Indianapolis, IN
Between Indianapolis And Chicago Is A Trail In A Vibrant College City Blending History With Tranquil Nature – Islands
Indiana may evoke cornfields and sports, but there’s so much more to the Hoosier State than that. Take a stroll through the forested woodlands along the Wabash River in the state’s north-central region on any given afternoon. Depending on the season, you might smell the sun baking the tall grass or turning the leaves golden; listen to a soundtrack of red-winged blackbirds and the gentle splash of a fishing lure dropping into the river; and watch colorful butterflies or soft snowflakes drift through your peripheral vision. Away from urban noise, rimmed by marshland, and shaded by buckeye, sycamore, and cottonwood trees, this nature oasis is part of the 13.4-mile Wabash Heritage Trail. This scenic, multi-use path runs along Burnett Creek and the Wabash River, traversing historic landmarks, residential parks, and farmland. The easy-to-moderate trail is open to the public and popular for jogging, strolling, and experiencing a slice of nature.
The Wabash Heritage Trail is steeped in American history. Its northern end at the Tippecanoe Battlefield in Battle Ground, Indiana, is a National Historic Landmark. The 96-acre site now includes a park, a nature center, and a museum. In 1811, it was where the Battle of Tippecanoe took place, fought between the U.S. Army under William Henry Harrison and a Native American confederation associated with Shawnee leader Tecumseh. “Go there for a great history lesson,” writes one Google reviewer. “The museum itself is small but packed with information, and the battlefield itself is easy to stroll,” adds another.
At the trail’s southern terminus, Fort Ouiatenon is believed to have been the site of one of the earliest French trading posts. Today, the approximately 90-acre park is home to a wooden blockhouse built in 1930 in the style of 18th-century traders. The park also features picnic areas and a concrete boat ramp with river access.
Navigating the Wabash Heritage Trail
The core of the trail is the Wabash River, the longest free-flowing river east of the Mississippi. It begins near Fort Recovery, Ohio, and flows southwest across northwestern Indiana, then veers south to form part of the Indiana-Illinois border before washing into the Ohio River. “Wabash” is believed to be a French translation of a Miami word generally meaning “clear water over white stones,” though centuries of agriculture and development have turned it noticeably murkier. Along the trail, anglers can cast lines for some of the river’s 150 fish species, including catfish, carp, and smallmouth bass. Just note that those over 18 do need a fishing license in Indiana.
Lafayette is one of America’s fastest-growing metro areas, so some of the trails are within earshot of highways and in sight of residential areas. Even so, much of the route is surprisingly tranquil before reaching the bustling Purdue University, a Big Ten conference school and home to the Boilermakers and more than 50,000 students.
Primarily located in Indiana’s Tippecanoe County, the linear trail starts north of the river’s western bank in Battle Ground, next to Prophetstown, Indiana’s newest state park with historic grasslands and woodlands. From there, it follows Burnett Creek to Davis Ferry Park on the Wabash River, which also features a boat launch. A footbridge crosses the river at Davis Ferry, continuing the trail southeast along the river’s eastern bank. A few miles farther down, the trail crosses the John T. Myers Pedestrian Bridge into West Lafayette and Tapawingo Park, where it continues along the river’s northern bank. Some parts can be muddy depending on the season, but reviewers say it’s typically passable. Note that bicycles are permitted only on the trail’s paved urban sections.
The trail offers a nature oasis close to the city
Along the way, additional access points include McAllister Park, formerly the Lafayette Municipal Golf Course, which features a disc golf course and a model plane airstrip; Riehle Plaza, an outdoor events area near downtown Lafayette; and Lyboult Sports Park. The trail’s primary bicycle-friendly section is a 3-mile paved stretch from South River Road to Sagamore Parkway, with an extension path through West Lafayette’s Happy Hollow Park. The stretch of river between Davis Ferry Park and Tapawingo Park is also considered an easy paddle. Put in at the Davis Ferry boat launch and beach on the sand at Tapawingo Park.
Though the Wabash Heritage Trail passes through urban and residential areas, it still offers ample opportunities to spot wildlife. More than 300 bird species have been recorded throughout the county, and hikers frequently report seeing squirrels, deer, and other animals. “Great views of Indiana farmland and the Wabash river,” wrote one Google reviewer. “So many local species of animals that are ready to greet you.” Offshore, Heron Island Nature Preserve is an undeveloped 11-acre river islet accessible only by boat and, though overrun with poison ivy, supports a heron rookery. The trail is also close to the Celery Bog Nature Area, a once-thriving farm now a wetland and wildlife mecca with trails, located along the Indiana Birding Trail. It’s worth the slight detour for outdoor enthusiasts and nature photographers, as more than 260 species of birds have been documented there.
