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Friday, July 18, 2025

New guidebooks provide particulars on all of metro Atlanta’s parks and trails


Jonah , left, and Zana giving a studying at Davidson-Arabia Mountain Nature Protect. (Photograph by Aleksandr Sasha Greenspan)


Co-authors Jonah McDonald and Zana Pouncey speak about Mountaineering Atlanta’s Hidden Forests.

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Hikers, lace up your boots or tighten these sandal straps. A few of metro Atlanta’s best-kept mountaineering secrets and techniques won’t be a secret for much longer. Final month, native naturalists Jonah McDonald and Zana Pouncey launched Mountaineering Metro Atlanta’s Hidden Forests: An Hour or Much less From Downtown. The guide comes six months after the discharge of the primary quantity: Mountaineering Intown Atlanta’s Hidden Forests: Inside And On The Perimeter. Collectively, the two-volume compendium marks a complete assortment of hikes, trails, parks and preserves in Atlanta, together with at the very least 90 locations which have by no means appeared in a guidebook earlier than. 

McDonald is a park ranger at Mason Mill Park as a part of DeKalb County’s Recreation, Parks and Cultural Affairs, and, on the time, Pouncey was a park ranger on the Stonecrest’s Davidson-Arabia Mountain Nature Protect. The 2 initially met on the Environmental Educator Alliance Convention in March 2020 at Jekyll Island, on the eve of the worldwide lockdown. Regardless of the terrors of the pandemic round them, Pouncey and McDonald grew to become good buddies.

“Although neither of us knew this, my plans for writing a brand new mountaineering guidebook have been coming collectively at precisely the identical time as Zana’s plans for altering jobs,” mentioned McDonald. “I used to be on the lookout for a co-author to companion with, and, after I discovered that Zana — who’s somebody I belief, like and work nicely with, was between jobs — I reached out with a co-authorship proposal.”

“It was very serendipitous that our paths continued to cross,” mentioned Pouncey, who now works for the Nationwide Parks Conservation Affiliation (NPCA), a nonprofit watchdog of the Nationwide Park Service. “After I left my place at DeKalb County, Jonah approached me and requested about being a co-author for the books. [I knew] he’d written the unique model 10 years in the past and was making updates and, in fact, I mentioned sure.”

As Pouncey knew, McDonald was form of “the man” for mountaineering wherever in Georgia’s capital. In 2002, he hiked all the Appalachian Path, beginning north and trekking south, finally touchdown in Atlanta on the finish of his epic journey. McDonald favored town a lot that he determined to settle in, and he quickly began main hikes and walks in metro space parks, main him to publish his first (2014) version of Mountaineering Atlanta’s Hidden Forests: Intown and Out. 

After an additional decade of rambling and exploring each city nature nook and changing into a little bit of a social media star for Atlanta nature lovers, McDonald determined it was time to replace the guidebook right into a two-volume set. Figuring out what a frightening process this could be as a father working a full-time job, McDonald wanted some assist, which is when he reached out to Pouncey.

“I believe these books are higher for having two individuals’s brains behind them,” mentioned Pouncey. “We introduced in our personal concepts and views that collectively made the books extra sturdy. Jonah and I labored rather well collectively, and I appreciated [his] group and communication.”

The 2 had a standard objective in thoughts: to meticulously map out as many trails and parks within the metro space as they might and assist extra individuals uncover and confidently discover even essentially the most obscure locations. This meant McDonald and Pouncey personally visiting each park, protect and trailhead featured within the new two-volume version. However greater than geo-mapping and describing, McDonald and Pouncey additionally devised a score system for the paths that included not simply size and issue but in addition security, public transit choices, hidden gems and secret histories that few Atlanta hikers find out about — just like the “mule” carving within the granite outcrop at Line Creek Nature Space in Peachtree Metropolis or the outdated bathtub trapped between two timber at Decatur’s Briarlake Forest Park.

Co-authors Jonah McDonald, left, and Zana Pouncey with their books.

However it wasn’t simply Pouncey and McDonald turning this guidebook right into a actuality. The 2 enlisted greater than 50 volunteers who helped with testing the hike routes that now seem within the books. Over two years, these buddies, relations, colleagues and even some strangers beta-tested what Pouncey and McDonald had written, declaring ambiguities within the textual content or maps and taking detailed notes.

The result’s a complete pair of guidebooks on nature spots in Georgia’s capital. Seventy of those 126 hikes weren’t within the unique guidebook and a few — comparable to Clinton Nature Protect, Lionel Hampton Beecher Hills Park, and, surprisingly, Lake Charlotte Nature Protect off Moreland Avenue — have by no means been featured in any guidebook.

The 2 authors had their guide launch on the Davidson-Arabia Mountain Nature Protect on June 14 with a guide speak, adopted by a one-hour nature stroll across the protect, which was partially rained out by a summer season bathe.

“Now that every thing’s lastly completed, it’s actually satisfying, and I really feel happy with what we’ve completed,” mentioned Pouncey, who was exhausted by the (in whole) three-year writing course of. “I believe we’ve had our heads down working nonstop; hopefully, now that we’re completed, we will make time to have a good time.”

The pair is doing varied talks and signings, together with on the Large Haynes Creek Nature Heart in Conyers (September 27); DeKalb Historical past Heart (September 4); and the Decatur Guide Competition (October 3 and October 4). 

As for McDonald, who’s written 4 guidebooks now (Take a look at his second publication Secret Atlanta: a Information to the Bizarre, Fantastic, and Obscure), he’s trying ahead to somewhat R&R. “I don’t think about that I’ve written my final guide, however this challenge was so time consuming, I’m prepared for a break.” 

Or maybe a hike by means of a hidden forest?

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Jeff Dingler is an Atlanta-based writer and entertainer. A graduate of Skidmore Faculty with an MFA in inventive writing from Hollins College, he’s written for New York Journal, The Washington Put up, The New York InstancesTiny LoveNewsweekWIREDSalmagundi and Flash Fiction Journal. Extra info at jeffdingler.org.



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