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More horse paths for McHenry County?

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WOODSTOCK – Horse riding enthusiasts may get part of what they asked for.

After approaching the McHenry County Conservation District about a year ago, its operations director said some of the McHenry County Horse Club’s requests could be met with two “easy” changes.

The quotes around “easy” were his.

“I put ‘easy’ in quotes because nothing in the district is easy,” Director of Operations John Kremer said at the district’s board meeting Thursday evening.

“There’s typically permitting. There’s different committees it has to run through. Everything takes time, but it seemed they weren’t insurmountable to do. It didn’t have to have a lot a resources, both staff and financial resources, put into them.”

The horse club’s January 2012 letter boiled down to three requests, Kremer said. They would like the district to expand the diversity of paths through different terrains, allow horses on some of the multiuse trails the district already has, and address parking shortcomings.

An additional loop could be added to the trails at Glacial Park by using a road that is used only by district staff, Kremer said.

It would cost about $50 in signs and may actually save the district money, he said. The district could redirect hikers onto the proposed horse trail, and staff would not have to mow the path the hikers currently use.

The new loop also would avoid a road crossing that is a bit of a trouble spot, especially for skittish horses or new riders, Kremer added.

Additional parking space could be created at Rush Creek by clearing out brush on the east side of the parking lot if soil tests indicate that it could handle the traffic.

That would allow small- to mid-sized groups – and all their accompanying rigs – to meet at a park at the same time, something that now is difficult, Kremer said.

There are more changes the district could pursue, including some that already are in the district’s master plans, but these are some the staff could start on this spring.

For example, a horse trail was in the master plan at the Brookdale Conservation Area, but the plan was never implemented because the area practically doubled in size not long after its inception and the district planned to update the master plan.

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