New Hampshire Subwatersheds Best for Restoration

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

New Hampshire Subwatersheds Best for Restoration New Hampshire Subwatersheds Best for Restoration Prospect Hill Greeley Brook 1.66 33080 33081 Second Connecticut Lake1.66 Cowen Hill Metallak Mountain 1.66 33084 1.66 1.66 33083 33085 330312 1.66 33082 1.66 Magalloway Mountain Lake Francis 1.66 Pittsburg 330313 1.66 Pittsburg OE E 33086 1.66 33087 1.66 330315 Wilsons Mills Mount Pisgah 1.66 1.66 33089 330316 Lovering MountainDiamond Pond 1.66 330317 1.66 1.66 33090 33091 Umbagog Lake North 330319 1.66 Errol 330931.66 Dixville Notch Blue Mountain 330322 1.66 Tinkerville Bloomfield 33094 1.65 Umbagog Lake South 33095 1.66 1.66 33096 1.66 330321 330323 1.66 Teakettle Ridge 33098 Dummer Ponds 1.66 1.62 33097 Percy Peaks 330325 1.66 Stratford Maidstone Lake 330100 Success Pond 1.66 Milan 330327 1.66 1.66 West Milan 330101 330326 Stark 1.66 1.66 Groveton 330102 330104 1.66 330103 1.57 330106 1.66 1.63 Shelburne 330107 330328 1.66 Berlin 330305 1.66 1.66 Mount Crescent 330108 Lancaster Jefferson 330109 1.6 1.66 330110 330306 Gilman Wild River 1.66 1.66 Carter Dome 33058 1.17 330308 1.66 330111 1.63 330307 1.55 330112Mount Washington 33059 1.13 Mount Dartmouth 1.17 33061 Twin Mountain Bethlehem 1.58 Jackson 33062 0.61 33067 1.61 Littleton Stairs Mountain 330274 33065 1.19 1.61 330271 1.65 Lower Waterford Crawford Notch 330270 33071 Barnet 33063 33064 330272 0.65 South Twin Mountain 0.65 1.26 1.13 1.29 330200 1.29 33073 1.58 1.3733068 1.19 33072 330273 Franconia 330201 1.13 North Conway West 330279 33070 Sugar Hill 33074 33075 1.31 1.63 1.65 1.26 1.34 1.16 330278 1.33 1.25 330203 330276 33069 330277 Lisbon 1.17 Bartlett 1.2 Mount Carrigain Mount Osceola 330202 1.51330284 33076 330204 0.54 330281 1.64 1.33 1.28 33078 Lincoln 330282 330285 330283 1.11 1.62 Mount Moosilauke0.61 Conway 33077 0.78 Silver Lake 330205 330206 East Haverhill 330288 0.54 330207 0.45 Mount Chocorua Newbury 330290 330291 1.11 Mount Tripyramid 330287 33079 1.33 1.52 1.57 1.64 330209 1.3 Waterville Valley 0.44 Woodstock Freedom 33050 0.54 1.09 1.64 330208 330211 1.11 330296 1.39 330289 1.63 330293 Mount Kineo Ossipee Lake 1.26 Warren 1.21 1.45330294 330210 Tamworth 330213 1.49 Piermont 1.16 330295 0.45 Center Sandwich 330297 330300 1.33 330215 0.57 Squam Mountains 1.41 330212 330218 330214 3301881.14 Ossipee 1.37 1.14 330302 33052 1.34 1.42 Rumney Plymouth 330301 33053 0.34 Tuftonboro 1.43 Wentworth 1.26 330220 Melvin Village 1.04 330217 Center Harbor 330190 Smarts Mountain 330216 330219 330221 0.5 0.56 0.3 0.3 0.37 Lyme 330540.57 330189 330222 330191 33028 330223 0.19 330192 Sanbornville Ashland 0.49 1.06 1.05 Holderness 0.29 0.49 330193 330194 33029 1.22 330233 1.14 Wolfeboro Mount Cardigan 330224 0.48 0.23 3301960.23 33055 1.19 33030 Newfound Lake 330225 Laconia West Alton Canaan 0.99 0.52 3302261.15 0.23 1.05 33056 Winnisquam Lake0.28 330197 330235 Enfield 330229 330195 33031 Bristol 0.48 Danbury 1.09 Farmington 330228 0.39 330236 1.07 0.45 1.12 1.09 330198 1.17 330341.02 330230 33032 330227 Gilmanton Ironworks Alton Enfield Center Grafton 0.25 Belmont 330113 330238 North Grantham 1.19 0.43 0.33 330199 0.32 330231 330115 330240 Rochester 33035 1.03 Northfield 0.14 330119 0.39 33036 330162 Andover Franklin North Hartland 1.08 0.95 1.17 Baxter Lake 330163 330114 0.87 330239 330370.38 Parker Mountain 330245 New London 0.98 330118 0.3 330164 330241 0.3 0.27 Sunapee Lake North 0.9 Pittsfield 33039 0.31 Loudon 330243 1.15 330244 0.2 0.42 33040 0.41 330117 1.2 0.45 0.14 3302460.16 Claremont North Grantham 33042 330166 Penacook 33041 330165 330116 330122 Dover West 330167 0.4 Barrington Windsor 33043 0.37 0.41 0.47 0.3 Warner Webster 330247 Bradford Northwood 0.16 3301680.37 330250 33044 0.27 330169 330171 0.16 0.44 0.25 Gossville 0.92 0.24 330120 Suncook 