Many of the NJ
Section’s
access points
and
trails
can be reached from public transportation from New York City and points in New
Jersey or from Rockland County, New York.
Rockland
Coachs Number
9 bus, which departs from the Port
Authoritys George Washington Bridge Terminal (175th Street, accessible
from the A express subway line) or from the Port Authority Bus Terminal
(42nd Street), stops at Bridge Plaza in Fort Lee
(a number of other bus lines connect at the Bridge Plaza stop from points
in New Jersey), then travels up
U.S. Route 9W to the
state line and on to Rockland County.
We cannot verify
bus schedules: for bus schedule
information for the Number 9 bus, visit
Rockland Coaches (Red and Tan Lines) or call 201
384-2400 or 212
279-6526.
(For connecting bus information, also check
New Jersey
Transit’s website.)
Our downloadable
maps show major bus stops in the vicinity of the park.
Our hiking description
pages also include bus information where relevant.
The hike described below is a popular, relatively easy hike for hikers who
come by mass transportation. It can be extended by combining with other
hikes described in our
hiking section.
Point
Lookout
(easy +)
From the State Line stop on
Route 9W, it is a walk
of about 1.5 miles along an old,
closed concrete-topped highway to “Lookout Inn” at
State Line Lookout.
Note that
bicycles are permitted on the old roadway, though they
are not permitted on any trails or highways in the NJ Section.
The No. 9 bus
will let you off at the state line, which is also the entrance to Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory, a research facility
run by Columbia University (the Lamont-Doherty grounds are private property).
From here, simply follow the old concrete highway east. Note that this walk is not
difficult, but that a large portion of it will be along a moderate uphill grade. The
roadway you walk on was built in 1926, and was originally the northbound stretch of the
state highway that connected New York and
New Jersey along the western Hudson.
After about 1.5 miles you
will arrive at Lookout Inn (a refreshment stand and gift shop) and
“Point Lookout,” the
highest point on the Palisades Cliffs in New Jersey(elevation 532
feet), with panoramic views of the Hudson
River Valley north, east, and south. From
here you can return along the same route (about 1 hour round-trip hiking time),
or find access to the following hikes listed in our Hiking descriptions:
The Women’s Federation Monument (easy +, see also note, below);
Cross Country Ski Trails (moderate);
Peanut Leap
Cascade (moderate +); and
The Giant
Stairs (most difficult).

Hikers can
also return to Route 9W along an
alternative route that will take them past the
Womens Federation Monument.
Begin at Lookout Inn and
go to the ski trail entrance at the northwest corner of the parking area. At
your first left take ski trail "A" which also overlaps with the aqua-blazed
Long Path.
Follow until it comes to a junction, where you turn left to cross the entrance
road to State Line Lookout (use caution here). Continue through the gap in the
parapet stones and into the woods. The trail goes down a ravine on stone steps. At the base of the
ravine and across the bridge, the aqua trail intersects the blue-and-white-blazed
Forest View Trail; as you go
up the other side of the ravine, the two trails overlap. At the top you will find the
Womens Federation Monument, which is in the shape of a
watchtower, or “castle.”
From here, stay on
the blue-and-white-blazed Forest View Trail headed west. This trail will take you
across a pedestrian bridge over the Parkway and to Route 9W, about a
mile south of where you were first dropped off. There is a bus stop at the entrance
to the Boy Scout camp less than
0.25 miles to the north. The trails are moderate, but
the route does require a fairly steep descent and then ascent along the ravine between
State Line Lookout and the Women’s Federation
Monument. (About 45
minutes from Lookout Inn to the bus stop.)

The bus stop at
the state line
also provides direct access to the aqua-blazed
Long
Path. You will find the trail entrance
between the old highway and the entrance booth to Lamont-Doherty.
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