The Outdoors · Central New York
Griggs Gulf Keeps Harford and Richford in the Plateau Woods
Griggs Gulf State Forest links Harford and Richford through a primitive forest landscape on the Cortland-Tioga line.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 27, 2026
Griggs Gulf gives Harford and Richford a quiet public-forest identity.
DEC presents it as primitive forest, and the 2,346-acre state forest crosses the Cortland-Tioga line. That makes it feel tied to the plateau map instead of one village center.
This is the kind of public land that explains why a rural road can feel wooded, quiet, and a little farther from services than the mileage suggests. Informal hiking, nature observation, hunting, trapping, and snowmobiling give the forest a different rhythm from a signed gorge trail or a busy county park.
The water story is small but revealing. DEC notes the headwaters of Owego Creek and two small ponds with fishing opportunities. That mix makes Griggs Gulf feel like working woods: habitat, recreation, seasons, and drainage all sharing the same ground.
Around Harford and Richford, the appeal is quiet and practical rather than resort-like. The forest connects hill roads, creek headwaters, and nearby service towns such as Whitney Point and Cortland. Maps, seasons, hunting use, and road approach are part of the outing, which is exactly what gives the place its local character.