330248 330253 Sunapee Lakes 330121 0.28 0.16 Newport 0.13 330255 0.87 0.89 33046 0.4 330172 Concord 0.91 3302540.18 Newmarket Portsmouth 33045 Claremont South 330170 0.92 330174 330249 0.82 0.22 0.16 330252 0.16 Epping Springfield 0.28 Hopkinton 330123 Pawtuckaway 330261 330260 33047 Henniker 0.16 0.16 Hillsboro Upper Village 0.82330256 3302570.13 330177 0.27 0.28 330259 0.4 330175 Candia 330258 33019 1.02 330124 3302630.13 0.98 Manchester North Washington 0.23 Hampton 3306 0.47 0.15 0.26 0.78 330262 330126 330267 330268 33049 East Lempster 330176 330127 330129 0.33 330264 330178 0.13 0.14 0.16 0.37 Alstead 0.41 0.23 Goffstown 33020 0.98 0.68 Weare 330133 Exeter 330128 330130 Kingston Bellows Falls 1.02 330125 0.26 330266 0 1.01 0.17 0.19 330173 Hillsboro Deering 330131 330265 3307 330179 0.25 Sandown 330139 0.15 33021 330135 Derry 0.37 0.93 0.39 0.21 0.26330136 3308 Stoddard 330180 0.94 Manchester South 330144 Gilsum Marlow 0.25 330134 Pinardville 0.16 330181 0.21 0.16 33023 0.84 0.39 330132 0.2 330137 0.13 330138 0.25 330141 330145 3309 330101.02 New Boston 0.16 Walpole 330183 330184 Salem Depot 0.42 0.37 330182 Greenfield 330142 Nashua North Windham 0.91 Peterborough North 0.16 0.27 0.16 330151 33024 0.36 Dublin 0.4 Marlborough 0.17South Merrimack330147 0.16 330146 330140 330143 0.46 33011 0.53 330150 33012 0.49 33026 330185 Milford 0.17 330186 0.27 Keene 0.95 Greenville 1.06 Putney 0.32 Spofford 330148 330187 Peterborough South 33025 33014 0.93 1.27 330158 33013 0.26 Troy Monadnock Mountain 0.93 33016 330154 0.97 33015 1.19 0.9 West Swanzey 3302 1.17 33017 0.97 Priority Scores higher score = higher priority Extirpated & Predicted Extirpated Watersheds Selected 0.27 (in white) USGS NH Quad Index NHD NH Streams New Hampshire 0 5 10 20 Miles EBTJV HUC Codes (underlined) Source: Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture, National Atlas July, 2008.
Recommended publications
  • Ecoregions of New England Forested Land Cover, Nutrient-Poor Frigid and Cryic Soils (Mostly Spodosols), and Numerous High-Gradient Streams and Glacial Lakes
    58. Northeastern Highlands The Northeastern Highlands ecoregion covers most of the northern and mountainous parts of New England as well as the Adirondacks in New York. It is a relatively sparsely populated region compared to adjacent regions, and is characterized by hills and mountains, a mostly Ecoregions of New England forested land cover, nutrient-poor frigid and cryic soils (mostly Spodosols), and numerous high-gradient streams and glacial lakes. Forest vegetation is somewhat transitional between the boreal regions to the north in Canada and the broadleaf deciduous forests to the south. Typical forest types include northern hardwoods (maple-beech-birch), northern hardwoods/spruce, and northeastern spruce-fir forests. Recreation, tourism, and forestry are primary land uses. Farm-to-forest conversion began in the 19th century and continues today. In spite of this trend, Ecoregions denote areas of general similarity in ecosystems and in the type, quality, and 5 level III ecoregions and 40 level IV ecoregions in the New England states and many Commission for Environmental Cooperation Working Group, 1997, Ecological regions of North America – toward a common perspective: Montreal, Commission for Environmental Cooperation, 71 p. alluvial valleys, glacial lake basins, and areas of limestone-derived soils are still farmed for dairy products, forage crops, apples, and potatoes. In addition to the timber industry, recreational homes and associated lodging and services sustain the forested regions economically, but quantity of environmental resources; they are designed to serve as a spatial framework for continue into ecologically similar parts of adjacent states or provinces. they also create development pressure that threatens to change the pastoral character of the region.
