I recently had the pleasure of meeting a couple from Colorado. They made the comment of it being difficult to get used to the "green tunnels" and that they found it disorienting. I asked what they meant by ‘green tunnels' and they explained that the tree lined streets all looked the same to them and that you couldn't get a clear look at the sky. Out west I guess things are different, but here in Lexington I see our ‘tunnels' as an asset and a wonderful selling point. Streets lined with mature trees help to keep things cool in the summertime and offer protection to the hundreds of squirrels and bird species. There is even a hawk nesting across the street in my neighbor's yard. The Lexington planning board has done a great job of setting up and preserving green areas for the town. Many are interconnected like the one I take my morning walks along.
I live near the Old Res, a pond that is stocked with trout and bass in the springtime and set-up with a guarded swimming area for the kids all summer. They just closed the swimming area for the season last weekend since the High School and College age lifeguards are all going back to school now.

Around the Res is a footpath that many like me walk, typically with a dog or two, each morning. Just off that is a paved path that cuts another green tunnel through a wooded section to connect from Cary Ave. and Marrett road over to Bridge Elementary School. The path continues past Bridge, across Middleby and through some more woods with a link up to Baskin Road and then on down past the Lincoln soccer/lacrosse field complex.

It cuts through another small conservation area that features a side route on a boardwalk loop through a swampy area. Last year I saw a fox on the boardwalk. You then exit the woods out onto Worthen road. Once you hit Worthen you can go left up to the Hayden Rec. Ice Rink or cross over to the High School fields, track and the town pool / tennis court complex. Or go right and down to the High School campus itself. If you go straight and across past the baseball fields, football stadium and playground then you have only a short walk to be in downtown Lexington. It is a great walking path, a main traffic route to Bridge School and the High School, and many times I see families riding their bikes along the paved pathways. These pathways and conservation areas are scatter green tunnels all around Lexington and make it a wonderful place to walk in the summertime.

