The Great Eastern Trail (GET)

Maps and Trail Conditions - West Virginia

Great Eastern Trail in West Virginia is a cooperative project of West Virginia Scenic Trails Association, Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, Southeastern Foot Trails Coalition (SEFTC), Mid Atlantic Foot Trails Coalition (MAFTC), American Hiking Society. Link to these GET Association member organizations or click on the map below for detailed hiking maps and trail conditions.

The GET hiker first nears the Mountain State on descending 2,000 feet to the New River. The New River, despite its name, is the second oldest in the world, and one of the few that flows north.

The yellow blazes of Allegheny Trail welcome you definitively to West Virginia. A major attraction on the south end of Allegheny Trail is the Hanging Rock Raptor Migration Observatory, reached via either of two intersections with a blue-blazed side trail. A visit to the observatory will yield, on a clear day, a 360-degree view of the Allegheny Mountains in West Virginia and Virginia.

Soon the ALT's yellow blazes are left behind for a developing route through George Washington National Forest edging back into the Old Dominion. This route is entirely within the National Forest, and is covered in National Geographic Maps 791 and 792. Check Potomac Appalachian Trail Club for details. It is anticipated this portion of route will use many existing hikeable National Forest trails with relatively few and short connections to be made. North of US Hwy 33, GET generally follows the height of land along VA/WV border with a few excursions through valleys on either side.

Just past Big Schloss, the GET joins the completed and well maintained Tuscarora Trail, returning to the Mountain State for a 40-mile traverse of West Virginia's Potomac Highlands where both GET and Tuscarora Trail finally cross the Potomac River to Hancock, Maryland where the GET hiker has a difficult choice between western and eastern branches forming a loop. Both branches follow the Potomac for some distance where the hiker almost remains in "Almost Heaven". (See PATC Maps F and L for the route of the GET through northern Virginia and West Virginia.)

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