Hike to the Fair (it’s still a good idea)

It’s North Carolina State Fair time again, a fact I was reminded of this morning when I drove down Hillsborough Street this morning and saw a guy hawking parking spaces for $10. $10! Do you know how many Krispy Kreme hamburgers you could buy for $10? Then I was reminded of a post from last year encouraging people to save a sawbuck and their waistline at the same time by hiking to the State Fair. I’ve updated that post slightly and rerun it below.

Why put up with the hassles of traffic and pay $10 for premium parking to this year’s N.C. State Fair, which opened last night (if you live within a 30-mile radius of the Fairgrounds you likely heard the opening fireworks salvo around 9:30) and runs through Oct. 24, when you can park for free and encounter zero traffic?  And, you get a 2.7-mile (one way) nature hike to boot. Here’s the deal:

The deal: Park at N.C. State’s Schenck Forest and hike 2.7-miles mostly along the Loblolly Trail to the Fair.

Why would I want to do that? To avoid heavy traffic and pricey in-close parking charges, for one. But here’s an even better reason: That over-the-top Krispy Kreme bacon cheeseburger, corn dogs, funnel cakes, deep-fried Twinkees, blah, blah, blah (double entendre intended). That, I would wager, is a typical meal at the Fair. Let’s take a look at that repast from a caloric standpoint.
Corn dog: 460 calories. (Source: Nutrient Facts.)
Funnel cake: 277 calories. (Source: Fitday.com)
Deep-fried Twinkee: 425 calories (Source: Fitsugar.com)
Total: 1,162 calories.
Now, let’s run the numbers on how many calories you might burn walking 5 1/2 miles (the round-trip distance). The following were derived from the Fitness Partner Activity Calories Calculator based on 90 minutes of hiking (a fairly brisk pace) for folks of three different weights.
150 pounds: 614 calories.
175 pounds: 716 calories.
200 pounds: 818 calories.
Pretty revealing, eh?
How you can hike to the fair on the Loblolly Trail: First, drive to the main entrance of Schenck Forest. From Wade Avenue, that would entail exiting at Edwards Mill Road and going 0.7 miles east, to Reedy Creek Road. Go left on Reedy Creek for 0.3 miles, take a left on State Farm Road. Go another tenth of a mile and park. Here’s a map.
Is the trail easy to follow? Sure. Just follow these directions, starting from the Schenck Forest gate where you park, walk down the dirt road for:
0.75 miles — (the dirt road ends in a turnaround loop at about mile 0.7; continue downhill on the narrow trail at the beginning of the loop).
1.3 mi. — Take a right turn, cross a small creek on seven stones, proceed through the left side of the pedestrian tunnel/culvert under Wade Avenue. (The tunnel is lit, but can be a little wet. Friday, there was no more than an inch in the deepest spot.)
1.7 mi. — You’ll see a cool bridge that you don’t get to go over on your right. Instead, walk another 30 yards and go left into the tunnel under Edwards Mill Road (this one’s dry).
1.8 mi. — Trail, which becomes paved on the other side of the tunnel, Ts into RBC Center Road. Either take sidewalk right or go right on the footpath just before the roadway. For our purposes, we’re sticking with the natural path.
2.0 mi. — Trailhead parking for Loblolly Trail. Go left on sidewalk along four-lane street, then go right at first right. This will spit you out onto Trinity Road at …
2.2 mi. — Go left on sidewalk along Trinity Road up to Youth Center Drive.
2.6 mi. — Cross Trinity on Youth Center Drive (but not before the State Highway Patrolperson says it’s OK).
2.7 mi. — Arrive at State Fair ticket booth.
See the map below.
Anything else I need to know? Yes. Though the tunnels are lit, the rest of the Loblolly Trail is not. Plus, technically, the trail closes at dusk. For the record, sunset today is officially at 6:37 p.m.; by the time the fair closes on Oct. 25 it will set at 6:26 p.m. Plan accordingly. Also, this is a fairly easy trail but the wet weather has made it a little mushy in spots. I did the trail Friday in a pair of low-cut hikers and my feet stayed dry. Good tread is important.
Enjoy the fair!

5 thoughts on “Hike to the Fair (it’s still a good idea)”

  1. Nice. Is that at all bikeable? I plan on avoiding parking and burning off some small portion of my fried-cheese-related calories by biking to the fair, but the 440 interchanges at Edwards Mill and Blue Ridge are always where it gets a little hairy, traffic-wise. That tunnel under 440 seems like it could sneak me around that nasty piece of Edwards Mill where the bike lane vanishes and dumps you into traffic right where 440 is unloading all of its auto traffic on to the road.

    1. Unfortunately, this trail is hiking only. And I like your idea of sneaking through the culvert under Wade Avenue (the “bike lane” situation on Edwards Mill at Wade was remarkably ill-conceived) but can’t picture how you’d get from Edwards Mill to the culvert. Maybe with so much fair traffic Edwards Mill will be slower and more safe? (Hey, a biker can dream, can’t he?)

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