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September 14, 2006
A walking history tour of the Link River canyon will be offered by the Klamath
County Museum beginning at 10 a.m. Saturday.
Titled “People, Plants and History of
the Link River Trail,” the tour will begin at the trail's south trailhead,
behind the Favell Museum. The free tour is expected to last about 90 minutes.
Participants can expect to come away from the walk with free blackberries and
plums. The Link River Trail was established in the early 1970s as a recreation
facility, but its history goes back many more years. The city's first sawmill
was built on the Link River in 1877, and the town's first hydroelectric plant
dates to 1895.
For many years, the primary access to the Lakeshore Drive area was along the
west bank of Link River. The road was eventually closed to the public, but it
continued to serve as an access road for Pacific Power.
Saturday's history walk will include
discussion of homes that once lined the west bank of the river, as well as the
types of plants - both native and non-native - found along the trail.
Presenters will be Klamath County Museum manager Todd Kepple and Forest
Service botanist Sarah Malaby.
The Link River Trail is an unpaved, barrier-free access road with gentle
grades in isolated spots.
Other county museum activities planned for this fall include an oak woodlands
hike and a pioneer cemetery tour Oct. 14, and a downtown historical walking
tour Nov. 11.
For more information contact the Klamath County Museum at 883-4208.
Source: http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2006/09/14/news/local_news/local2.txt