    [Show full text]
  • Summer 2004 Vol. 23 No. 2
    Vol 23 No 2 Summer 04 v4 4/16/05 1:05 PM Page i New Hampshire Bird Records Summer 2004 Vol. 23, No. 2 Vol 23 No 2 Summer 04 v4 4/16/05 1:05 PM Page ii New Hampshire Bird Records Volume 23, Number 2 Summer 2004 Managing Editor: Rebecca Suomala 603-224-9909 X309 [email protected] Text Editor: Dorothy Fitch Season Editors: Pamela Hunt, Spring; William Taffe, Summer; Stephen Mirick, Fall; David Deifik, Winter Layout: Kathy McBride Production Assistants: Kathie Palfy, Diane Parsons Assistants: Marie Anne, Jeannine Ayer, Julie Chapin, Margot Johnson, Janet Lathrop, Susan MacLeod, Dot Soule, Jean Tasker, Tony Vazzano, Robert Vernon Volunteer Opportunities and Birding Research: Susan Story Galt Photo Quiz: David Donsker Where to Bird Feature Coordinator: William Taffe Maps: William Taffe Cover Photo: Juvenile Northern Saw-whet Owl, by Paul Knight, June, 2004, Francestown, NH. Paul watched as it flew up with a mole in its talons. New Hampshire Bird Records (NHBR) is published quarterly by New Hampshire Audubon (NHA). Bird sightings are submitted to NHA and are edited for publication. A computerized print- out of all sightings in a season is available for a fee. To order a printout, purchase back issues, or volunteer your observations for NHBR, please contact the Managing Editor at 224-9909. Published by New Hampshire Audubon New Hampshire Bird Records © NHA April, 2005 Printed on Recycled Paper Vol 23 No 2 Summer 04 v4 4/16/05 1:05 PM Page 1 Table of Contents In This Issue Volunteer Request . .2 A Checklist of the Birds of New Hampshire—Revised! .
    [Show full text]
  • As Time Passes Over the Land
    s Time Passes over theLand A White Mountain Art As Time Passes over the Land is published on the occasion of the exhibition As Time Passes over the Land presented at the Karl Drerup Art Gallery, Plymouth State University, Plymouth, NH February 8–April 11, 2011 This exhibition showcases the multifaceted nature of exhibitions and collections featured in the new Museum of the White Mountains, opening at Plymouth State University in 2012 The Museum of the White Mountains will preserve and promote the unique history, culture, and environmental legacy of the region, as well as provide unique collections-based, archival, and digital learning resources serving researchers, students, and the public. Project Director: Catherine S. Amidon Curator: Marcia Schmidt Blaine Text by Marcia Schmidt Blaine and Mark Green Edited by Jennifer Philion and Rebecca Chappell Designed by Sandra Coe Photography by John Hession Printed and bound by Penmor Lithographers Front cover The Crawford Valley from Mount Willard, 1877 Frank Henry Shapleigh Oil on canvas, 21 x 36 inches From the collection of P. Andrews and Linda H. McLane © 2011 Mount Washington from Intervale, North Conway, First Snow, 1851 Willhelm Heine Oil on canvas, 6 x 12 inches Private collection Haying in the Pemigewasset Valley, undated Samuel W. Griggs Oil on canvas, 18 x 30 inches Private collection Plymouth State University is proud to present As Time Passes over the about rural villages and urban perceptions, about stories and historical Land, an exhibit that celebrates New Hampshire’s splendid heritage of events that shaped the region, about environmental change—As Time White Mountain School of painting.
