Garrett County, MD: Pet Paradise

It’s a great place to live or visit with your pet (especially your dog!)

Check out the narrated version on Youtube

Dog parks

Oakland Town Dog Park
27 Oakland Rosedale Road, Oakland, MD 21550
https://oaklandmd.com/dog-park.html

McHenry Community Park (operated by the Deep Creek Lake Lions Club)
1249 Bumble Bee Rd Accident MD 21520
https://deepcreeklions.org/service-programs/mchenry-community-park/

Pick up your dog waste!

County and Municipal areas

  • 7 of the 8 incorporated municipalities have some form of walking path suitable for short walks (Accident, Friendsville, Grantsville, Kitzmiller, Loch Lynn, Mountain Lake Park and Oakland)
  • County-owned recreational properties: Fork Run, McHenry Community Park and Casselman Soccer Fields
  • Leashed, licensed and vaccinated dogs are not prohibited in any of these areas, to the best of my knowledge
  • Use your best judgement and check before you go if possible
  • Garrett County Animal Control Ordinance: https://www.garrettcounty.org/animal-shelter/animal-control-ordinance

State parks

Other State Land

  • Savage River SF – Trails and camping throughout
  • Potomac-Garrett SF – Trails and camping throughout
  • Mt Nebo WMA trail

State Park Pet Rules

  • All pets must be licensed and have all required vaccinations, including a rabies vaccination.
  • Pets must be leashed. Pets may be off-leash and under voice control while swimming in designated areas or hunting (with the appropriate permit).
  • Pet owners must clean up after their pet. Waste disposal containers are available in most areas.
  • Service animals are permitted in all pedestrian areas.
  • Pets, with the exception of service animals, are not allowed in park buildings or playgrounds.
  • Pet owners must obey all park signs that prohibit the entry of pets into specific areas.
  • Excessive barking is not permitted in any park area, especially during campground “quiet hours” (10:00 p.m.- 7:00 a.m.).
  • https://dnr.maryland.gov/publiclands/pages/pets.aspx
•https://dnr.maryland.gov/publiclands/documents/MPSPetPolicy.pdf

Federal recreation areas

Swimming spots

  • Deep Creek, Herrington Manor and New Germany Lakes (with the limitations per the table above
  • Yough River and Jennings Randolph Lakes – not explicitly prohibited that I can find
  • Yough, Potomac and Savage Rivers – there are some level sandy public access areas on these rivers, but I’d be reluctant to let my dog swim in them
  • NO Swimming for dogs: Broadford Lake and  probably Savage River Reservoir (humans are not allowed to swim there)

Good trails for dogs

Local veterinarians

Garrett County in the times of Meshach Browning

Deep Creek (Lake) in the time of Meshach Browning

“My mind cannot imagine a more beautiful sight than could be obtained from the highest grounds of the Hoop-Pole Ridge, which commanded a view of the valley between that and the great Back-Bone . . . It was a grand sight to watch the tall grass, rolling in beautiful waves with every breeze which passed over its smooth surface, as well as the herds of deer skipping and playing with each other.  It was not a strange thing to see a great lubberly-looking bear forcing  his way through the grass, when every deer which got a sight or scent of him would bound off, with tail erect, toward the nearest thicket”

These are the words of Meshach Browning (1781-1859) from his book, Forty-Four Years of the Life of a Hunter (1859), describing much of the area that would become Deep Creek Lake. Browning was one the earliest settlers of Western Maryland and a prolific hunter, killing over 2,000 deer, 500 bear, and numerous panthers, wolves and rattlesnakes. His book, penned with a turkey quill by candlelight, recounts many of his hunting expeditions, as well as providing details about pioneer life in this area during the early 1800’s. 

Browning was born in Damascus, Maryland but spent most of his life in what would become Garrett County.  His book covers his pioneering life from 1790 to 1835 and provides invaluable information on the natural, social and economic history of Western Maryland.  The map accompanying this article was published in 1838 and is annotated with the approximate locations some of the sites mentioned in Browning’s book.

