Nielson employees participate in a corporate workday, including team-building exercises.
Nielson employees participate in a Corporate Team Building Day, beginning with team-building exercises.

Posts Tagged ‘Recreation’

County OKs $100,000 for First Ave. bike path

Posted: July 25th, 2014

By: Bob Uphues, Editor

A bike path along First Avenue connecting North Riverside with Riverside-Brookfield High School is one step closer to reality after the Cook County Forest Preserve District Board voted 16 to 0 on Tuesday to spend $100,000 to help fund the project.

The county’s grant represents roughly half of what it will cost to build a bike/pedestrian path on the west side of First Avenue from Ridgewood Road to 31st Street. That’s the first phase of a three-phase plan to extend the path north all the way to 26th Street and west all the way to Prairie Avenue, which would link it with the Salt Creek Trail.

“Our hope is to be under way this fall,” said Douglas Chien, advocates’ network manager for the Friends of the Forest Preserves, which worked with Brookfield resident Doug Hoogstra and Riverside resident Randy Brockway last fall to get the ear of Cook County Commissioner Jeffrey Tobolski.

“He instantly saw how much sense this made,” said Chien of Tobolski, who became the project’s champion at the county level and won the support of Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle.

Tobolski showed amazing leadership and got everyone in the room,” said Hoogstra, who had approached local leaders individually but without result. “He laid out a very clear path and slowly, methodically got it done. It was good government working together to get great results.”

Hoogstra became interested in the path plan after attending a pedestrian safety meeting at Riverside-Brookfield High School a couple of years ago, when the village convinced the Illinois Department of Transportation to install left-turn signals at the First and Forest/Ridgewood intersection.

An avid bike rider who grew up riding the Salt Creek Trail, Hoogstra was frustrated that there was no direct connection to the Salt Creek Trail from his home in Brookfield.

“I tried to get the kids to the salt Creek Trail but couldn’t do it, because it was so unsafe to do so,” said Hoogstra, who said he would instead lash the family’s five bicycles to a rack and drive to the trail. “It’s ridiculous.”

While building a path along First Avenue from Ridgewood to 31st Street won’t connect the path to the Salt Creek Trail, it’s a key step.

State Sen. Martin Sandoval, who is the chairman of the senate transportation committee, has already pledged another $600,000 in the next year to extend the path west along 31st Street to Golfview Road and then north, hooking up again with First Avenue, all the way to 26th Street.

There’s no funding yet for the critical third phase of the path — extending it west from Golfview Avenue, across the Salt Creek bridge and all the way to Prairie Avenue. That leg will cost more than $1 million.

But, according to Chien, that’s the leg of the path that the Cook County Forest Preserve District really wants to complete.

“That leg is the top priority for the Forest Preserve District, because it’s the direct connection they’ve been lacking,” said Chien. “This is the critical gap that’s been missing.”

In addition to the county funding for the first leg of the path, North Riverside has pledged $37,000 and Riverside $30,000. Riverside-Brookfield High School has placed $33,000 for the path in its 2014-15 budget.

Mountain Biking

Posted: July 1st, 2014

While folks will mountain bike in a number of areas in the preserves, the two official sites are the Palos Forest Preserves in the southwest portion of the county and Deer Grove in the northwest. Our friends at CAMBr have the scoop on mountain biking in the preserves, and volunteer workdays for maintaining and building trails. They do a great job with educating users about staying on official trails and advocating for trail users.

If you want terrain, good trails, and beautiful nature, check out either of these two spots. Palos has many more trails that offer many different lengths and skill levels. While Deer Grove is a bit more straight forward. Either way, these are some of the best trails south of the Wisconsin border.

Mountain biking off trail does tremendous damage to these fragile ecosystems, never mind the fact that it is totally illegal and can get you up  to a $500 fine. So, please, check out the maps and plan a day where folks have worked hard to give you a great experience.

Get those tents ready: Forest preserve camping begins in 2015

Posted: March 13th, 2014

For the first time in nearly 100 years, camping will be open to the public at five suburban Cook County forest preserves as soon as Memorial Day weekend 2015.

The Cook County Forest Preserve District will soon begin construction on a $26 million camping plan that will create two new camping sites and renovate three sites previously used only for groups such as Boy Scouts and organized church groups.

The five sites include Camp Sullivan in Tinley Park, Camp Reinberg in Palatine, Camp Bullfrog Lake in Willow Springs, Shabonna Woods in South Holland and Camp Dan Beard in Northbrook.

“We are really targeting the people in the larger Chicago area. People who have either traveled to other places to camp, or won’t camp at all because it’s too far for them,” forest preserve Supt. Arnold Randall told the Sun-Times.