    [Show full text]
  • Great Vacation Times at Chocorua Camping Village & Wabanaki Lodge & the Greater Ossipee - Chocorua Mountain Region for Toll-Free Reservations 1-888-237-8642 Vol
    Great Vacation Times at Chocorua Camping Village & Wabanaki Lodge & the Greater Ossipee - Chocorua Mountain Region For Toll-Free reservaTions 1-888-237-8642 Vol. 19 No. 1 GPS: 893 White Mountain Hwy, Tamworth, NH 03886 PO Box 484, Chocorua, NH 03817 email: [email protected] Tel. 1-888-BEST NHCampground (1-888-237-8642) or 603-323-8536 www.ChocoruaCamping.com www.WhiteMountainsLodging.com We Trust That You’ll Our Awesome Park! Escape the noisy rush of the city. Pack up and leave home on a get-away adventure! Come join the vacation tradition of our spacious, forested Chocorua Camping Village KOA! Miles of nature trails, a lake-size pond and river to explore by kayak. We offer activities all week with Theme Weekends to keep the kids and family entertained. Come by tent, pop-up, RV, or glamp-it-up in new Tipis, off-the-grid cabins or enjoy easing into full-amenity lodges. #BringTheDog #Adulting Young Couples... RVers Rave about their Families who Camp Together - Experience at CCV Stay Together, even when apart ...often attest to the rustic, lakeside cabins of You have undoubtedly worked long and hard to earn Why is it that both parents and children look forward Wabanaki Lodge as being the Sangri-La of the White ownership of the RV you now enjoy. We at Chocorua with such excitement and enthusiasm to their frequent Mountains where they can enjoy a simple cabin along Camping Village-KOA appreciate and respect that fact; weekends and camping vacations at Chocorua Camping the shore of Moores Pond, nestled in the privacy of a we would love to reward your achievement with the Village—KOA? woodland pine grove.
    [Show full text]
  • Pre-European Colonization 1771 1809 1819 1826 1840 July 23, 1851
    MOVED BY MOUNTAINS In this woodblock by In the first big wave of trail building, The Abenaki Presence Endures Marshall Field, Ethan Hiker-Built Trails Deepen Pride of Place Allen Crawford is depicted hotel owners financed the construction carrying a bear, one of the of bridle paths to fill hotel beds and cater For millennia, Abenaki people traveled on foot and by canoe many legends that gave the By the late 19th century, trails throughout the region for hunting, trading, diplomacy and White Mountains an allure to a growing leisure class infatuated by were being built by walkers for that attracted luminaries, “the sublime” in paintings and writings. war. The main routes followed river corridors, as shown such as Daniel Webster, walkers in the most spectacular in this 1958 map by historian and archaeologist Chester Henry David Thoreau and This inset is from a larger 1859 map and Nathaniel Hawthorne. settings. Hiking clubs developed Price. By the late 1700s, colonialism, disease, warfare and drawing by Franklin Leavitt. distinct identities, local loyalties European settlement had decimated native communities. GLADYS BROOKS MEMORIAL LIBRARY, MOUNT WASHINGTON OBSERVATORY and enduring legacies. Their main foot trails were taken over and later supplanted by stagecoach roads, railroads and eventually state highways. DARTMOUTH DIGITAL LIBRARY COLLECTIONS “As I was standing on an Grand Hotels Build Trails for Profit old log chopping, with my WONALANCET OUT DOOR CLUB Native footpaths axe raised, the log broke, The actual experience of riding horseback on a For example, the Wonalancet Out Door Club developed its identity were often faint and I came down with bridle path was quite a bit rougher than suggested around its trademark blue sign posts, its land conservation advocacy to modern eyes by this 1868 painting by Winslow Homer.
