. Every village in this part of the Finger Lakes has waterways, but few have a 156-foot cascade sitting at street level, steps from restaurants and coffee shops. Shequaga’s scale — combined with its no-effort accessibility — means guests can stand in front of a genuinely dramatic waterfall without committing to a trail. That’s not common in a region where most significant waterfalls require at least some hiking to reach.

    What makes it worth returning to is how much it changes. In spring and after heavy rain, the water volume is substantial — the roar carries down Main Street and mist reaches the viewing area. By late summer it quiets to a more measured flow, and in autumn the surrounding foliage turns the entire gorge face into a scene that photographs well across almost any conditions. In a hard winter, the falls partially freeze: icicles form on the shale ledges, the usual curtain of white water narrows to a trickle through ice, and the visual is entirely different from the warm-season version. The village lights the falls at night year-round, and fireworks are shot above them during the fall festival — both worth mentioning when setting guest expectations across seasons.

    From Goldenrod Preserve, the falls are about two minutes away — close enough that they fit naturally into a morning in town rather than requiring a dedicated trip. A practical pairing: pick up coffee and grab a slice somewhere on Main Street, then walk down to the falls and spend time at the viewing area before heading back to the property. It’s low-effort and tends to leave a strong impression, particularly on guests who aren’t expecting to encounter something this scale steps from a village center.

    What to Know Before You Go

    Access is as simple as it gets. Park for free on or near South Genesee Street, walk a short flat paved path, and the falls are right in front of you — no trail, no entry gate, no fee. The walkway is ADA accessible with no steps required. A separate vantage point is available from the pedestrian bridge at the crest: head north on Genesee Street, left on Steuben Street, then left again on Mill Street. The falls are illuminated at night year-round, which makes an after-dark visit worth suggesting to guests who are staying over.

    Water volume varies considerably and is worth setting expectations around. After rain or snowmelt — especially in spring — the falls run hard and loud, with mist reaching the viewing area. In a dry summer stretch, the same falls run quieter. Shequaga Creek rarely goes completely dry, but there’s a meaningful difference between a wet spring and a dry August. Guests visiting in winter should know the area below the falls can be icy underfoot; good footwear matters between December and March.

    Business/Location Name: Shequaga Falls
    Website: villageofmontourfalls.com
    Address: 109 S Genesee St, Montour Falls, NY 14865
    Phone: (607) 535-9476
    Type/Category: Waterfall / Public Park
    Distance from Goldenrod Preserve: Approximately 2 minutes by car
    Best For: All ages; waterfall viewing; town walks; seasonal and night photography
    Price Point: Free; no entry fee; free street parking
    Hours/Season: Year-round, open daily; illuminated at night
    Accessibility: ADA accessible; flat paved walkway from street to viewing area; no steps required

  • Eagle Cliff Falls at Havana Glen Park: A Short Hike to a Striking Waterfall in Montour Falls

    Eagle Cliff Falls at Havana Glen Park: A Short Hike to a Striking Waterfall in Montour Falls

    Some places earn their reputation the moment you round the last bend. Eagle Cliff Falls at Havana Glen Park is one of them. A short walk leads through a narrow shale passage, up a flight of metal stairs, and into a natural amphitheater where a clean ribbon of water drops the full height of the cliff face into a shallow, quiet pool. It’s one of the most striking short waterfall walks in the area — and at roughly a minute from Goldenrod Preserve, one of the easiest to fit into any day.

    Why We Recommend It

    The geometry of the place is what gets you. The trail narrows between two layered shale walls, opens to a short flight of metal stairs, and delivers you into a natural amphitheater where Eagle Cliff Falls drops a single clean line of water into a shallow, gravel-bottom pool. Smaller seeps and drips run down the surrounding rock all summer, so the whole basin feels alive — water on every surface, moss and ferns filling every crack of stone.

    What makes it worth recommending isn’t only the falls itself, though it’s a good one. It’s how much scenery you get for how little walking. Short enough that it’s an easy add to any day in the area; striking enough that it doesn’t feel like a consolation prize. On a warm day, the pool is calm and shallow enough to wade or dip your feet, which makes it a natural choice for travelers who want a real Finger Lakes nature moment without committing a half-day to it. From Goldenrod Preserve, it’s roughly a one-minute drive — closer than most morning coffees.

