Deckers Creek Trail update, P2P Meeting on TUESDAY for Marion and Monongalia Counties and Why Parkersburg? blog from Amy Camp

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ERT - Mike Breiding

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May 16, 2026, 8:01:53 AM (6 days ago) May 16
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A few updates and invites!  Feel free to share.

1) Deckers Creek Rail-Trail is fully OPEN after crew finished resurfacing to Route 92 in Reedsville. Eight miles of rail-trail have been resurfaced with compacted limestone on the upper section of the Deckers Creek Rail-Trail.

2) Crew cleared many down trees from recent storm, mostly near Pricketts Fort and one at the far end of the Deckers Creek Rail-Trail. If you see more, please text me location and photo- 304-692-6782. Thanks to those that report to me all those down trees over the years! It helps us respond fast.

3) Please join us for the P2P Meeting on Tuesday, May 19 5:30-7:30pm at Fairmont State University for Marion and Monongalia Counties! All are Welcome!   Learn more and RSVP https://p2pcorridor.org/events 
There is a meal involved so it helps to RSVP but feel free to show up. I appreciate our Mon County folks being willing to travel!  
Or show up for Wednesday, May 20 for Fayette County, PA and the Sheepskin Trail! 


Read blog below to get a taste of our earlier meetings across WV and this one in Parkersburg- Wood County.  Amy Camp will be leading the last two meetings.  

Have a great weekend, Ella

Begin forwarded message:

From: Amy Camp of Cycle Forward <cyclef...@substack.com>
Subject: Why Parkersburg?
Date: May 15, 2026 at 12:32:04 PM EDT





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Why Parkersburg? 

Here are a few reasons (plus a P2P Corridor update)

 



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The Ohio River in Parkersburg, West Virginia

You know you’re in for a good community meeting when a registrant emails you to say he’ll be there along with his wife and a model covered bridge: 

“Be there by five with wife, a bridge, wearing a cap from Antarctica.” 

That would be retired pilot, educator, and all-around idea man Stanley Cole, who attended a community meeting I hosted this week for the Parkersburg to Pittsburgh (P2P) Corridor Regional Master Plan project. Besides bringing the model to encourage the installation of prefabricated bridges along the trails, he also brought positive energy. At one point he told a young concessionaire who is renting bikes and kayaks how proud he was of him. It was a sweet moment. 



Stanley Cole with the model covered bridge.

Another personal highlight of the high energy gathering was meeting Belinda Armstrong, one of the artists who painted a striking 12-peice installation in the hallway of the Wood County Resiliency Center. The collection celebrates the Mid-Ohio Valley’s connection to the river. Belinda and her husband, Ken, are the parents of a former client of mine. How is it possible that I’ve led a workshop for their daughter 200 miles away and then got to meet them in PKB? 



Sharing a moment with Belinda and Ken Armstrong in front of one of her paintings.

Belinda wasn’t the only artist in the room. We had people working in the arts, in education, economic development, tourism, and more all come together to think about the promise of this corridor. When we kicked off this project in December, a Facebook commenter asked, “Why Parkersburg?” (suggesting, as Gertrude Stein once famously did, that “There’s no there there”). 

After my time with this group (and others in Doddridge, Ritchie, and Harrison counties over the last couple of weeks), I can tell you why. We have some pretty amazing communities across Appalachia and along the trails that make up the P2P Corridor. It’s the people. It’s the culture. It’s the landscape. And so much more. 

There’s significant work ahead, but many of the ingredients are there. Speaking of which, I had the opportunity to visit Point Park in Parkersburg. I can’t say enough about this incredible civic investment at the confluence of the Little Kanawha and Ohio rivers. This park is special! (See a short video I posted here...it’s the only way to see how fantastic the Floodwall Mural is.) 

I was there in the evening and enjoyed seeing how many people were out fishing, taking their kids for a walk, and catching the sunset. This is an actively used park and would make an ideal bookend for the P2P experience. Imagine beginning a walk or ride at Point Park in Parkersburg and ending at Point State Park in Pittsburgh, both on the Ohio River! That’s part of the vision for the P2P Corridor.

If you live or work along the P2P Corridor, please join us for one of our remaining meetings and take our community survey here. Trip photos are below. 

About the P2P Corridor Project

The P2P Corridor links six existing and emerging rail-trails. When complete, the trails comprising the P2P Corridor from Parkersburg, WV to Connellsville, PA will create a fully connected 180-mile system of trails, one of the longest in the U.S. The P2P meets the Great Allegheny Passage near Connellsville. Trail users can continue on to Pittsburgh using the GAP and Three Rivers Heritage Trail. The master plan project has been made possible through an Appalachian Regional Commission ARISE grant made to the National Road Heritage Corridor with matching funds from the Just Transition Fund, Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation, and the City of Fairmont.



Parkersburg’s Point Park at sunset.


This is part of the Floodwall Mural Project by Christopher Santer and other artists.


More from the Floodwall Mural Project.


Catfish mural by Erica Ash at the Point Park Marketplace (and offices of Greater Parkersburg CVB).
 
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© 2026 Amy Camp
Pittsburgh, PA 
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Ella Belling
Executive Director
Mon River Trails Conservancy
P.O. Box 282
Morgantown, WV 26507
http://montrails.org
304-692-6782

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