Today, if you stood on Hoop-Pole Ridge (1) and looked north or east, most of your view would be encompassed by Deep Creek Lake, not the grassy fields described by Browning above.  Indeed, it seems that most of the southern half of Garrett County was largely unoccupied during his time.  He describes the “head of the North Branch of the Potomac …was the greatest wilderness we were acquainted with” (2).  Interestingly, the only town noted on the map – Selbysport (3) – is the only settlement discussed in Browning’s book as well.  Since the B&O Railroad segment to Oakland was not completed until 1851, and the only other access to the area was via the National Road in the northeastern part of the county, it is unsurprising that the southern end of the county had no population of note. Browning had several homesteads during the period documented in the book, generally located in The Glades (4) and Sang Run (5).  His Sang Run cabin stood until at least 1919 when it was photographed by Leo Beachy[1], but has since been torn down. 

Browning’s hunting grounds also ranged countywide – from the Youghiogheny River (6) where he wrestled for his life with a wounded buck, to Meadow Mountain (7) where it is easy to imagine the bear dens he describes along the trails of today’s State Park.  And of course, he mentions Deep Creek with “…water being so clear and cold, that it will make a man’s arm pain him to the elbow, if he holds his hand in it a few minutes…” and “where success was certain” when fishing for fresh trout, a favorite of his first wife, Mary.

Although life was hard in the pioneer days of western Maryland, it is clear that Browning appreciated the natural beauty of the area, respected the wildlife he hunted and enjoyed the simple pleasures of life. 

“Here I found my true pleasure – my wife, dressed clean, her beauty, in my estimation, unsurpassed; the children, as clean as water and soap could make them, plenty to live on, and not an enemy on earth.  I say, who could be happier than I was at the time?”

The Deep Creek Lake Lions has dedicated its new trail system at the McHenry Community Park to Meshach Browning.  The multi-use, low intensity trail system, opening in 2019, will have informational signs throughout with passages and images from the life and times of Browning.  Drafts of the signs can be found here: http://www.deepcreeklions.org/MB-Trailhead.html

Map information: Maryland. (inset) Western section of Maryland. An Illustrated Atlas, Geographical, Statistical, And Historical, Of The United States And The Adjacent Countries. By T.G. Bradford. Boston: Weeks, Jordan, And Company, 1838.


[1] Leo Beachy’s photography of the area during the early 1900’s could (and probably will be) the subject of a future article.  A brief intro to his story and a link to the photo of Browning’s cabin as well as many others can be found here: http://www.garrettcountymuseums.com/photos.html

Deep Creek Lake, v4.0

The current version of Deep Creek Lake isn’t the first, second or even third time a dam has been planned or built on or around Deep Creek.  Almost as soon as permanent settlers lived around it, Deep Creek and the area around it have been of interest to those who wanted to capture and use its waters for a variety of purposes.  One proposed plan to dam Deep Creek and two actual dams (one on Deep Creek and one on Cherry Creek) have been found in our research. 

In 1824, James Shriver, a leading civil engineer and proponent of expansion of the C&O Canal, published the rather verbosely titled “An account of surveys and examinations, with remarks and documents: relative to the projected Chesapeake and Ohio and Ohio and Lake Erie Canals “. In it, he lays out a speculative route for the continuation of the C&O Canal to connect the Potomac and Cheat Rivers by cutting through western Allegany (now Garrett) County.  To provide adequate draft for the barges and flood water for the locks, he proposes damming Deep Creek around the site of the current US Route 219 bridge. The plan also called for a tunnel under Backbone Mountain to connect this new waterway with the Potomac around Westernport.  His cost estimate for the entire project to connect Cumberland to Pittsburgh was $5,566,564.

The massive cost and burgeoning railroad industry prevented the development of the C&O Canal past Cumberland, but the rigorous work that Shriver did to plan his route remains an excellent resource of historical data on the area, including a detailed map of the region through which the planned canal would traverse. The text of his report describes some intriguing details of the area including trees of up to 12 feet in girth and a rock formation the locals had named “the Devil’s Castle”. In the detail of his map below, the green shaded area shows the proposed lake from damming Deep Creek around the current 219 bridge and captures the current shoreline of the southern end of the lake remarkably well.


You can view and download the fully digitized map here: https://search.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/u2084891#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=0&xywh=1767%2C7005%2C8195%2C4728
and read the scanned publication here: https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015091128796%3Bview%3D1up%3Bseq%3D11

Two more actual dams were built on Deep Creek and Cherry Creek in the late 1800’s as aquaculture projects.  The first was on Cherry Creek around 1883 and was the project of Gus W. Delawder, Commissioner of Fisheries for Western Maryland at the time. He named the new body of water Lake Cleveland in honor of President Cleveland who visited it and spent the day fishing there. The second dam was overseen by R. T. Browning, the grandson of the famous Garrett County frontiersman and hunter Meshach Browning and was completed in 1893, at the site of present Glendale Bridge.  This body of water was named Lake Brown after Maryland Governor Frank Brown (1892 -1896).

