River Runs and Forest Trails
No sooner had 18th century settlers dug a toehold in
the upper Connecticut River Valley, than travelers from elsewhere made the wilderness
a hot new destination. They came for the same things that interest us today
fresh air, mountains, free-flowing waters, and adventure.
Beginning in cold springs high in the Great North Woods, the Connecticut River
quickly gathers volume and takes on multiple personalities. It turns sedately
through vast pools and lazy eddies, then dashes down between boulders. Canoeists
and kayakers can choose either swift, challenging water, or a quiet, flatwater
paddle. On nearby lakes and ponds, anglers fish through the summer and then
through the ice. According to the season, skiers skim over the water, through
the snowy woods, or down groomed slopes.
State parks, campgrounds, and trails throughout the region including
the Appalachian
Trail itself offer backcountry experiences for hikers, cross-country
skiers, and mountain bikers. Those looking for a true wilderness trail experience
will want to know about the Cohos
Trail, a 162-mile remote trail in northern-most New
Hampshire. Rural roads make for excellent family bike touring from village to
village. In the winter, a network of snowmobile trails links many communities.
If you plan to visit the Northern Forest, check the
Nulhegan
Gateway Association for information on hiking, bicycle touring, mountain
biking, horseback riding, canoeing, camping, wildlife viewing, and more.
Some places in the Valley are as wild as you'll find in New England. Throughout
the region, and through four seasons, you'll find the setting for your favorite
form of adventure. And at night you can sleep out under the stars, in a place
where it's still dark enough to see them.
The River Trail
The Connecticut River itself is a trail. Native Americans employed the river
and its tributaries as a network of highways between Canada and Long Island
Sound. Today, boat landings provide public access sites for boating, canoeing
and fishing. The Connecticut River Joint Commissions provide a series of maps
that show river access points for the entire Byway region.
The Birding Trail
The Connecticut
River Birding Trail highlights 46 special places in the Upper Connecticut
River Valley where you can see, hear, and experience our region and its many
natural wonders, most especially wildlife on the wing.
Valley Quest
Valley
Quest is a series of more than 125 treasure hunts stretching across 40 towns
in the Connecticut River Valley
in Vermont and New Hampshire. Quests, making use of hand-drawn maps and riddle-like
clues, lead to hidden special
places, such as remote lakes, old cellar holes, favorite trees, and forgotten
cemeteries. Quests are exciting adventures
that gently share and teach the natural and cultural history of the region.
State Parks
In the Byway region's many state parks, you can choose
your form of adventure among camping, picnicking, swimming, hiking, biking,
boating, and fishing.
Here's a clickable map to help you find Vermont
state parks convenient to the Byway, and
some general information about New
Hampshire state parks. Or you can visit them
here, from south to north:
Fort
Dummer State Park, Brattleboro, VT
Pisgah
State Park, Chesterfield, NH
Chesterfield
Gorge Natural Area, Chesterfield, NH
Wilgus
State Park, Ascutney, VT
Ascutney
State Park, Windsor, VT
Quechee
State Park, Quechee, VT
Thetford
Hill State Park,
Thetford, VT
Bedell
Bridge State Park, Haverhill , NH
Ricker
Pond State Park, Groton, VT
Forest
Lake State Park, Dalton, NH
John
Wingate Weeks Historic Site, Lancaster, NH
Maidstone
State Park, Maidstone, VT
Beaver
Brook Falls Natural Area, Colebrook, NH
Dixville
Notch State Park, Dixville, NH
Coleman
State Park and Campground, Stewartstown, NH
Deer
Mountain Campground, Pittsburg, NH
Lake
Francis State Park and Campground, Pittsburg, NH
Trails
Of course, the premier footpath in the Byway region is the Georgia-to-Maine
Appalachian
Trail, which passes through both Vermont and New Hampshire and crosses the
Connecticut River at Norwich-Hanover.
Another extraordinary trail, still under development, is the 740-mile Northern
Forest Canoe Trail running east-west linking
the Adirondacks and Northern Maine. A living reminder of the history and heritage
of the Native Americans who traveled these waters in birch bark canoes, the
trail crosses the Connecticut River via the Upper Ammonoosuc and Nulhegan watersheds.
The Vermont Outdoor Guide Association maintains a list
of Vermont trails, greenways and waterways,
for hiking, biking, birding, paddling, horseback, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing,
and snowmobiling. A similar list
of New Hampshire trails includes routes for
hikes, mountain bikes, and snowmobiles.
Snowmobilers on the Vermont side of the Connecticut should check in with the
Vermont
Association of Snow Travelers. Across the
river, youll find plenty of New
Hampshire snowmobile clubs.
Get your thrills skiing down the flanks of an ancient volcano at Ascutney Mountain Resort, west of Windsor in Brownsville, VT, at Burke Mountain in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom, or at the Dartmouth Skiway in Lyme, NH.
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