Hiking to Kennedy Peak in Virginia

A trip on a popular hiking trail in Virginia’s Fort Valley region that I went with my school’s outdoor club.

Overlooking Shenandoah Valley


Overlooking Shenandoah Valley

We made this trip during the second last weekend of October, about peak foliage time in the mountains of Virginia. (I personally prefer more diverse colors earlier in the season, so this felt like the last weekend with decent foliage.) We decided to take Massanutten Mountain Trail to Kennedy Peak, a popular trail in the Fort Valley region of Virginia that concluded at a former fire tower with panoramic views.

Marker


Parking for Kennedy Peak

The most technical bit of this trail may actually be parking.
“Kennedy Peak Trailhead” was located at the crest of Fort Valley Road (VA675). The only legal way was to parallel park on the north side of the road (purple area). Towards the south there was a small lot (red area) with “No Parking” signs. Parking in that lot may (or may not) be legal as long as access to “Mt Top Dr” wasn’t blocked. There’s no parking elsewhere along the narrow Fort Valley Road and Virginia Police was said to enforce this strictly.

We reached the trailhead at about 10:30am, and there wasn’t any space left on the north side of the road. The small lot to the south was empty (by the time we were back, we saw a few cars parked there.), but out of abundance of caution, we decided to park at Stephen’s Trailhead down the road. This added 3km of roundtrip distance and 140m of elevation gain to our hike.

So by the time we started our hike it’s almost 11am.
Here’s GPS tracking:

First, we took the Massanutten Mountain Trail to the original trailhead. This section wasn’t very remarkable, but it’s clean and well-maintained.

  • Trail
    Trail
  • Trail
    Trail
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    Trail
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    Trail
  • Trail
    Trail
  • Trail
    Trail
  • Trail
    Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail

Click here to display photos of the trail.
Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail


20 minutes later we were on the proper trail towards Kennedy Peak. This section of the trail was noticably wider. Since it followed a mountain ridge for about two-thirds of the distance, it’s relatively flat, to the degree that an ATV may be able to drive on it.

  • Trail
    Trail
  • Trail
    Trail
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    Trail
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    Trail
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    Trail
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    Trail
    Towards the end the trail got a bit narrow and rocky.
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    Trail
    The final spur off Massanutten Mountain Trail towards Kennedy Peak.
  • Trail
    Trail
    The final spur off Massanutten Mountain Trail towards Kennedy Peak.
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail
  • Trail

Click here to display photos of the slideshow
Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail

Trail


Trail
Towards the end the trail got a bit narrow and rocky.

Trail


Trail
The final spur off Massanutten Mountain Trail towards Kennedy Peak.

Trail


Trail
The final spur off Massanutten Mountain Trail towards Kennedy Peak.


Marker


Marker

At 2.75km from the upper trailhead where the trail made a sharp turn. These rocks and stick were probably a marker for this turn. Unfortunately, I admired its ingenuity while walking past them, until 100m later when I realized we were on the wrong track.

Towards the end, the wide thoroughfare along the ridge turned into a proper trail as it gained elevation towards Kennedy Peak, which we arrived at 12:30pm.
With limited size of parking, we didn’t run into a lot of people along the trail, and had the entire fire tower of Kennedy Peak to ourselves. That meant, we took our time to appreciate the views.

To begin, Kennedy Peak was probably the best place to view the winding Shenandoah River, as its south fork was making a few meanders right in front of us. It’s actually better than Shenandoah National Park as the turnouts along Skyline Drive were farther from the river. To the south and southwest, more mountains in the Fort Valley region were visible. It’s a pity that views to the north and northwest were largely obstructed, otherwise it would be a truly panoramic view.

  • Overlooking Shenandoah Valley
    Overlooking Shenandoah Valley
  • Fields in Shenandoah Valley
    Fields in Shenandoah Valley
    Town of Luray in the background.
  • Fields in Shenandoah Valley
    Fields in Shenandoah Valley
    Thornton Gap, a wind gap through Shenandoah National Park, in the background.
  • Mountains of Shenandoah National Park.
    Mountains of Shenandoah National Park.
  • Shenandoah River
    Shenandoah River
  • Mountains to the South
    Mountains to the South
  • Mountains to the South
    Mountains to the South
    Duncan Knob in the center right.
  • Mooreland Gap
    Mooreland Gap
  • Overlooking Shenandoah Valley
  • Fields in Shenandoah Valley
  • Fields in Shenandoah Valley
  • Mountains of Shenandoah National Park.
  • Shenandoah River
  • Mountains to the South
  • Mountains to the South
  • Mooreland Gap

Click here to display photos from Kennedy Peak.
Overlooking Shenandoah Valley


Overlooking Shenandoah Valley

Fields in Shenandoah Valley


Fields in Shenandoah Valley
Town of Luray in the background.

Fields in Shenandoah Valley


Fields in Shenandoah Valley
Thornton Gap, a wind gap through Shenandoah National Park, in the background.

Mountains of Shenandoah National Park.


Mountains of Shenandoah National Park.

Shenandoah River


Shenandoah River

Mountains to the South


Mountains to the South

Mountains to the South


Mountains to the South
Duncan Knob in the center right.

Mooreland Gap


Mooreland Gap


View from Kennedy Peak


View from Kennedy Peak

And while we were taking rests and enjoying snacks, I launched my drone for an aerial tour of Shenandoah Valley in front of us.

  • Overlooking Shenandoah River
    Overlooking Shenandoah River
  • Kennedy Peak
    Kennedy Peak
  • Kennedy Peak
    Kennedy Peak
  • Kennedy Peak
    Kennedy Peak
  • Kennedy Peak
    Kennedy Peak
  • Overlooking Shenandoah River
  • Kennedy Peak
  • Kennedy Peak
  • Kennedy Peak
  • Kennedy Peak

Click here to display photos of the slideshow
Overlooking Shenandoah River


Overlooking Shenandoah River

Kennedy Peak


Kennedy Peak

Kennedy Peak


Kennedy Peak

Kennedy Peak


Kennedy Peak

Kennedy Peak


Kennedy Peak


Overlooking Shenandoah Valley


Overlooking Shenandoah Valley

And here’s a video:

40 seconds, 2160p60fps, H265 only, 2.5x playback speed, 8Mbps/43MB.

In the end, we stayed at Kennedy Peak for about 50 minutes, before we started our way back.

Stick Insect


Stick Insect
One that got onto one of my friend’s shoes.

The way back wasn’t very remarkable, just that the colors of foliage were as awesome. In the end, we were back at Stephen’s Trailhead around 3pm, concluding this trip.
END

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 Hiking to Kennedy Peak in Virginia by Huang's Site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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