Long Point Trail
One of the best classic views of the New River Gorge Bridge, ending at a rocky overlook point. No permit.
West Virginia · Stamp 38 / 63
A river older than the mountains it cuts through, spanned by one of the longest steel arch bridges on Earth.
The New River is, despite its name, considered one of the oldest rivers on Earth, old enough that it was already flowing before the Appalachian Mountains around it finished rising, carving a gorge deeper and older than the peaks that now frame it. The New River Gorge Bridge, completed in 1977, spans that gorge 876 feet above the water, and at 1,700 feet its arch remains the longest steel arch span in the Western Hemisphere.
This became the country's newest national park in only 2020, upgraded from a national river designation, though the land has drawn climbers, rafters, and hikers for decades before that change. Every third Saturday of October, Bridge Day closes the span to traffic and opens it to hundreds of BASE jumpers and rappellers, drawing crowds that dwarf any other day of the year.
Come for the bridge. Stay for the whitewater, the sandstone cliffs, and some of the best rock climbing in the eastern United States. Read the story, plan around Bridge Day if that's not your scene, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
A rugged, whitewater river flowing northward through deep and spectacular canyons, the New River is actually among the oldest rivers on Earth.Adapted from National Park Service interpretive materials on New River Gorge
Six ways to spend your time, from a bridge overlook to Class V whitewater below it.
The main stop for the classic bridge view, with an overlook and stairs down toward the rim for a closer angle.
The signature viewA rim-edge trail with multiple overlooks of the gorge, the bridge, and the tracks below, popular with climbers.
Half day · confident hikersGuided rafting trips run rapids ranging from mellow to Class V, with outfitters based just outside the park.
Half to full day · guidedThe largest waterfall on the New River, a wide, boardwalk-accessible cascade at the park's southern end.
Everyone · 20 minA once-booming coal and railroad town now nearly abandoned, still served by a working Amtrak stop.
History · half dayConsidered one of the best sandstone climbing destinations in the eastern United States, with routes for every level.
Climbers · guides availableAnswer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.
Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a note on which overlooks give the classic bridge shot.
One of the best classic views of the New River Gorge Bridge, ending at a rocky overlook point. No permit.
A rim trail with multiple sandstone overlooks of the gorge, popular with both hikers and rock climbers. No permit.
A short, accessible boardwalk to the largest waterfall on the New River, at the park's southern end. No permit.
A short walk through the historic railroad ghost town of Thurmond, once a booming coal transport hub. No permit.
A rim trail at the park's Grandview section with some of the most photographed overlooks in the park, especially in spring rhododendron bloom. No permit.
A steep descent to the ruins of a historic coal mine on the gorge floor, with a genuinely tough climb back out. No permit.
No permit for day hikes · free park entry with no entrance fee · rafting and climbing typically arranged through licensed outfitters
Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.
Reintroduced to the region after disappearing, now nesting on the sandstone cliffs of the gorge and occasionally visible diving near the bridge.
Common throughout the gorge's forested slopes, generally shy and most active in the early morning and evening.
Found throughout the park's forests, especially visible along quieter park roads at dawn and dusk.
A popular gamefish in the New River, drawing anglers to its warmwater sections below the whitewater stretches.
Present in the park's forests but elusive, mostly nocturnal, and rarely encountered by day visitors.
Common in the park's forested areas, a slow-moving and long-lived resident of the Appalachian understory.
North America's largest salamander, found in the park's cleanest, coldest streams, an indicator of high water quality.
Covers many of the gorge's rim trails in pink and white blooms each spring, especially dense around the Grandview area.
Found in the park's cooler, shaded ravines, though declining regionally due to an introduced insect pest.
One of the tallest hardwood trees in the eastern forest, common throughout the gorge's slopes.
Common on the drier, rockier sections of the gorge rim, blooming white to pink in early summer.
Grows on the exposed sandstone outcrops along the rim trails, tolerant of the thin soil and full sun exposure there.
Common along the New River's banks, identifiable by its distinctive mottled, peeling bark.
The New River is considered one of the oldest rivers on Earth, predating the Appalachian Mountains it now cuts through.
The New River Gorge Bridge's 1,700-foot arch is the longest steel arch span in the Western Hemisphere, standing 876 feet above the river.
New River Gorge became the country's newest national park in 2020, upgraded from a national river designation held since 1978.
Bridge Day, held the third Saturday of every October, draws hundreds of BASE jumpers and tens of thousands of spectators to the closed span.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full New River Gorge deep dive lives on the journal.
Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.
East across Virginia: from one gorge-rim national park to another ridge road in the Appalachians.
Open Stamp 22 → The collectionSee the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn New River Gorge into a road trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.