Lafayette, Indiana, is the travel hub for the Wabash Heritage Trail. Close by, Purdue University Airport (LAF) is a regional link to Chicago O’Hare International Airport (ORD) 140 miles northwest, and Indianapolis International Airport (IND), less than 70 miles southeast. Lafayette is also home to an Amtrak station, providing rail access to the rest of the U.S.
Indianapolis, IN
Indiana Black Expo honors diverse leaders at annual summer celebration luncheon
Indiana Black Expo’s Summer Celebration is one of the largest African American cultural events in the country. For the past 55 years, the multi-day celebration is jammed packed with a variety of events showcasing music, culture, education, health, business and community.
This year, several were honored at the Pacers Sports & Entertainment Corporate Luncheon Friday.
The honorees included:
- Anthony Anderson, Lifetime Achievement Award. The Emmy-nominated actor is known for starring in “black-ish” and “All About the Andersons.”
- Pastor Jeffrey A. Johnson Sr., Legacy Award. He served as senior pastor of Eastern Star Church in Indianapolis for 37 years.
- Delroy Lindo, Screen Image Award. The Academy Award-winning actor is known for his work with director Spike Lee and the widespread recognition he garnered for his work in Ryan Coogler’s Sinners.
- October London, Music Heritage Award. The South Bend R&B singer is signed to Death Row Records.
- Terri Carmichael Jackson, Excellence in Sports Award. She serves as executive director of the Women’s National Basketball Players Association.
- Mathew Knowles, Carolyn Brown Mosby Above and Beyond Award. The music executive is a global leader in sales, marketing and entrepreneurship.
IBE President and CEO Alice Watson said this year’s class of honorees was the largest the organization has honored at the luncheon.
“We wanted our community to see the greatness and the possibility of what can be done, even in this climate,” Watson said.
Each honoree recognized was given the chance to say a few words to those in attendance at the luncheon.
Actor Delroy Lindo, who accepted the Screen Image Award, emphasized the important role everyone plays in strengthening and protecting communities.
“Our jobs and our mandate to all of us is to increase all our efforts to protect our community, to be leaders in our community in whatever spheres of influence we are in,” Lindo said.
Fellow honoree and music executive Mathew Knowles, accepted the Carolyn Brown Mosby Above and Beyond Award. Knowles, father of global superstars Beyonce and Solange and a breast cancer survivor, was recognized for his health advocacy work.
“My mission in life is to educate and to motivate. I’ve done it in corporate America. I’ve done it in music. But now I’m doing it in saving lives,” Knowles said.
This year is particularly special, as it marked 40 years of providing access to free health care through the Health Fair. For the first time, $4,000 in free health screenings and resources will be provided to each attendee.
The IBE Summer Celebration wraps up this Sunday.
Kicking off the final weekend at 6 p.m Friday was the Music Heritage Festival at the IU Michael Carroll Stadium. The signature event showcased the legacy of Black music and culture, featuring iconic legends and rising stars.
The lineup fro the Music Heritage Festival in downtown Indianapolis:
- KEM – Headliner. The three-time Grammy-nominated R&B artist delivers smooth vocals on hits like “Love Calls” and “I Can’t Stop Living You.”
- October London – The Indiana native brings his signature soulful sound and contemporary R&B style.
- King George – The emerging artist mixes Southern soul with modern R&B influences.
- Midnight Star – The legendary funk band behind classic 1980s hits “No Parking (On the Dance Floor)” and “Freak-a-Zoid.”
Other events on tap for the weekend include:
- IBE Cultural Arts Pavilion, featuring free live music, spoken word and art.
- Exhibition Hall, featuring over 300 vendors and 250+ exhibitors including Black-owned businesses, corporations, nonprofits, and government agencies. Ideal for shopping, networking, and exploring cultural exhibits.
- Indiana Health Fair, offering free resources and screenings for diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, cancer and stroke risk. Mathew Knowles will lead a fireside chat at the Health Fair Saturday at 10 a.m., showcasing the importance of early detection.
For a complete schedule of events, visit IndianaBlackExpo.com.
