The Outdoors · Western New York
Chestnut Ridge's Eternal Flame Trail Needs Real Shoes
Erie County's Eternal Flame Trail is short, memorable, and moderate, with ravine warnings that deserve real shoes and a little care.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
The Eternal Flame Trail at Chestnut Ridge is one of those Erie County outings that sounds tiny until you are on it. The county trail map lists it as 0.56 miles one-way, but also marks it moderate. That combination is the clue: short does not mean sidewalk-simple.
The draw is the natural flame tucked into the Shale Creek ravine area of Chestnut Ridge Park. The flame gives the hike its little bit of wonder, but the ravine gives the day its footing, mud, and common sense.
The map lays out the practical part plainly. Stay on marked trails, keep dogs leashed, carry out what you carry in, and do not climb up or down the ravine or waterfalls. Real shoes, a little mud tolerance, and a weather check make the outing much nicer.
On a starter outing, screenshot the county map and treat the flame as a ravine hike, not a roadside photo stop. It is a fun Erie County story, but the fun works best when people leave the slope, creek, and trail in good shape for the next group.