Beaches BeachesSailing SailingHiking HikingGardens GardensGuided Tours Guided ToursExcursions ExcursionsBuildings BuildingsDiving DivingRestaurants & Bars Restaurants & BarsWaterfalls WaterfallsFishing Fishing
All Maps All MapsAcommodations AcommodationsRestaurants & Bars Restaurants & BarsDiving Map Diving MapBeach and Scenery Beach and SceneryBoats and Marinas Boats and Marinas
Grenada Guides Hiking Morne LaBaye Hiking Trail Grenada
03 | 09 | 2010
Grenada Home Grenada Home
Lodging on Grenada Lodging on Grenada
Grenada Guide Grenada Guide
Lodging on Carriacou Lodging on Carriacou
Carriacou Guide Carriacou Guide
Restaurants & Bars Restaurants & Bars
Carriacou Geography Carriacou Geography
Carriacou Villa Rent Carriacou Villa Rent
Visitor Comments Visitor Comments
Diving Diving
Bars Bars
Restaurants Restaurants
Yacht Charters Yacht Charters
Lodging on Carriacou Lodging on Carriacou
Encyclopedia Encyclopedia
Tourism Reviews Tourism Reviews
Grenada News Grenada News
Morne LaBaye Hiking Trail Grenada PDF Print E-mail
(1 Vote)
Getting around Grenada - Grenada Hiking

Morne LaBaye Hiking Trail GrenadaMorne LaBaye Hiking Trail GrenadaThe Morne LaBaye Trail is a brief and easy walk, which takes about fifteen minutes and is suitable for the whole family, features twelve points of interest intended to acquaint the visitor with the area's ecology.
The trail departs directly from the visitor center and provides an easy walk through the naturalenvironment.
Vegetative species are labelled with signs, and a brief explanation of their history and importance are outlined in an available trail-guide.

This short interpretive trail has excellent examples of Grenada 's rich foliage, and it's a good introduction to the park.
One of the first plants you'll see is the endemic Grand Etang fern, found in this area of Grenada and nowhere else in the world.
The fern has a distinctive spore pattern under the fronds.
Unlike most other plants, ferns reproduce by spores instead of seeds.

The mountain palms, whose fruit and fronds Grenadians use in many different ways, are also characteristic of this part of montane forest.
You'll observe an interesting symbiotic relationship between the slender bois canot tree (Cereropia) and the ants living in its hollow trunk.
In return for shelter, the ants repel opossums and other animals trying to climb the tree to graze on tender new shoots.

FernWhat botanists call a pioneer species, bois canot is one of the first to reappear after severe hurricane winds destroy a forest.
Another pioneer species is the colorful heliconia (or balisier, pronounced "bah-lee-zyay"), a member of the banana family.
You've probably seen the blooms, shaped like a long row of lobster claws, made into decorative bouquets in hotel rooms.
These yellow, orange or red ornamentals have flower-like bracts that are almost scimitar-shaped. Mosquitoes thrive in the water pockets of these bracts, which sometimes provide the only stagnant water for breeding.
Looking skyward you'll see the tall marouba tree, with its spreading branches and small leaves.

The marouba takes its nourishment from the sun above the high canopy, instead of from the forest soil.
Locals say marouba bark can drug or stun fish, making them easy to catch.
Besides bamboo, the Morne LaBaye Trail contains lots of elephant grass, which resembles sugar cane, but is distinguished by its jointed stem.
This elephant grass was originally planted decades ago to provide a convenient refueling stop for horse and donkey-drawn wagons crossing the island.
It is still used for fodder when meadows on the farms lower down wither away in the dry season.

Hiking on Grenada At the morne ("small hill" in French) itself is a small weather station to monitor the complex and frequently changing conditions of Grand Etang.
At the River Turning Crater you'll find lingering evidence of Hurricane Janet's destruction back in 1955: a stand of huge, dead gommier (gum) trees, now serving as display posts for countless air plants.
The gommier (Dacryodes excelsa) is the most common large tree of the rain forest.
Its bark contains a gum that can be used to light fires. Only, some of the gommier trees have no bark.
Their trunks withstood the hurricane's 150-mph winds, but their branches and leaves were stripped away.
Unable to photosynthesize (the process which turns sunlight into the sugar), they died.

At the end of the trail lies a spectacular tower overlooking the park and the Eastern-Atlantic coast.

  • Length: Less than 1 mile.
  • Time: 15 minutes.
  • Difficulty : 1.
  • Trailhead: Behind the park headquarters.

TripAdvisor Reviews - Morne LaBaye Trail Feed

TripAdvisor - get the truth. then go.

 
Random Content
Loading
Loading
RSS Grenada Lodging RSS Grenada Lodging
RSS Carriacou Lodging RSS Carriacou Lodging
RSS Grenada Tour RSS Grenada Tour
RSS Carriacou Tour RSS Carriacou Tour
RSS Diving Guide RSS Diving Guide
RSS Sailing Guide RSS Sailing Guide