History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Perinton's Trails Tie Parks to the Canal
Perinton's local identity links Crescent Trail footpaths, preserved open spaces, the RS&E Trolley Trail, and Erie Canal Heritage Trail.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Perinton’s trail story works because it is not one path trying to explain the whole town. The Crescent Trail alone has about 35 miles of footpaths for hiking, cross-country running, snowshoeing, nature study, and photography.
Those paths move through wooded hills, town parkland, scenic overlooks, wetland edges, and preserved open space.
Then the map opens wider. The Crescent Trail connects with the Erie Canal Heritage Trail and the RS&E Trolley Trail. Perinton’s wider trail system links three recreationways: the Erie Canal Heritage Trail, the Perinton Hikeway-Bikeway on the old trolley route, and the Crescent Trail network of footpaths.
That gives Perinton a nice everyday pattern. A person can start with a small walk near a neighborhood edge and end up thinking about canal towpaths, old rail and trolley corridors, wet meadows, and glacial hills. The trails do not feel like decoration added after the fact. They help stitch together parks, preserved land, Fairport’s canal setting, and the quieter corners of the town.
The best Perinton outings have that layered feel. One day it is a dog walk. Another day it is a canal ride. Another is a muddy footpath through woods or wetlands. Put them together and Perinton feels like a town with a shared outdoor language, where old transportation lines and local recreation still meet.