A Morning on the Ridge: Celebrating the Welsh Hills Segment

Apr 20, 2026 | Connect with Nature, Driftless Trail, Monthly Updates, Volunteer

Hikers along the Welsh Hills Segment of the Driftless Trail.

Last Saturday, April 18th, 2026, neighbors, partners, and supporters gathered at the Welsh Hills trailhead to celebrate the official opening of the full Welsh Hills Segment of the Driftless Trail. While parts of this trail have been open, the completion of the full ridge route marks something new, a fully connected experience across a remarkable landscape in the Driftless Area. 

It was a simple morning. Attendees pulled on their jackets against the spring breeze and set out along the trail together. Conversation carried easily across the hills. There was a shared sense of appreciation, not just for the trail itself, but for everything it represents.

The Welsh Hills hold stories that stretch far beyond this moment. Named by Frank Lloyd Wright’s grandparents, the name reflects the Welsh roots of the families who settled here in the mid 1800s. Wright himself, wandered there ridgelines as a boy, shaped by the same views that visitors experience today. The land tells an even older story. Rock outcrops reveal layers of sediment laid down by an ancient sea, later carved by meltwater into the valleys that define the Driftless Area.

After decades of care and restoration, these hills support native plants, pollinators, and migrating birds. Life continues to return and to adapt, shaped by both natural processes and the steady commitment of people who care for this place. 

To walk this trail is to move through all of these layers at once, human and natural history woven together under your feet. The Welsh Hills segment is part of something much larger taking shape across this region. The Driftless Trail Corridor is the emerging vision for nearly 100 miles of connected conservation land and public access across southwest Wisconsin. Seventeen landowners have stepped forward to host trail segments, adding to 10 miles of continuous protected lands stretching from the Lower Wisconsin River down to Knobs Road. Beginning at Wintergreen, the trail connects people directly to the landscape. 

Trails like this do more than guide our footsteps. They connect people to land, offering space to walk, reflect, and experience the beauty of the Driftless Area. They connect habitats, allowing wildlife to move, adapt, and thrive across a changing landscape. They connect communities, bringing together neighbors, conservation partners, and volunteers around a shared vision of care.

In a time that can often feel uncertain, this work offers something steady. Resilience is not built all at once. It grows over time through protected acres, restored habitats, and relationships rooted in trust. It takes shape each time a landowner says yes, each time a trail segment is completed, and each time someone steps onto the land and feels a sense of connection.

The Welsh Hills Trail is a reflection of that shared effort. What began as an idea is now something people can experience firsthand, step by step, along the ridge.

Welsh Hills Segment Trailhead.

If you have not yet visited, this is an invitation. From the trailhead near the Frank Lloyd Wright Visitor Center, you can explore a 2-mile Unity Chapel Loop, a 2.6-mile Ridge Loop, or a 2.8-mile Perimeter Loop. Along the way, the trail offers sweeping views, restored prairie, wooded ridgelines, and glimpses into both the history and future of this landscape.

As you walk, you become part of that story. This growing network of trails, protected lands, and restored habitats exists because people continue to show up for it. Together, we are caring for this place in a way that will last. Across the Driftless Area, that care is building something enduring, rooted in conservation, connection, and a deep respect for the land we share.

We want to thank Taliesin Preservation and the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation for their continued partnership and care in stewarding this landscape and helping make the Welsh Hills Trail possible. We would also like to extend our gratitude to the many partners and volunteers who contributed their time, energy, and expertise to bring this trail to life.