Apple Valley Legacy Trail

Put a Flag on the Damed Hill

Here are practical, steady, plain-text steps that, I believe, can actually move the Legacy Trail forward. Nothing fancy, just what works when a project has drifted because of weak oversight.

  1. Rebuild a clear purpose.
    The town needs to restate in writing what the Legacy Trail is intended to be: a heritage trail on Bass Hill that reflects local history and community involvement. A simple statement of purpose helps stop the drift.
  2. Restore local involvement
    Bring back the people who built the original concept. Their knowledge of the hill, the ruin, and the history is deeper than anything an outside firm can supply. A small advisory group of locals can guide decisions and keep the project grounded.
  3. Produce a straightforward plan.
    No glossy studies. Just a short, practical plan showing:
  • the route
  • trail features
  • interpretive elements
  • cost
  • timeline
    Traditional, simple planning cuts out confusion.
  1. Rebuild funding the old-fashioned way
    Use a mix of sources instead of chasing flashy grants:
  • small state recreation grants
  • modest town allocations
  • private donations
  • corporate sponsorship for signs or benches
    These are reliable, common-sense funding channels.
  1. Replace the lost historic feature with something honest
    The original ruin cannot be brought back, but an interpretive replica or a simple marker showing where it stood can restore meaning. The goal is not to invent a museum but to acknowledge what was lost and explain its importance.
  2. Start with visible, easy wins
    Projects often revive when people see progress. Begin with:
  • trail clearing
  • directional signs
  • a basic trailhead kiosk
  • regular maintenance patrols
    These show commitment and cost very little.
  1. Put the site back into public use
    Foot traffic keeps trouble away. Schedule:
  • guided walks
  • volunteer cleanups
  • historical talks
    These create a sense of ownership and pride.
  1. Practice steady upkeep
    Real stewardship is not complicated. It is regular:
  • trash removal
  • brush trimming
  • sign repair
    Without these, any project slips back into neglect.
  1. Keep communication open
    Share updates every month. Short, factual updates prevent the silence that breeds frustration.
  2. Honor the original spirit
    The project began as a community effort tied to local heritage. If the town returns to that spirit, the Legacy Trail can still become the landmark people hoped for.