    What to Know Before You Go

    This is a town park, not a state park, so amenities are simple and the trail is short — but it’s not effortless. To reach the base of Eagle Cliff Falls you’ll cross a shale passage and climb a flight of metal stairs, so think of this as a short walk with some climbing rather than a fully accessible path. Surfaces can be slick after rain, the gravel near the pool is uneven, and closed-toe shoes with grip will serve you better than sandals.

    The falls shift with the season — fuller and more dramatic in spring and after rain, slimmer in late summer — so the photo you saw online may not be the version you meet on the day. Plan to verify current park hours, any vehicle or entrance fees, and seasonal access directly with the town before you go. And if you plan to wade, bring a towel — the pool stays cold well into August.

    Business Name: Havana Glen Park (Eagle Cliff Falls)
    Website: townofmontour.gov/havanaglen
    Address: 135 Havana Glen Rd, Montour Falls, NY 14865
    Phone: (607) 535-9476
    Type / Category: Town park / Waterfall walk
    Distance from Goldenrod Preserve: ~1 minute by car
    Best For: A quick, scenic nature stop; photographers; families with mobile kids; warm-weather feet-in-the-water moments; pairing with a meal or coffee in Montour Falls
    Accessibility: Short walk, but includes stone passages and metal stairs — not wheelchair- or stroller-accessible

  • Watkins Glen State Park: Walking the Gorge in the Finger Lakes

    Watkins Glen State Park: Walking the Gorge in the Finger Lakes

    Some places reveal themselves all at once; Watkins Glen State Park reveals itself a little differently every visit. Carved by Glen Creek over thousands of years, the gorge trail threads past nineteen waterfalls, along stone staircases, and behind curtains of falling water — a Finger Lakes landmark worth returning to in every season. For guests at Goldenrod Preserve, it’s a 5min drive to one of the most rewarding walks in the region.

    Why We Recommend It

    Watkins Glen is the kind of landmark that doesn’t get smaller on a second visit. Spring runoff is loud and dramatic; late summer is quieter and greener; October turns the cliffs into a corridor of yellow and burnt orange. Guests who go once almost always tell us they’d go back — and the gorge usually obliges by looking nothing like it did the first time.

    The gorge trail itself is the centerpiece — a stone walkway that winds beneath cliffs, over arched bridges, and behind one of the falls. It’s an unusually intimate way to experience a state park; you’re not looking at the landscape from a distance, you’re walking through it. A new entrance bridge has recently been added at the park, designed to blend with the historic stonework rather than compete with it — a quiet investment in keeping this place accessible to the public for another century.

    We tell guests to go in the morning. The light through the gorge walls is best early, you’ll be ahead of the summer crowds, and the temperature is friendlier on a hot afternoon. Just 5min drive from Goldenrod Preserve, it makes for an easy half-day plan with time left for a winery stop or lunch on the way home.

    What to Know Before You Go

    The main gorge trail is a real walk — not a stroll. Expect stone stairs, frequently wet and uneven footing, and spray from the falls even on dry days. Closed-toe shoes with grip are non-negotiable, and a light rain shell is worth carrying. The reward is one of the more memorable hikes in the Finger Lakes; the trade-off is that this isn’t a stop for guests who can’t manage stairs or slick stone.

    Timing matters. Mornings are meaningfully quieter than afternoons, especially on weekends in July and August. The gorge trail is also seasonal, so check before a shoulder-season visit if the gorge is the main draw. The upper rim trails generally stay open longer when the lower gorge is closed.

    There’s a parking fee at the main entrance and it’s worth confirming current rates and hours directly through the New York State Parks website before you go. You can also call the park office at (607) 535-4511.

    Business Name: Watkins Glen State Park
    Website: parks.ny.gov
    Address: 1009 N Franklin St, Watkins Glen, NY 14891
    Phone: (607) 535-4511
    Type / Category: State Park / Hiking and waterfalls
    Distance from Goldenrod Preserve: 5min Drive
    Best For: Morning gorge walks, waterfall photography, repeat visits across seasons, a first-timer’s introduction to the Finger Lakes