Mine Trail/Roomy Mine Loop from the New Weis Center
Directions to trailhead
Take Skyline Drive to its northwestern end at Greenwood Lake Turnpike (County Route 511). Turn left and proceed south for 1.6 miles to West Brook Road. Turn right onto West Brook Road, crossing the Wanaque Reservoir. At the next intersection, turn left, then take the second left onto Snake Den Road, following signs to the New Weis Center. In 0.3 mile, bear left at a fork, and continue for another 0.3 mile to a large dirt parking area on the right side of the road, just before the entrance to the New Weis Center.
Hike Description
This hike affords you the opportunity to enter the historic Roomy Mine (open from April 15 to September 15 only). Although the mine itself is high enough to permit you to stand, you’ll have to crawl a short distance to reach the entrance. Be sure to bring along a flashlight or headlamp!
From the southwestern end of the parking area, head uphill on the paved Snake Den Road, following the light green blazes of the Otter Hole Trail. In 0.3 mile, the pavement ends and you continue on a dirt and gravel road. In 200 feet, you'll reach the Richard N. Warner kiosk on the left. Here, you should turn left, leaving the road, and begin to follow the joint Mine (yellow-on-white) and Hewitt-Butler (blue) Trails. The joint trails ascend on a footpath through mountain laurel and then climb more steeply through a rocky area, with rock steps provided for part of the way.
After leveling off, the trails reach a junction, where they split. The blue-blazed Hewitt-Butler Trail continues ahead, but you should turn left and follow the yellow-on-white blazes of the Mine Trail. The trail passes some interesting jumbled boulders and rock outcrops on the left and begins a steady descent. After a while, the descent moderates, and the trail joins an old woods road. You’ll reach a junction with the orange-blazed Roomy Mine Trail, which begins on the left, but continue ahead on the yellow-on-white Mine Trail.
After a relatively level section, the trail descends to a T-intersection, where the red-on-white-blazed Wyanokie Circular Trail (also the route of the teal-diamond-blazed Highlands Trail) comes in from the right. You should turn left and follow the joint Mine, Wyanokie Circular and Highlands Trails, which descend slightly to cross an intermittent stream.
A short distance ahead, you’ll see on the left the ruins of a stone shelter, constructed by members of the Green Mountain Club in the 1930s. The trail now approaches Blue Mine Brook. Just before reaching the brook, you’ll notice a circular mine pit to the right of the trail, with a small pile of tailings (discarded waste rock) to its left. The trail crosses the brook on a wooden footbridge, built as an Eagle Scout project in 2002.
Turn right after crossing the footbridge and proceed ahead for about 100 feet. To the left is the Blue Mine, filled with muddy water. This mine, named for the dark blue color of its ore, was discovered by Peter Hasenclever about 1765 and was worked extensively in the 1800s. A large concrete pad at the entrance to the mine, with protruding iron rods, once served as a base for steam-operated equipment.
Go back to the footbridge (do not recross it) and continue ahead on the joint Mine/Wyanokie Circular/Highlands Trails. Almost immediately, the Highlands Trail leaves to the right, and you should continue ahead on a rocky woods road, following yellow-on-white and red-on-white blazes. Just ahead, bear left at a fork and continue ahead for a quarter mile on a level footpath until the two trails separate. Here, you should turn right and follow the yellow-on-white blazes of the Mine Trail, which climbs on a narrow woods road, once used to access the Roomy Mine. At the top of a rather steep pitch, the Mine Trail turns sharply right, but you should continue ahead on the old road, now following the orange blazes of the Roomy Mine Trail.
At the top of the rise, the entrance to the Roomy Mine is on the right. Named for Benjamin Roome, a local land surveyor, the mine was opened shortly after 1840 and worked until 1857. To enter the mine (open only from April 15 to September 15), you first have to crawl through a short passage that is only about two feet high. That leads to a large chamber, with the horizontal shaft heading into the mine directly ahead. The shaft is about six feet high and leads 60 feet into the hillside, where it dead-ends. The temperature inside the mine is a constant 52 degrees, and the floor is usually wet.
When you’re finished exploring the mine, turn right and follow the orange blazes of the Roomy Mine Trail along the mine road. Soon, the trail bears right onto another road (the red-on-white-blazed Wyanokie Circular Trail ends here on the left). A short distance ahead, at a huge boulder, turn left and continue to follow the Roomy Mine Trail, which climbs over a rise and passes interesting rock outcrops.
After a jog to the right, the trail crosses Blue Mine Brook above a waterfall, turns right and briefly follows the brook, then turns left and continues to a junction with the yellow-on-white-blazed Mine Trail. Here, the Roomy Mine Trail ends, and you should turn right onto the Mine Trail. (From here to the end of the hike, you’ll be retracing your steps.) The trail is level at first, then climbs steadily.
At the top of the climb, turn right, joining the blue-blazed Hewitt-Butler Trail. Now following both blue and yellow-on-white blazes, descend steeply to Snake Den Road, here a dirt road. The Hewitt-Butler and Mine Trails end here. You should turn right and follow the green-blazed Otter Hole Trail along Snake Den Road back to the parking area where the hike began.