Indianapolis, IN
Canada wildfire smoke leads to air quality alerts for Sunday, Monday
Will wildfire smoke affect World Cup Final?
Sam Cardona-Norberg shares the information about the wildfire smoke in New York/New Jersey as the World Cup Final approaches this weekend.
Sports Seriously
Smoke from Canada’s wildfires will continue to affect air quality in Indianapolis later this weekend and into early next week.
While Indianapolis did not issue an alert for Saturday, July 18, the city’s Office of Sustainability did issue Knozone Action Days for Sunday, July 19, and Monday, July 20, “due to high levels of particulate pollution.”
The Indiana Department of Environmental Management also issued Air Quality Action Days for Saturday, Sunday and Monday for portions of the state. Smoke will affect the air quality in northern and central Indiana through Monday, with heavy smoke lingering in the north due to a stationary front.
The air quality these days will be unhealthy for people in sensitive groups; those individuals should remain inside as much as possible. Vulnerable people include children, older adults, pregnant people, outdoor laborers and anyone with respiratory illnesses or heart disease.
“During Knozone Action Days, the air quality may become unhealthy for sensitive individuals due to increased ground-level ozone and/or fine particles — two of the most common pollutants in the United States,” the news release says.
Wildfire smoke contains fine particulate matter, which causes damage when it enters the lungs.
When air quality decreases due to particulate matter, the Office of Sustainability recommends residents try to reduce their own contributions to this type of pollution. This can be done by:
- Not burning trash, furniture, leaves or grass clippings (always illegal in Marion County)
- Avoid campfires, bonfires and barbecues until the air pollution clears up
All Hoosiers should take precautions during days with poor air quality and reduce their exposure to outdoor air, a news release from the city says.
These precautions include:
- Staying inside
- Keeping windows and doors closed
- Running an air conditioner if available
- Using a high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) purifier if available
- Using the “recirculate air” function on a vehicle’s AC unit
Sunday and Monday will mark the fourth and fifth Knozone days for Indianapolis this year. The city recommends people who must be outside during days of high particulate matter wear N95 or P100 masks. Cloth or surgical masks will not protect people very well from the smoke, the release says.
Climate change exacerbates wildfire impacts
The long stretch of poor air quality stems in part from the fact that Canada’s fire season starts earlier and lasts longer than in the past, according to the Canadian Climate Institute. This makes it more difficult for firefighters to contain the blazes.
Forest fires occur naturally, but the CCI says fires are hotter and wilder today, causing greater destruction.
The last three fire seasons in Canada have been some of the worst on record. The CCI says climate change, largely from burning fossil fuels, is warming Canada twice as fast as the global average, putting that country’s boreal forests at greater risks of burning.
In the U.S., human-caused climate change has increased fire weather in the west, according to NASA. As the Earth warms, hotter weather combined with various other factors contributes to conditions that are prime for fires.
Resources for Hoosiers during poor air quality days
Indy’s Office of Sustainability and the Indiana Department of Environmental Management both provide resources for Hoosiers.
Indy’s Office of Sustainability regularly publishes information on Facebook, X and Instagram under the handle @SustainIndy.
The state’s SmogWatch website has air quality forecasts and an alert system users can sign up for.
Karl Schneider is an IndyStar environment reporter. You can reach him at karl.schneider@indystar.com. Follow him on BlueSky or Twitter @karlstartswithk
IndyStar’s environmental reporting project is made possible through the generous support of the nonprofit Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.
Indianapolis, IN
See inside Indianapolis Public Library’s upgraded, accessible bookmobiles
A look at The Indianapolis Public Library’s new bookmobiles
See inside The Indianapolis Public Library’s new bookmobiles
The Indianapolis Public Library’s bookmobiles have been a crucial part of the library’s public outreach for nearly 75 years, but they recently got a much-needed upgrade to improve patron experiences and overall accessibility.
Bookmobiles are essentially a library branch on wheels. Almost all library services are available on board, from checking out books, movies, magazines, CDs and more as well as signing up for a library card, placing holds and more. They play a huge part in the library’s public outreach by bringing library services to people who can’t get to the library themselves or those who simply don’t have a branch nearby.
The Frog and Toad bookmobiles, aptly named for the beloved children’s book characters of the same names, were recently replaced with upgraded vehicles that are smaller in size, but ultimately more accessible to patrons.
“The main goal of our department is to bring the library to those who can’t get to the library,” Maggie Ward, manager of outreach services and volunteer resources at the Indianapolis Public Library said. “So we wanted to make sure our new bookmobiles were fitting into that of being more accessible.”