Local historian Champ Zumbrun has written a great, more detailed article on the history of these lakes that can be found here: http://dnr.maryland.gov/Pages/md-conservation-history/Cottage-in-the-Wilderness.aspx

Although we have not been able to track down any maps of the exact extent of Lake Cleveland, the detail of a 1901 topographical map from the USGS shows Lake Brown quite clearly, with the dam almost exactly where the current Glendale Bridge is today.

In 1925, the dam was completed by the Youghiogheny Hydro-Electric Company on Deep Creek and the lake we know and love today began to fill. There were plans for three more dams, not on Deep Creek, but along the Youghiogheny River. The map below (with North pointed to the left) shows those three dams (and resulting lakes). For a variety of reasons, this scheme never came through. For more information on the lakes that may have been, check out Chris Preperato’s excellent article here: http://historyoftheupperyough.com/stories/youghdams/

So, for better or worse, Deep Creek Lake is what we’ve got. It’s exceedingly unlikely that any new major dam projects will happen in this area.

Garrett County Gazette, September 2022

Welcome to the second issue of the Garrett County Gazette.  I’m Chris Nichols, your guide to helping you find out what’s going on, what’s coming up and interesting tidbits from the area. Let’s jump right in!
Garrett County’s 150th Anniversary
Garrett County was officially created in 1872 and our local government is celebrating the 150th Anniversary  with a big, FREE event on Saturday, September 17 from 10 am – 6 pm at the Garrett County Fairgrounds in McHenry. There will be music, a history walk, food, car show, artwork displays & more. Plus, collect a commemorative bronze coin for each of the 8 municipalities in the County will be available.  For more info on the event, check out https://150.garrettcounty.org/
The county’s first public disc golf course opens
Deep Creek Lake Lions Club  held the grand opening of the new public disc golf course (the Glades at Meshach Run Disc Golf Course) at the McHenry Community Park on 1249  Bumble Bee Road, McHenry, Maryland. The Glades at Meshach Run is a 9 hole, free-to-play disc golf course. Disc golf is similar to conventional golf, with throwing discs taking the place of balls, and raised metal baskets taking the place of holes. 

Ryan Harlow and Chrystal Stroud had the honor of performing the ribbon cutting.  They were the community members who brought the idea to the Deep Creek Lake Lions Club and organized the volunteer construction. 
Approximately 25 people attended the event and participated in a group disc throw that was captured by a drone.
Door prizes were awarded to winning participants and included DCLLC swag bags, maps donated by Narrows Hill, and 3 disc golf packages donated by Ryan’s Disc Golf Stop located on Accident Bittinger Road, Maryland

The Club hopes to expand from 9 holes to 18 holes in the near future and is looking for more sponsors to complete the additional 9 holes. The course has been a testing ground for use by the visually impaired, another of the Club’s primary service areas. Using remote-activated beepers on the discs and targets, the Club has been able to have visually-impaired kids play a few holes at the course. 
 
One the visually-impaired participants in the Blind Camper program was able to play a few holes of the disc golf course with special discs and beepers

Garrett County – Pet Paradise
Garrett County, MD is a great place to live or visit with your pet! In a recent Youtube video, I cover all the places to take your furry companion (OK mainly your dog) out on the trails, swimming and more! 
Some action shots with my dog Spencer 

History Corner
In a joint project with Garrett County Historical Society and Taylor-Made Deep Creek Vacations and Sales, I had the pleasure of coordinating a panel discussion on stories and tales from Deep Creek Lake with “old-timer” panelists: Beverly Railey Robinson, Ed King, Karen Frazee Myers and Ann Smith. We met in the Deep Creek Lake room at the Transportation Museum in Oakland and just had a great time chatting and sharing stories about “the good old days”. It’s important to get these stories recorded before they’re gone forever!

The video of the entire session is here on Youtube


The GCHS helps to protect, preserve and promote our local history, and membership is just $25 per year!  And much thanks to Taylor-Made Deep Creek Vacations and Sales for the professional level video recording and editing!  

