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Lake Willoughby is a southeast trending basin. Willoughby is a glacial lake that is over 300 feet (91 m) deep in places, making it potentially the deepest lake entirely contained within New England, and second in the area to only Lake Champlain, whose deepest point reaches around 400 feet (120 m). Estimates for the lake's depth range from 300 ...
Willoughby State Forest covers 7,682 acres (31.09 km 2) in Newark, Sutton and Westmore in Caledonia and Orleans counties in Vermont. [1] The forest is managed by the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks, and Recreation. Activities include hiking, primitive camping, cross country skiing, snowshoeing, hunting and fishing. [2] [3]
Mount Hor is a mountain in Sutton, Vermont. [1] It is part of the Northeastern Highlands of Vermont. It is located on the west side of Lake Willoughby and constitutes the west side of "Willoughby Notch" [2] ("Willoughby Gap"). There are hiking trails in Willoughby State Forest. [3] Mount Hor is the subject of a poem by Robert Frost.
The relatively young 12,000-year-old glacier-carved lake is flanked on the east by Mount Pisgah 2,752 feet (839 m) and the west by Mount Hor 2,654 feet (809 m). The mountains, which have hundreds of feet of rock cliffs, are located in the Willoughby State Forest and the cliffs have been designated a National Natural Landmark .
Crystal Lake State Park is a day-use state park and historic site in Barton, Vermont, United States. [2] It is located at 96 Bellwater Avenue, off Willoughby Lake Road ( Vermont Route 16 ) just east of the village, at the northwestern end of 763-acre (309 ha) Crystal Lake .
Mount Pisgah is a mountain in Westmore, Vermont. It is located on the east side of Lake Willoughby and constitutes the eastern side of "Willoughby Gap" ("Willoughby Notch"). It is part of the Northeastern Highlands of Vermont. There are hiking trails in Willoughby State Forest. [3]
This is a list of lakes in Vermont. Swimming, fishing, and/or boating are permitted in some of these lakes, but not all. The Vermont Department of Health and Department of Environmental Conservation establish the limits of Escherichia coli allowed before swimming is permitted.
In 1910 a camp for younger boys, called Keewaydin Dunmore, was founded on Lake Dunmore in Vermont [3] and in 1921 a new girls-only camp, called Songadeewin (meaning "strong of heart"), was founded on Lake Willoughby, also in Vermont. [4]