Cranberry Lake Preserve Loop
Directions to trailhead
From the Bronx River Parkway at the Kensico Dam, take Route 22 North Once past the dam, turn right at a traffic light onto Old Orchard Street. In about 100 feet, turn right into the Cranberry Lake Preserve, and continue ahead for 0.3 mile to the Nature Center, where parking is available. (If the entrance gate is closed, park outside the gate and walk along the road.)
Hike Description
Although comprising only 190 acres, Cranberry Lake Preserve is surrounded on several sides by watershed lands. It is a quiet oasis in the midst of suburban Westchester County and offers a pleasant walk around a tranquil lake. Trail junctions in the preserve are marked by numbered wooden signs, and the numbers are referenced in this description.
From the Nature Center, proceed south on a wide yellow-blazed path. At a blue sign to the "Lake" (junction #4), turn left and follow an orange-blazed trail downhill to the shore of Cranberry Lake, then turn right (at junction #26) onto a trail with blue and yellow blazes. After briefly following the lake shore, the trail climbs to ledges overlooking the lake, continuing to parallel it. At the end of the lake, it descends. After crossing a boardwalk, the trail reaches junction #6.
Turn left onto a wide path, and following blue, purple and red blazes, then turn left at the next junction (#7) onto an orange-blazed trail, immediately crossing the Bent Bridge over a bog. The trail runs along old stone walls and passes the "stone chamber" – probably an old root cellar. At the end of the orange trail (junction #16), turn right onto a wide path (an old railraod bed) and follow it to a Y-intersection, with a sign for the New York City Watershed grown into a tree (junction #18).
Bear left here, now following the Red Loop Trail. This trail, which circles the park, will be your route for most of the remainder of the hike. On the right, marking the boundary between the park and New York City Watershed lands, is an expertly-laid dry stone wall, built over a century ago and still in nearly perfect condition today (except where damaged by fallen trees). Soon, the trail bears left and heads south, continuing to follow the wall.
At the southern end of the park, with private homes visible ahead through the tree, the red trail turns left and begins to head east. Be alert for a sharp right turn (marked by an arrow on a tree to the left) and head downhill toward Hush Pond, continuing to follow the red trail. Cross the outlet of the pond on puncheons, bear left (north), and soon begin to parallel a wetland on the left. In a short distance, you’ll join a level dirt road, with cliffs on the right.
Soon, the cliffs are supplanted by a concrete wall. This wall is a remnant of a facility built about 1912 to crush stone that was quarried just to the east of the trail and used for the construction of the Kensico Reservoir. Just beyond a crumbling section of the wall, you’ll reach junction #13, where a blue-blazed trail leads left to a wooden observation platform. Unfortunately, the view over South Pond is largely obscured by vegetation.
Return to the main trail and turn left (north), now following both blue and red blazes. Soon, you’ll reach a small cascade with a bench (junction #14). Just beyond the bench, turn right, leaving the wide road, and cross the stream on a wooden footbridge, continuing to follow blue and red blazes. At the next fork, bear right and proceed along the Red Loop Trail through a mountain laurel thicket. After a short climb, you’ll reach junction #20, where the Purple (History) Loop, marked with purple-on-white blazes, joins from the right.
The trail now descends rather steeply. At the base of the descent (junction #21), the blue trail joins from the left, and the trails cross a boardwalk. Just beyond, at junction #22, the trails again split. Bear right, continuing to follow the red and purple-on-white trails, which cross another boardwalk. Bear right at junction #23, continuing to follow the red and purple-on-white blazes.
After curving to the left, the trail reaches a T-intersection (junction #34), with cliffs ahead. Here, the red and purple-on white trails turn right, but you should turn left, now following yellow blazes. At the next junction (#33), bear left, continuing to follow the yellow blazes, and descend to the lake. At junction #24, turn right and follow yellow and blue blazes, with the trail paralleling Cranberry Lake. After passing junction #27, you'll reach a viewpoint over the lake (with the view partially obstructed by vegetation). Just beyond, you’ll reach junction #26. Turn right onto the orange trail, follow it back up to the yellow trail at junction #4, and turn right on the yellow trail to return to the Nature Center where the hike began.