Trail

The developing 40-mile Burke River Trail will follow the south side of the Catawba River, dipping down to the small towns of Burke County. The hiking and biking trail will be a mix of natural surface, crushed cinder and paved as it wanders along the river banks and into downtowns.

Communities along the trail will reap trail benefits such as increased economic activity, bike and pedestrian transportation, improved citizen health.

Connections to other trails

  • Fonta Flora State Trail and Overmountain Victory State Trail – co-location Morganton Greenway
  • Wilderness Gateway State Trail – co-located on Valdese Greenway and combined trailhead at Henry River Mill Village
  • Hickory Trail – connection to Aviation Walk at Hickory Airport
  • Upper Catawba River Paddle Trail – 6 access points on BRT
  • Valdese Lakeside Park and Oak Hill Park & Forest – will pass through each large park

The Burke River Trail (lime green) will connect to 3 State Trails: Fonta Flora State Trail (purple dash west to Lake James), the Wilderness Gateway State Trail (large pink dot SMSP to Valdese) and the Overmountain National Historic Trail (pink/purple dash). Huge loop opportunity!

It also co-locates with many Upper Catawba River Paddle Trail access points.


Trail Status as of Spring 2024

  • Corridor Feasibility Study Complete (green and brown)
  • Trail on the Ground – 2-mile Valdese Greenway, 4-mile Morganton Greenway, 0.15 at Horseshoe Park Rhodhiss, and 2.5-mile of scattered sidewalk (blue)
  • Next up – 0.5 mile on BCPS property in Valdese, 0.5 mile in Rhodhiss, 4 miles in Morganton – getting closer
  • Contacting landowners along other segments

Helpful Info

Segments: Regional trails are often built in segments as stakeholders along the path are able to contribute and as right of ways are obtained. With Valdese Lakeside Park’s 2-mile greenway being engineered, one segment can be announced – McGalliard Falls Park to Valdese Lakeside Park. Growing from there to the east, the potential exists to work with Burke County BOE and Draughn High School and then Natural Land Alliance, Inc. This gives a 4-mile segment to branch out from.

Representative Blackwell first presented the idea for the trail and has been active in meeting with stakeholders and contacting agencies impacted by the trail (NCWRC, Duke Energy, etc).