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    Dumbarton Oak Park

    4.8 (9 reviews)

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    Austin G.

    Dumbarton Oak Park is a large park in Georgetown with several playgrounds, tennis courts, picnic area, and light hiking. If you have dogs or small children,it's the perfect place to explore!

    Trail entrance
    Nicole C.

    The Dumbarton Oaks hiking trails are great for a short hike in DC. If you start at the southern end of the trail at the end of Lover's Lane (31st and Avon St) there's a box with a map that gives you a few different options and marks historic sites along the trail. I've done the hike a few time by starting in Georgetown and ending in Woodley Park, which is a nice way to spend some time in nature without leaving the city.

    Beautiful hiking and jogging trail

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    3 months ago

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    6 years ago

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    6 years ago

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    8 years ago

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    8 years ago

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    6 years ago

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    8 years ago

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    11 years ago

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    6 years ago

    The park is nice and free. Virgin nature to enjoy by. Place can serve as a shelter during the day heat in the summer.

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    Klingle Valley Trail

    Klingle Valley Trail

    4.0(3 reviews)
    1.2 miWoodley Park

    For context, this space used to be a road that ran through the a valley below most of the…read moreneighborhood. However, the stream that runs through the valley made the ground under the road unstable, and the road was closed for decades. The whole area was abandoned, and after debates on what to do with the space, a trail was constructed where the road used to be. The trail runs just less than a mile. The surface is very nice, but I am rather puzzled as to what we're supposed to do with this trail. Neither end of the trail has much going on, and the number of people trying to traverse it on a regular basis would only be locals from Cleveland Park try to go to Rock Creek, but it's hard to access that end due to the private school and other buildings that effectively block it off. There's no connection to Connecticut Avenue, which I kind of understand simply because it would have been expensive to build stairs down from the bridge several stories above, but the trail is completely inaccessible to the main thoroughfare in the area. Also, despite being near the zoo, the zoo has no entrance anywhere near the trail's end (which frankly has always been a flaw as the zoo forces traffic towards more crowded residential areas; it should always have had an entrance on Klingle when there was a road). The trail is also notable for being very well lit; with streetlights close together lining the entire trail. It's very noticeable when you look down from the Connecticut Avenue bridge above at night. However, given how both ends of the trail have very few people and the police would have real trouble getting to this trail, I would not go on it after dark, regardless of how light it is. It seems unsafe. All of which is to say that while I'm glad they finally did something, there's not much to recommend the trail as of yet. Soapstone Valley is similar, nearby, and a much nicer walk. I do have some hope that the trail will become more useful in the future, but it isn't much of a destination at present.

    Was actually driving to Glover Archbold Park when I saw this, the Klingle Vallery Trail. I thought…read morethat this was do. I didn't know the size of this park but it looked like fun. While reading about decommisioned Subway stations in New York I decided to look into what we may have here along those lines. What I found out about Klingle Road and how there are portions of it which are not longer open to vehicular traffic. That explains some of the trail but Klingle Valley Trail still confuses me. There's this whole Tregaron Conservancy business which I cannot explain. When you walk the trail you'll see what I mean. I loved how green everything was around me and the stream added to the experience. You could easily knock this out in an hour but with the amound of benches, you could also spend an entire day here because the amout of canopy above keeps the humidity at bay. Hopefully, next time I will better understand where Klingle Valley Trail begins and Tregaron Conservancy ends.

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    Dumbarton Oak Park - hiking - Updated May 2026

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