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One
mile east of
East Lake Drive
is the entrance to Theodore Roosevelt
County Park.
From here, we
walk the last and most
spectacular six miles of
the 130-mile Paumanok
Path (PP).
Park by Third
House, headquarters for
the Park and soon-to-be
museum.
The original
structure, built in
1747, was home for the
livestock overseer.
In 1898, at the
end of the Spanish
American War, Teddy
Roosevelt and his Rough
Riders were quarantined
at Third House to
recuperate from yellow
fever.
A short walk up
the driveway to the
right of the cabins will
bring you to a gate
chained closed.
Beyond the gate,
to the left are
grasslands and to the
right, pasture for Deep
Hollow Ranch, the oldest
cattle ranch in the
USA.
On the fence
enclosing the pasture
are the white blazes of
the PP.
Unlatch the
chain, walk through the
gate, and re-latch.
Follow the blazes
on the fence posts.
The trail travels
gradually upslope to a
grassy knoll that offers
a view of Lake
Montauk.
Follow the trail
to the right around a
post and rail barrier.
For the next
mile, blazing is sparse.
Walk along the
fence looking for a
blaze to the left; it
shortly takes you away
from the fence.
Soon the trail
leads you through a very
tight kissing gate.
Follow the fence
around another right
turn.
Here, the trail
runs through lush
vegetation.
Travel upslope to
a Nature Conservancy
grassland restoration
sign; turn right.
Continue upslope
to Cornergate Ridge,
about one mile from
Third House.
From here, look
north to Oyster Pond and
the Sound beyond, east
to the huge antenna at Camp Hero
and South towards the
verdant wetlands that
feed Ogden’s Brook as it winds its way to Oyster
Pond.
Follow a terraced
trail down-slope.
Cross a bridal
path intersection; bear
to the right.
After a short distance,
reach a post and rail
fence with round blue
plastic blazes and a PP
right turn blaze.
Here the PP is
sharing the trail
corridor with the
Ogden’s
Brook Trail.
As you approach
an arm of Oyster Pond,
the trail descends into
wetlands.
Passing Hetty’s
Hole, phragmites to your
left indicate wetlands
nearby.
It’s rumored that
Hetty, a Montauket
Indian, road her horse
into the wetlands here
on a cold, rainy night,
and met her untimely
demise. As we travel
along the southern shore of Oyster Pond,
the trail intersects two
other paths; a “Y”
intersection, where the
PP continues to the
left, and then straight
across the wider trail.
These two trails
run south, join, and
lead to parking at the
Oyster Pond Overlook.
The trail is now
marked with the white
blazes of the PP and the
plastic round blue
blazes of the
Ogden’s
Brook Trail.
Continuing along
the south shore of
Oyster Pond, several
boardwalks built by
State Parks take you
through fern-covered
wetlands punctuated with
boulders, and then over
Ogden’s Brook Bridge.
The East Hampton
Trails Preservation
Society designed this
bridge.
The National
Guard air-lifted by
helicopter, pre-cut
materials to this remote
location.
After crossing a
second smaller bridge,
the trail brings you
along the shore of the
pond offering a view of
water teaming with a
variety of seabirds.
Follow Ogden’s Brook Trail north
along the eastern shore
of the pond.
Where the trail
splits, turn right onto
a woods road, south to Montauk Highway.
About three miles
from Third House, the
trail crosses over the
highway offset a short
distance to the west.
Cross over the
guardrail by a
flexi-stake marker.
Here the round
white plastic markers of
the Point Woods Trail
accompany the white
painted rectangles of
the PP.
For a little more
than a mile, this
well-engineered trail
wends its way south
through a jungle of
oversized holly, laurel,
black birch, beech, and
swamp maple.
It winds around
wetlands, protected from
weather and salt spray
by the Atlantic facing
bluffs.
Cross over three
wooden bridges, then
walk on rocks across a
brook.
The trail takes
you through a gap in a
chain link fence, and
soon weaves through a
jumble of erratics.
It then takes you
to the
Battery
112 trail, to concrete
bunkers; be alert for
the right turn that
takes you back into the
woods.
Follow rocks
across a brook, then
cross two wooden
bridges; soon turn left
onto the wide unpaved Old Montauk Highway.
Two
hundred yards beyond the
turn, leave the PP, turn
right; a short walk
brings you out to a
spectacular vista of the
bluffs and ocean.
Returning to the
PP you’ll find the
remainder of the trail
sparsely marked.
There are several
more bluff-top
overlooks, just follow
your nose for about a
mile, and you’ll end up
by Turtle Cove.
Instead of
getting onto the road
here, you can walk the
rock revetment around
the base of the
lighthouse.
I’ve seen people
slip on these rocks; be
careful. Several trails
take you up to the road;
there’s a trail parallel
to the beach that leads
to the trails map kiosk
by the side of the
concession stand.
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