Upcoming Events

Grantsville Oktoberfest, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022 AT 12 PM – 5 PM-The Third Annual Grantsville Lions Club Oktoberfest is back with local brews, German beers, live music, kids activities, and traditional German contests! The Oompah Band and the Wurstband will be providing music all day long at the amphitheater stage. The Grantsville Arts & Entertainment District will have their scarecrow making station, as well as face painting for kids. JTF1 will also be there with their outdoor set up. There will be a car show in the upper field a full slate of German food this year! 
Check out the Grantsville Lions Club Facebook event for more details! 

Autumn Glory Festival,  October 12 – 16, 2022 throughout the County
I probably don’t have to tell most of you about Autumn Glory, but there are some new cool events and activities planned this year including a week-long carnival, more craft shows and others! Check out the Chamber’s site that does a great job of bringing all these events together in one spot: 
https://www.visitdeepcreek.com/autumnglory/
Real estate perspective
The number of residential properties on the market is growing, but slowly, and sales are still happening fairly quickly and close to listing price.  So, it may be a good time to get an idea of what your property is worth.  On the buying side, even though interest rates are rising, there are still good ones to be found, especially given the innovation in financing products that has happened over the past few years.
I’m always happy to talk about buying or selling property or just chat with you about the market and the area. Check out my real estate agent website, or call or email me anytime! That’s it for this edition! Thanks for checking it out! If you’ve got ideas, suggestions or questions about the area, don’t hesitate to reach out!

-Chris

Greetings from Narrows Hill

Greetings Neighbor!

Hello, my name is Chris Nichols, your neighbor on Narrows Hill.  I’m also a real estate agent with Taylor-Made Deep Creek Vacations and Sales and am ready and able to help you achieve your real estate goals.

Just in case you’re not aware, Narrows Hill generally lies in the area “between the bridges”  – that is the Glendale and State Park Bridges and continues roughly to Toothpick and Beckman’s Peninsula Roads. Before there was a Deep Creek LAKE, there was just Deep CREEK and the Narrows is where Deep Creek carved through the terrain to create a rocky gorge which you can still see on either side of the Glendale Bridge.

In this detail from a map I developed, “Deep Creek – Then and Now”, I’ve zoomed in on the Narrows Hill area.  The map’s background layer is a 1901 topographical map showing the general terrain, roads and structures at that time.  Overlaid are today’s roads (in black) and the lake (translucent blue). I don’t really think the roads have moved since then, but over the scale of the whole map, it’s tough to get everything to align completely. You can see the rest of this map and others I’ve made of the area at narrowshill.com

You’ve probably already noticed the “STATE DAM” labeled around where today’s Glendale Bridge is.  Before the current dam, there was actually a much smaller dam on Deep Creek to create a fish hatchery pond.  You can find out more about this dam (and a couple of other actual and proposed ones on Deep Creek) on my website, dimesy.com.

The Narrows of Deep Creek was one of Meshach Browning’s favorite fishing spots.  He was one of the earliest settlers of what would become Garrett County in the early 1800’s and wrote a fascinating account of his life and times titled “Forty-Four Years of the Life of a Hunter”. When his wife Mary was craving a mess of trout to fry up in fresh butter, Meshach headed to the Narrows of Deep Creek to catch them, where he wrote “success was certain”.  The Deep Creek Lake Lions Club has a great historical exhibit on Browning’s life and times at the nearby McHenry Community Park.  You can find out more about all the other great stuff and the park the club runs here: deepcreeklions.org.

 For those of you who have docks in this area, you may gripe about the rocks and steepness of the lakefront, but one advantage is that there is almost always enough water to float your dock.  As the Membership VP for the Property Owners’ Association of Deep Creek Lake, I often hear stories from owners in the southern end of the lake who have to pull their docks in August in some years.  So, even if lake levels aren’t a big issue for your property the POA does a great job representing lake are owners, and I’d recommend joining if you’re not already a member.  It’s just $30 per year and you can go online to deepcreeklakepoa.com to learn more.

I bet you’re asking yourself, “Isn’t this letter just an ad for his maps and real estate business?”. Yeah, it sure is, but hopefully it’s got some heart and value added.  But since it is ad, here are some items I’m obligated to say.  If your property is currently listed with another real estate professional, the letter is not intended to solicit the offerings of other Brokers. All information in this letter including but not limited to market information, mapping and history is deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

With that out of the way, I do hope you’ll consider checking out my maps or consulting with me for your real estate needs. If you’re selling, or even just wondering what your property is worth, now’s still a great time to do it.  If you know someone who’s looking to buy (maybe even yourself), there are still good rates out there to help make that happen.  

