This is an easy biking adventure that you, your friends, and family will talk about for a long time.
The Virginia Creeper Trail is rich in beauty and regional history. This former rail bed passes through the Mount Rogers National Recreation area and the highland country of southwest Virginia. The Va Creeper Trail is open year round for trail runs, hiking, mountain biking, and horseback riding. The Virginia Creeper stretches 34 miles from Abingdon, Virginia down through to the lovely town of Damascus, Va (known as the Heart of the Va Creeper) along the Whitetop Laurel River and up to its highest point Whitetop Station near the NC State Line at Whitetop, Virginia. Young vines are relatively easy to uproot if you spot them early, and I rarely have to resort to the Brush-Be-Gone.The Virginia Creeper Trail is a recreational trail (rails to trails) located in Southwest Virginia (SWVA). Elsewhere, I try to pull them out if I see them sprouting. Of course they try to spread elsewhere, as well, so that I have to go down the row every year and pull them out of the trees, where they really want to grow. I soon noticed that the Virginia creeper vines outcompeted most of the rest, and I encouraged them to spread the length of the row. My property is bordered by a long row of junipers, where a lot of really obnoxious weeds had a tendency to sprout - buckthorn, ground ivy, garlic mustard - as well as Virginia creeper. While I have never actually planted Virginia creeper, I have encouraged it in some places as a groundcover. I come down myself on the cautiously positive side. And many people enjoy the bright red color of its foliage in the early fall. Virginia creeper gets points for being a native plant and for its berries as a source of food for birds (although they can be toxic if ingested by humans). On the positive side, t here are many gardeners who appreciate its habits, who want a vigorous climber to cover fences or walls, if not necessarily the trunks of trees. Left unchecked, Virginia creeper vines have the potential to overwhelm their host tree, but they are less of a problem than, say, kudzu or wild grapevine. I have some of it covering the side of my metal shed.
It can climb just about any vertical surface: telephone poles, fences, walls. The vines can reach at least 50 feet in length. Any time the vine encounters a tree, it begins to climb, anchoring itself into the bark with adhesive pads at the ends of its aerial roots. The plant tolerates shade and can often be found growing beneath trees, but it reaches high for the sunshine. The vines can grow twenty feet in the course of a single year, and they readily take root at stem nodes along the length of the vine, where new shoots then sprout.īut Virginia creeper really prefers to grow upwards. Virginia creeper's growth can be very vigorous. (So, for that matter, is poison ivy.) But it must certainly be considered aggressive. In that case, Virginia creeper can not be labeled invasive in the eastern half of the U.S., where it is native. Now there are some people who insist that the term "invasive" properly applies only to non-native plants in a given habitat. The other is its invasive habit of growth. This reaction is one indictment against Virginia creeper. Virginia creeper, however, is not entirely harmless, as it contains oxalic compounds to which some people are allergic they may end up with a rash from attempting to remove these vines. The reason for the urgency in distinguishing these two plants is of course the fact that poison ivy produces a toxin called urushiol that is seriously harmful to most people. The berries of Virginia creeper are dark purple, while poison ivy's are white. The leaflets of poison ivy are carried on petiolules (stems), with the central petiolule longer than the rest the leaflets of Virginia Creeper sprout directly from the stem, without distinct petiolules. Virginia creeper's leaves are "toothier," longer, and more folded along the midrib, with rather more prominent veins. There are several ways to tell the two vines apart, however. And worst of all, both plants flourish in woodsy habitats, so that it is quite possible to find them growing together in the same thicket or climbing the same trees, and both are difficult to eradicate once established. Both plants produce berries that are attractive to birds, which then propagate the plant widely via their droppings. And while Virginia Creeper has five leaflets as opposed to the notorious "leaflets three" of poison ivy, it is common for early-sprouting leaves of Virginia creeper to have only three leaflets, exacerbating the confusion. Both are woody vines with a strong climbing habit, both have similar brushy aerial roots for clinging to the bark of trees, both are deciduous with leaves that turn red in the fall.