The new vehicles will allow bookmobiles to attend more events and be a part of parades, since they are more compact and easier to maneuver on the road.
New bookmobiles are more accessible
The manual wheelchair ramps make them accessible for patrons who previously were unable to get on board due to the steep, and sometimes unreliable, electric wheelchair ramps on the last ones.
“All of our wheelchair/walker-using patrons, anybody you know with mobility issues, have a lot easier time getting off the bookmobile,” Ward said.
“Even though they’re shorter and people have talked about ‘oh, it’s smaller’ and nuances aside, it’s so much better,” Amber Scott, driver and circulation clerk for Bookmobile Toad, said. “Like scouting new places, the first thing would be ‘can the vehicle fit’ and a lot of time it would be like there’s no place for us to park.”
These vehicles should also be a lot easier to maintain, meaning the bookmobiles will spend less time in the shop and more out in the community.
Frog and Toad bookmobiles cater to different age groups
Frog is the blue bookmobile and most often the selection on board caters to children and stops at daycares and preschools, while Toad, the green bookmobile, has books more geared toward adult readers and makes stops at senior living communities or neighborhoods without a library branch nearby.
Despite weather constraints, the bookmobiles can still bring the library experience to patrons in a way they couldn’t before.
On days too hot for patrons of senior communities or schools to come outside to the bookmobiles, the new ones are equipped with shelving units that can be removed and rolled inside.
“Last time we were scheduled for a visit, it was so hot, but we had missed a couple visits because we have our own weather policy that we won’t go if it’s too cold or hot because we don’t want people coming outside,” Scott said. “Since we have this now, we took three carts into their lobby and just set up with our laptop and the hot spot and everybody was there that we would usually see.”
“We only cancel if it’s extreme weather, but even then we’ll try to just do deliveries if we can,” Ward said.
The library has a small fleet of Ford Escapes to deliver holds and materials to patrons that they requested.
“We call them Itty Bitties,” Scott said.
Each bookmobile comes with a librarian
The Frog and Toad bookmobiles each have their own librarian on board to assist patrons and help provide a full library experience.
“We have a lot of patrons who tell us they schedule their day around us,” the librarian for bookmobile Toad Katie Watson-Juarez said. “We have residents who don’t really leave their rooms except to come out to the bookmobile because they love coming. That probably is one of the best parts is knowing people are so excited that we’re coming.”
Residents from one of bookmobile Toad’s stops at Rittenhouse Village Northside shared their favorite things about the visits.
“I think it’s a great system for the ease it makes for us,” resident Mark, who likes to read Western books, said. “I don’t have to go out and go to a library or something, even though it’s nice to do that. This is just an exception to that rule.”
“I like living here, but when you read you get to go somewhere else,” resident Tony — who likes to read detective novels and listen to jazz CDs — said.
That is one of the main reasons Brittney Spencer, celebrations director at Rittenhouse Village Northside put in the request for the bookmobile.
“It has opened the world up for them to be able to escape,” Spencer said. “My whole job is to try and get them to escape out of worries of like their health or anything like that, so it is great that they’re here and able to provide that for us.”
Getting people excited about reading is something both bookmobiles provide to the community.
“For some of these kids, this is their first ever experience with the library, because we visit a lot of preschools and stuff, so I mean just kind of showing them what a library is all about, getting them excited about it is kind of fun,” Kathleen Stewart said.
The bookmobiles are in high demand as there is currently a waitlist to be included in their routes. They operate on a biweekly schedule, visiting the same spots every two weeks.
And it doesn’t take a library card to enjoy the bookmobiles. They have books not in circulation available to readers without library cards to read and return.
The new bookmobile Toad started being used on June 1, while Bookmobile Frog has only been up-and-running since June 29, so the excitement of the new vehicles is still very fresh for the library staff as well as their patrons.
“I just love the versatility of these as opposed to our other ones,” Stewart said. “There’s so much we can do with it.”
Libraries are more than just a place to checkout books. They provide resources, services and often act as a community space for people to connect outside of home and work, which is something even the bookmobiles are able to provide.
“We’re bringing that third space to them, that connection,” Ward said. “So it’s more than just the books, it’s that community connection.”
Katie Wiseman covers trending news for IndyStar and Midwest Connect. Contact her at klwiseman@indystar.com. Follow her on Bluesky, Twitter and Instagram.
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