The Outdoors · Finger Lakes
Danby's State Forest Makes the Town Feel Like Working Woods
Danby State Forest gives the town a working-woods identity with trails, wildlife habitat, timber, hunting, skiing, and rustic camping.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Danby’s local texture is woods-forward in a way that changes the usual Tompkins County picture. DEC calls Danby State Forest a working State Forest, managed for recreation, wildlife habitat, forest products, carbon storage, clean water, hunting, hiking, trapping, Nordic skiing, rustic camping, snowmobiling, and biking.
That is a very different image from the college-town version of the county. In Danby, the Finger Lakes landscape becomes managed upland forest. Public access, hunting seasons, forest roads, trail use, and state-forest management all shape the local feel.
The working-forest idea is the key. This is public land with recreation, habitat, timber, water, and seasonal uses all sharing space. It can be beautiful, but it is not a manicured park with one simple script. People learn it by paying attention to trails, seasons, and the many ways a state forest is used.
That gives Danby a quieter appeal. The town is close to Ithaca, but the forest makes it feel like its own upland place: wooded, practical, a little wilder, and tied to the everyday work of keeping public land healthy and useful.