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  2. Mount Ascutney State Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Ascutney_State_Park

    The park has more than 12 miles (19 km) of hiking trails. Four of these trails—the Futures Trail, the Weathersfield Trail, the Brownsville Trail, and the Windsor Trail—lead to the summit of Mount Ascutney, [4] the park's most significant feature. Alternatively, visitors may drive to within a half-mile of the summit via the Mount Ascutney ...

  3. Mount Ascutney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Ascutney

    Mount Ascutney is a mountain in the U.S. state of Vermont. At 3,144 feet (958 m), it is the highest peak in Windsor County. Mount Ascutney is a monadnock that rises abruptly from the surrounding lowlands. For example, the Windsor Trail is 2.7 miles (4.3 km) to the summit with 2,514 feet (766 m) of elevation gain and an overall 18% grade.

  4. Wilgus State Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilgus_State_Park

    The park is heavily wooded, with most of its improvements between US 5 and the river. To the west of the road the terrain rises steeply to a promontory called Pinnacle Point, which is accessible via hiking trails. It is a few miles south of Weathersfield's town center, which is itself just south of Mount Ascutney, the area's most prominent peak ...

  5. Ascutney Mountain Resort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ascutney_Mountain_Resort

    The Mt. Ascutney Ski Club cut the first trail at Ascutney in 1938. Skiers initially had to hike up the mountain to be able to ski down the trail, now known as Screaming Eagle. In 1946, Catharine Cushman, with the help of others, began to develop real estate on the mountain, in essence opening Ascutney as a ski area.

  6. Delaware and Hudson Rail Trail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaware_and_Hudson_Rail_Trail

    The Delaware and Hudson Rail Trail is a 19.8-mile (31.9 km) rail trail built along an abandoned Delaware & Hudson Railway (D&H) corridor between West Rupert and Castleton, Vermont. The trail runs in two disconnected segments, separated by a short section that leaves the state for neighboring New York State before returning to Vermont.

  7. Calvin Coolidge State Forest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvin_Coolidge_State_Forest

    Calvin Coolidge State Forest, also known as Coolidge State Forest, covers 22,564 acres (91.31 km 2) in two parts in Rutland and Windsor counties in Vermont.The West portion cover 17,259 acres (69.84 km 2) in Killington, Mendon, Plymouth and Shrewsbury in both counties. [1]

  8. Joseph Battell Wilderness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Battell_Wilderness

    The Joseph Battell Wilderness is one of eight wilderness areas in the Green Mountain National Forest in the U.S. state of Vermont.The wilderness area, created by the New England Wilderness Act of 2006, [1] is named in honor of Joseph Battell (1839–1915), a philanthropist and environmentalist from Middlebury, Vermont.

  9. South Taconic Trail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Taconic_Trail

    The South Taconic Trail is a 21.3 mi (34.3 km) hiking trail in the Taconic Mountains of southwest Massachusetts and adjacent New York.The trail extends from Shagroy Road in Millerton, New York, north along the ridgecrest of the southern Taconic Range and the border of New York and Massachusetts, and ends north of the Catamount Ski Area on Massachusetts Route 23 700 feet (210 m) east of the New ...