But I’d be happy to hear from you on any of the other items in here, too! I love to hear stories, get corrections on claims I’ve made or help others learn more and connect with our special slice of heaven.

Hope to see you out and about on the lake! For more info on items in this letter, a good place to start is my personal website, dimesy.com or just contact me by phone or email below.  

Best regards,

Chris

Garrett County Gazette, August 2022

View this email in your browserWelcome to the first edition of the Garrett County Gazette.  I’m Chris Nichols, your guide to helping you find out what’s going on, what’s coming up and interesting tidbits from the area. Let’s jump right in!Deep Creek Lake Lions hosts Blind Camper ProgramThe Deep Creek Lake Lions Club hosted visually impaired children and their families from around the state for camping and recreation in the Deep Creek Lake area at the end of July.For nearly 30 years, the club has been hosting blind children for both summer and winter programs that emphasize personal growth and confidence-building through fun activities such as snow skiing and water sports. These are great programs that not only benefit the visually impaired kids, but also their families and also the volunteers, main of who are high school students. 

For more information on the Deep Creek Lake Lions Club, check out their websiteThe Campers and their families enjoy some fun time on the waterBroadford Park Trails celebrates grand openingThe Garrett County Coyotes, town officials, and sponsors held a grand opening for the Broadford Park Trails at the July 4 Celebration in Broadford Park this past Sunday.

This new 2.5-mile multi-use trail system at Broadford Park is now open to provide any person who wishes to enjoy recreation via walking, hiking, jogging, running, biking, birding, and snowshoeing outdoors.

Not only is this a great new addition to our excellent inventory of trails in the county, but it’s a great accomplishment for our mountain biking team to have a regular place to practice. 

For more information, visit Oakland’s website. Visit the Coyotes Facebook page for more info on the team.Dignitaries, sponsors and team members of the Garrett County Coyotes Mountain Biking Team pose in front of the new trailhead sign. New video trail tours postedSpeaking of trails, I’ve posted a number of new video trail tours to my Youtube channel over the past few months, bringing the total up to 15. Each tour is 15 minutes on average and gives the viewer an idea of the terrain, intensity and cool stuff at each trail. My goal over the next year is to visit all 44 trail areas I have listed in my Ultimate Garrett County Adventure Map.  I’m excited to share my journeys on these trails and hope to get more people outside, too.
 Some shots from my video tours – off-the-beaten path waterfalls and overlooks!History CornerThe most recent issue of the Glades Star, the quarterly publication of the Garrett County Historical Society, commemorated the County’s 150th Anniversary with historical surveys of all 8 of the incorporated towns in the County.  One of the interesting tidbits I came away with was from Accident’s history.  Apparently, little old Garrett County has a solid connection to the Nobel Prize!  Edwin Mattison McMillan, a physicist who was a co-awardee of the 1951 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (for his role discovering Plutonium) has roots in Accident.  His father , Dr. Edwin Harbaugh McMillan, was born in Accident and was reportedly a pharmacist there.

The GCHS helps to protect, preserve and promote our local history, and membership is just $25 per year! Edwin McMillan at the cyclotron at Berkeley Labs where he helped to discover PlutoniumUpcoming EventsSome cool events coming up: – have fun and support some great causes!
Mountain Maryland Dragon Boat Festival – SATURDAY, AUGUST 27, 2022 AT 9 AM at the Broadford Lake. Amateur teams of all skill levels will race dragon boats, competing for the championship title. Spectators will enjoy the excitement of the race, as well as food and artisan vendors, music, and kids activities. A full day of family fun! Supports the Dove CenterDeep Creek Lake Art & Wine Festival – SEP 9 AT 5 PM – SEP 10 AT 6 PM at the Fairgrounds. Features beautifully handcrafted works by local and regional artisans, more than 200 wines to taste from Maryland and national wineries, and more benefiting HART for Animals, Inc. and Garrett Lakes Arts FestivalPersonal announcementOn the personal front, I’m excited to announce that I’m now affiliated with Taylor-Made Deep Creek Vacations and Sales as a licensed real estate agent.  I’m looking forward to helping to guide you to your real estate goals. Be happy to talk about buying or selling property or just chat with you about the market and the area. Check out my real estate agent website, or call or email me anytime! That’s it for this edition! Thanks for checking it out! If you’ve got ideas, suggestions or questions about the area, don’t hesitate to reach out!

-ChrisCopyright © 2022 Chris Nichols, real estate agent, All rights reserved.
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