What's Up!

October 4, 2020

What's Up - Your guide to what's happening in Fayetteville, AR this week!

Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/1294363

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 9 of 47

10 WHAT'S UP! OCTOBER 4-10, 2020 A Long And Winding Road Pig Trail worth rediscovering for natural beauty JACK SCHNEDLER Special to NWA Democrat-Gazette B ack in the day, driving the Pig Trail with its steep and serpentine stretches was a rite of passage for faithful fans heading from points south to Razorbacks football games in Fayetteville. Then Interstate 540 (now I-49) with its Bobby Hopper Tunnel opened in the late 1990s, providing a much smoother and faster trip for the "Woo Pig Sooie" throngs. That left the older roller-coaster route on Arkansas 23 and 16 as something of a fondly remembered backwater. That's a shame, because the drive remains an alluring one — especially the 19 miles formally designated as the Pig Trail Scenic Byway. Running from the southern edge of the Ozark National Forest north to a crossroads at Brashears, the byway is most photogenic in the fall. That's when it becomes one of Arkansas' prime showcases of autumn leaves. As the Razorbacks prepare for their next home game on Oct. 17, fans from Central Arkansas with tickets for the limited-capacity seating can consider taking the Pig Trail in one direction or the other. They'd be following the lighthearted advice written by Democrat-Gazette Food Editor Kelly Brant when she was a Features reporter for the newspaper's Northwest edition in 1999. "Go the way of the piggies," Brant urged readers. "Take the Pig Trail. The new interstate may be smooth, semi-straight and mostly level. But, except for the tunnel, it's really not very fun. Who needs tunnels when you can have the challenge of some of the tightest curves on one of the hilliest roads in the state? Tunnel, schmunnel!" The nickname "Pig Trail," according to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture, is of uncertain derivation: "Near its crossing of the Mulberry River, it was not uncommon in times past to see roaming pigs, both feral and domesticated, as Ozark farmers once considered the forest as open range for fattening their shoats and hogs. Whether the road was named for these hogs, for its resemblance to a curly pig's tail, for the UA's football team, or some combination of the three remains unclear." The Mulberry River serves as a top attraction along the scenic byway for canoeing, kayaking and rafting. Near the bridge over the Mulberry, Turner Bend Store is a local landmark, having opened in 1911. Along with outdoor gear and Pig Trail T-shirts, it sells sandwiches and snacks as well as beer and wine. Other manmade sights along the route include churches, cemeteries and farms. They are overshadowed by the arching roadside trees and the panoramic views shaped by the Boston Mountains. The Arkansas Encyclopedia notes that "today's traveler is more likely to use the Pig Trail for leisure and recreation than point-to-point transportation." In a year when leisure and recreation are more valuable than ever, that's reason enough to detour from the rumbling traffic of the interstates. GO ONLINE! The Pig Trail More information on the Pig Trail can be found at the website of the Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture — encyclopediaofarkansas. net. Parts of the 19-mile Pig Trail Scenic Byway are marked as "Very Crooked and Steep." (Photo by Marcia Schnedler) FAYETTEVILLE

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of What's Up! - October 4, 2020