Camps Reinberg, Dan Beard and Sullivan will get upgrades such as renovations to existing buildings and demolition of older cabins. Crews will add cabins and tent sites. Camp Bullfrog Lake, the only camping site to allow recreational vehicles, will get 30 drive-in sites, so campers can pitch a tent or bring a camper or RV. And Camp Shabonna will get 10 sites and some seasonal cabins, a new picnic shelter and a building to shower.

Individual and smaller groups will be able to reserve a space online for both tent space and cabins. But larger groups may still need a permit, according to forest preserve district spokeswoman Karen Vaughn.

“We’re focusing [construction] first on the sites that would have winterized housing, at Camp Reinberg and Camp Sullivan,” Chris Slattery, Forest Preserve Director of Planning Development said. Slattery said those sites will be open by late fall or winter.

Construction bids went out this week, and construction will begin this spring: “We’ll have all these sites open by Memorial Day,” Slattery said.

Some issues are still being reviewed. As of now, groups will pay $20 per tent per night, or $50 per cabin per night, Vaughn said. But the county will hire a camp manager to review the pricing to make sure it’s in line with competitors, she said. Alcohol is currently allowed in county forest preserves, but Vaughn said administrators are still formulating policies when it comes to alcohol at the new campsites.

Camping is part of a larger focus for the county, aimed at getting people out into nature: “We talked to a lot of advocacy groups, a lot of people just in the public, and we all agreed that this is a great initiative to really introduce camping in a big way to Chicago,” Randall said.

It’s more of a re-introduction to the Chicago area. Campers in the early 20th century were allowed to go to any Cook County Forest Preserve to camp, and could even build their own cabins. But by 1929, officials outlawed the private cabins amid complaints. All public camping largely stopped soon after.

Benjamin Cox, president of forest preserve watchdog group Friends of the Forest Preserves said his organization was involved in the camping plan, and Cox says he’s pleased with the results.

“I think that the best form of recreation in the forest preserves is and will be camping, especially for families and youth groups,” Cox said.

Cox expects one big problem though: “I think it’s going to get packed. I think when you’re right here in the middle of so many people, these are going to be wildly popular places,” Cox said. “Some of them, you’re really going to have a hard time knowing that you’re this close to Chicago. You’re going to be in the middle of nature and it’s going to be so cool.”

To pay for the new and improved camping sites, as well as fix up trails in the system, the forest preserve issued bonds.

Forest preserve officials expect the camping program to break even.

Horseback Riding

Posted: February 1st, 2014

Horseback riding is still available at a ton of places throughout the preserves. Basically, any of the more than 200-miles of marked trails are okay for riding. By far the most popular places are the Palos Preserves near Palos Park and Lemont and Spring Creek Preserve near Barrington. You need a daily or annual license in order to bring your horse into the preserves. Please do not ride when the trails are wet – talk about post-hole diggers that lead to ankle breakers for hikers. Ouch.

Six places to rent horses on forest preserve property

Memory Lane
8290 S. Kean Avenue
Willow Springs, IL 60480
(708) 372-6472
Contact: Cathy or Billy

Forest View Farms
16717 S. Lockwood
Tinley Park, IL 60477
(708) 560-0306
Contact: James Larsen

Sarah’s Pony Rides
8220 S. Kean Avenue
Willow Springs, IL 60480

Fitzjoy Farm
12211 S. Lagrange Road
Palos Park, IL 60264
(708) 361-7977
Contact: Pat Doyle

A-Ranch 394 Inc.
1465 Glenwood-Lansing Rd.
Chicago Heights, IL 60411
(708) 895-1810
Contact: Debbie Hansen

Places to park your trailer

North
DAM #1 (north of picnic shelters) – Dundee Road, east of Milwaukee Avenue
BIG BEND LAKE – East River Road, south of Golf Road
North Branch Division
LINNE WOODS – Dempster Street, east of Lehigh Avenue
TOWER ROAD BOAT RAMP – Tower Road, east of Edens Expy.
CALVIN R. SUTKER GROVE – Golf Road & Woods Drive, Skokie
GLEN GROVE EQUESTRIAN CENTER – 9451 Harms Rd, Morton Grove

Northwest Division
DEER GROVE #1 – Quentin Rd., north of Dundee Rd.
BODE ROAD – Northeast corner of Bode Road & Route 59

Southwest
DAN MCMAHON WOODS – 107th St., west of LaGrange Rd.
HIDDEN POND WOODS (EAST) – Kean Ave., north of 95th St.
COUNTRY LANE WOODS – 95th St., east of 104th Ave.
CAMP KIWANIS – 9700 104th Ave, Illinois and Michigan Canal, Willow Springs
FORTY ACRE WOODS, 119th St., east of 96th Ave.
PALOS PARK WOODS (NORTH) – Kean Ave., south of Rt. 83
HORSETAIL LAKE – 104th Ave., north of 123rd St.
SWALLOW CLIFF WOODS – Rt. 83, West of LaGrange Rd.

South
SWEET WOODS – Cottage Grove, south of 183rd St.