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Published 9:00 pm Saturday, June 2, 2007

America’s a big country, but that doesn’t mean you can’t see it on foot. Decades ago, conservationists protected chunks of wilderness to be designated as hiking trails, and those routes are still there – some of them offering miles of serene wilderness, others with chunks of nature broken up by roads and development.

The greatest of them all? There are two, one on each coast: The Appalachian National Scenic Trail, completed in 1937, which stretches 2,175 miles between Maine and Georgia; and the Pacific Crest Trail, which runs 2,650 miles between Mexico and Canada, passing through California, Oregon and Washington.

www.appalachiantrail.org/site/c.jkLXJ8MQKtH/b.1423119/k.BEA0/Home.htm

The Appalachian Trail Conservancy maintains a Web site with history, maps, trail conditions, volunteer opportunities, descriptions of flora and fauna, and just about everything else you need to find out before you pull on your hiking boots for a months-long 14-state wilderness experience.

www.pcta.org

The Web site for the Pacific Crest Trail Association also offers some history, an events calendar, and, like the Appalachian Trail site, places where hikers can log photos and journal entries.

www.cdtrail.org/page.php

Still under construction is the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail, a planned 3,100-mile backcountry route between Mexico and Canada through the Rocky Mountains. The trail passes through Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico, including Glacier National Park and Yellowstone National Park. At the site of the Continental Divide Trail Alliance, you can find trail-building projects where volunteers put the pieces of the trail together. About 70 percent of the trail is useable now.

gorp.away.com/index.html

Most people just tackle pieces of these long trails, of course. For maps to those shorter hikes and thousands of others around the United States, try the subscription service. Click on “Where to Hike” and you’ll see a map of the United States; choose a state to find an array of options.

www.americanhiking.org

The American Hiking Society site will steer you to a hiking association in your part of the country, and it has plenty of listings for volunteer trail work.

www.hikewithyourdog.com

If you would like your canine to be in on all this, check out a site which lists some of the outdoor parks and monuments where dogs are welcome in the United States and Canada.

hiking.meetup.com

Need someone to hike with? This site has a hiking group for just about everyone, somewhere.

Anne Wallace Allen, for the Associated Press