Hikers participating in the Urban Candlelight Hike in Three Bridges Park

Thousands Braved the Cold for Urban Candlelight Hike at Three Bridges Park

The first-ever Urban Candlelight Hike just may have brought more people at one time to Three Bridges Park than ever before – and it was cold out!

The candles ran the length of Three Bridges Park, from the Domes to the Urban Ecology Center and for several hours on Saturday, February 25, a constant stream of people braved frigid temperatures to enjoy the outdoors. I’m not sure which was the more remarkable: the sheer numbers—it was clearly in the thousands—or the fact that so many who came had never been to Three Bridges Park before. There were people who traveled to Milwaukee from all over Wisconsin to participate in this family-friendly event.

The 2017 Urban Candlelight Hike in Milwaukee
Photo by Eddee Daniel

Billed as the first-ever Urban Candlelight Hike in Three Bridges Park, the route and the crowds actually spilled over the Menomonee River into Stormwater Park and past Palermo’s Pizza—which was open and doing plenty of business.

The 2017 Urban Candlelight Hike in Milwaukee
Photo by Eddee Daniel

In addition to pizza, participants could get free hot chocolate and churros at the Menomonee Valley branch of the Urban Ecology Center and toast marshmallows and make s’mores thanks to volunteers with the Friends of the Hank Aaron State Trail. One of the organizers reported that over 1,000 people were served s’mores before they ran out of their 1,300 marshmallows, 16 boxes of graham crackers and 16 boxes of chocolate bars.

The 2017 Urban Candlelight Hike in Milwaukee
Photo by Eddee Daniel

After unseasonable temperatures that reached into the 70s earlier in the week, the multitudes clearly were undeterred by the resurgence of winter. Icy blasts drove wind chills well below freezing. However, the vast majority of the people I saw were suitably bundled and enjoying the outing. The diverse crowd of all ages included many children, some young enough to be pushed in baby strollers.

An ice sculptor named Christopher Andrews was on hand in Stormwater Park at the site of the former chimneys that once marked the Milwaukee Road rail yards. To commemorate the history of the site he spent the afternoon sculpting a train engine from a 200-lb. block of ice. Many who passed by on their way to the bonfires admired the resulting sculpture. One onlooker was overheard saying, “As a kid my dad would drive us by here and point to the field to say that this is where he used to work. The train in the ice looks like it could drive right off the stand to continue work.”

Official event sponsors were Menomonee Valley Partners,Inc., the Urban Ecology Center and Friends of the Hank Aaron State Trail. NEWaukee also sponsored an after party at Third Space Brewing, one of the Menomonee Valley’s newest businesses. I didn’t catch the after party, but if it was anything like the main event, the place had to be hopping!

I don’t believe I’ve seen so many people in Three Bridges Park all at once even in the summer.

The 2017 Urban Candlelight Hike in Milwaukee
Photo by Eddee Daniel

Full disclosure: I am on the board of directors of Friends of the Hank Aaron State Trail and former artist in residence for Menomonee Valley Partners. This post originally ran on Urban Wilderness.

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Eddee Daniel is a Milwaukee-based photographer and writer. His work explores the intersection of nature and human culture. A graduate of the UW-Madison and UWM, he brings to his current practice more than 30 years of experience teaching art and writing about nature. He is the author of "Urban Wilderness: Exploring a Metropolitan Watershed," a visual and narrative tribute to Milwaukee’s Menomonee River. Eddee writes two blogs: Urban Wilderness and Arts Without Borders. He serves on the Board of Directors of Preserve Our Parks. You can email him at eddee@eddeedaniel.com.