Firestone Metro Park
![Park/Recreation Area: Green space that offers a place to relax and play outdoors. May include sports fields, picnicking, running paths, canoe rental, or workout/play equipment, along with diverse vegetation and a pond, creek or other water feature. Park/Recreation Area](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_94.gif)
![Bicycle Path : Designated and recommended bicycle paths or lanes. Bicycle Path](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_169.gif)
![Wildlife Habitat: Native environment for animals and the plants that sustain them. Can represent native natural environments, or protected areas such as park reserves where larger animals and other wildlife can be found. Wildlife Habitat](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_83.gif)
![Native Forests/Plants: Flora that is indigenous in the region, sometimes called old growth, heirloom or indigenous species. Native species requires less water and care than exotic imports, and usually attract more birds, bees and butterflies, and help the cycle of life stay in balance. May include a master gardener, permaculturalist or horticulturalist or information center. Native Forests/Plants](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_75.gif)
![Wetlands: May be on an official protection list, as wetlands are important habitats and useful for water cleaning and protection from storm surges. May be natural, reconstructed or artificial. Wetlands](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_64.gif)
![Natural Corridor/Greenway: Often follows along a river or streambed, ravine or steep hill, disused rail bed or roadway. May indicate a wildlife corridor for land animals that is left in a natural state, with native plants to shelter them. Often have paths for running, cycling, skating, etc. Natural Corridor/Greenway](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_66.gif)
![Pedestrian Friendly: Areas that favor walking over automobiles, such as pedestrian malls, plazas and traffic calmed zones that limit or restrict car traffic. Can indicate a route around an especially interesting area. Pedestrian Friendly](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_35.gif)
![Bird and Wildlife Watching: Place to view animals in the wild. Officially recognized or locally-known sites could be accompanied by guidelines for viewing without harm, and details on the species you might see. May include organizations or wildlife centers that help protect animals. Bird and Wildlife Watching](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/category_pictures_90.gif)
Overview
Dairy cows once grazed the hillsides of the area known today as Firestone Metro Park. In 1949, Metro Parks received a gift of 89 acres from the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company. Acquisitions of nearby parcels expanded the park to 258 acres.
In 1956, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources completed construction of a nearby dam, intended to create a reservoir for industrial water needs. As the reservoir of the adjacent Firestone Golf Course filled, the water table rose downstream, forming the large wetland and marshy meadows of Firestone Metro Park. Along with the Tuscarawas River and Tuscarawas Race, which once channeled water to the Ohio & Erie Canal, the area is home to fish, crayfish, frogs and turtles.
The meadows and forest shelter foxes, coyotes, raccoons, skunks, muskrats, rabbits, mice, voles and moles, along with many beautiful summer and fall wildflowers. More than 175 bird species have been sighted in Firestone Metro Park, including various types of wrens, thrushes, warblers, woodpeckers, herons and ducks. A number of different raptors – including bald eagles – have also been spotted.
A note to visitors: Poison sumac is found in the wet areas of Firestone Metro Park. This small tree/shrub contains a powerful skin irritant, similar to that of poison ivy. To avoid it, stay on designated trails.
Location:
Comments
Connections
- Twinsburg
- Cuyahoga Falls
- Concord Township
- Brecksville
-
- Munroe Falls
- Akron
- Stow
- Cleveland
- Cleveland
- OaklandUnited States
- OaklandUnited States
- United Kingdom
- South Africa
- MontclairUnited States
- CaliColombia
- CardiffUnited Kingdom
- Gwynn OakUnited States
- BerlinGermany
- Lithuania
- Curitiba / PRBrazil
- OaklandUnited States
- CardiffUnited Kingdom
- SunninghillSouth Africa
- San FranciscoUnited States
- United States
- DavosSwitzerland
- OaklandUnited States
- OaklandUnited States
- FlorianópolisBrazil
- BrooklynUnited States
- Switzerland
- United Kingdom
- United States
- OspreyUnited States
Multimedia
Impacts
No impacts have been left for this site yet - be the first!