Pennsylvania Wilds
The Pennsylvania Wilds is a region in northern Pennsylvania.
Regions
The Pennsylvania Wilds are made up of thirteen northern and north-central counties in Pennsylvania.
|
|
Cities and towns
- 🌍 Bellefonte - classic Victorian homes
- 🌍 Bradford
- 🌍 Clearfield
- 🌍 Coudersport
- 🌍 DuBois
- 🌍 Galeton
- 🌍 Kane
- 🌍 Lock Haven
- 🌍 Mansfield
- 🌍 Mount Jewett
- 🌍 Port Allegany
- 🌍 Punxsutawney — home to Groundhog Day and Punxsutawney Phil
- 🌍 Ridgway
- 🌍 Saint Marys
- 🌍 State College — home to Penn State and the Nittany Lions
- 🌍 Warren
- 🌍 Wellsboro
- 🌍 Williamsport — largest city in the Pennsylvania Wilds. Listing includes the adjacent borough of South Williamsport, home to the annual Little League World Series of Baseball.
Other destinations
- Allegheny National Forest - Over 500,000 acres of federally protected land with recreation activities ranging from hunting and fishing to backpacking and off roading with natural areas that range from old growth forests to man made reservoirs.
- Bilger's Rocks - Huge rock formations, laid across the land from glaciers during the ice age. Located in Clearfield County
- Curwensville Lake - Largest lake in Clearfield County.
- Mount Nittany - Prominent ridge near Penn State University and the namesake of the school mascot, the Nittany Lion
- Parker Dam State Park - In northern Clearfield County. Hiking, Camping, Swimming, Fishing and boating.
- Quehanna Trail
- Tioga State Forest — Pine Creek Gorge, also known as the Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania
- Kinzua Bridge State Park — A massive wrought iron bridge taller than the statue of liberty which was destroyed by a tornado in the early 2000s and converted into a state park with a skywalk.
Understand
Talk
English is spoken throughout the region. A few families of Amish farmers live in the area and speak a dialect of German called Pennsylvania Dutch.
Get in
Get around
In Williamsport, the alternative to car transportation is city bus service.
Stay safe
Be aware that there are many areas where cellular reception will be weak or non-existent. Along major highways, you'll likely be okay but even then an intervening mountain can cause connection issues. On the back roads, all bets are off. (Even satellite reception may be blocked if there's a big hill immediately to your south.)
Go next
This article is issued from Wikivoyage. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.