    [Show full text]
  • Curt Teich Postcard Archives Towns and Cities
    Curt Teich Postcard Archives Towns and Cities Alaska Aialik Bay Alaska Highway Alcan Highway Anchorage Arctic Auk Lake Cape Prince of Wales Castle Rock Chilkoot Pass Columbia Glacier Cook Inlet Copper River Cordova Curry Dawson Denali Denali National Park Eagle Fairbanks Five Finger Rapids Gastineau Channel Glacier Bay Glenn Highway Haines Harding Gateway Homer Hoonah Hurricane Gulch Inland Passage Inside Passage Isabel Pass Juneau Katmai National Monument Kenai Kenai Lake Kenai Peninsula Kenai River Kechikan Ketchikan Creek Kodiak Kodiak Island Kotzebue Lake Atlin Lake Bennett Latouche Lynn Canal Matanuska Valley McKinley Park Mendenhall Glacier Miles Canyon Montgomery Mount Blackburn Mount Dewey Mount McKinley Mount McKinley Park Mount O’Neal Mount Sanford Muir Glacier Nome North Slope Noyes Island Nushagak Opelika Palmer Petersburg Pribilof Island Resurrection Bay Richardson Highway Rocy Point St. Michael Sawtooth Mountain Sentinal Island Seward Sitka Sitka National Park Skagway Southeastern Alaska Stikine Rier Sulzer Summit Swift Current Taku Glacier Taku Inlet Taku Lodge Tanana Tanana River Tok Tunnel Mountain Valdez White Pass Whitehorse Wrangell Wrangell Narrow Yukon Yukon River General Views—no specific location Alabama Albany Albertville Alexander City Andalusia Anniston Ashford Athens Attalla Auburn Batesville Bessemer Birmingham Blue Lake Blue Springs Boaz Bobler’s Creek Boyles Brewton Bridgeport Camden Camp Hill Camp Rucker Carbon Hill Castleberry Centerville Centre Chapman Chattahoochee Valley Cheaha State Park Choctaw County
    [Show full text]
  • GRANIT 7.5' Quad Tile Index 1 2 3
    GRANIT 7.5' Quad Tile Index 1 2 3 1 GREELEY BROOK 108 DANBURY 4 5 6 7 2 PROSPECT HILL 109 BRISTOL PITTSBURG 3 MOOSE BOG 110 WINNISQUAM LAKE 4 METALLAK MOUNTAIN 111 LACONIA 5 COWEN HILL 112 WEST ALTON 6 SECOND CONNECTICUT LAKE 113 WOLFEBORO 8 9 10 11 7 RUMP MTN 114 SANBORNVILLE 8 PITTSBURG 115 GREAT EAST LAKE CLARKSVILLE ATKINSON & 9 LAKE FRANCIS 116 WINDSOR GILMANTON 10 MAGALLOWAY MOUNTAIN 117 CLAREMONT NORTH 11 BOSEBUCK MTN 118 GRANTHAM STEWARTSTOWN 12 13 14 15T SECOND 16 12 MONADNOCK MTN, VT-NH 119 SUNAPEE LAKE NORTH N A COLLEGE R G GRANT 13 LOVERING MOUNTAIN 120 NEW LONDON COLEBROOK S ' X DIXVILLE I 14 DIAMOND POND 121 ANDOVER D 15 MOUNT PISGAH 122 FRANKLIN 16 WILSONS MILLS 123 NORTHFIELD WENTWORTHS COLUMBIA LOCATION 17 BLOOMFIELD 124 BELMONT 17 18 1ER9VINGS 20 21 22 18 TINKERVILLE 125 GILMANTON IRON WORKS LOCATION 19 BLUE MOUNTAIN 126 ALTON MILLSFIELD ERROL 20 DIXVILLE NOTCH 127 FARMINGTON 21 ERROL 128 MILTON ODELL 22 UMBAGOG LAKE NORTH 129 SPRINGFIELD STRATFORD 23 MAIDSTONE LAKE 130 CLAREMONT SOUTH 23 24 25 26 27 28 DUMMER 24 STRATFORD 131 NEWPORT CAMBRIDGE 25 PERCY PEAKS 132 SUNAPEE LAKES D N A 26 DUMMER PONDS 133 BRADFORD L R E B 27 TEAKETTLE RIDGE 134 WARNER M STARK U H 28 UMBAGOG LAKE SOUTH 135 WEBSTER T MILAN R 29 O 30 31 32 33 29 GROVETON 136 PENACOOK N 30 STARK 137 LOUDON Y 31 WEST MILAN 138 PITTSFIELD N N E K BERLIN SUCCESS L 32 MILAN 139 PARKER MOUNTAIN I LANCASTER K 33 SUCCESS POND 140 BAXTER LAKE 34 MILES POND 141 ROCHESTER 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 35 LANCASTER W 142 SOMERSWORTH GORHAM RANDOLPH D A L T O N JEFFERSON 36 LANCASTER E 143 BELLOWS FALLS SHELBURNE 37 PLINY RANGE W 144 ALSTEAD WHITEFIELD 38 PLINY RANGE E 145 EAST LEMPSTER MARTINS 39 BERLIN 146 WASHINGTON LITTLETON CARROLL LOW & LOCATION & .
    [Show full text]
  • 2004 FS Legacy.Qxd4.0
    United States Department of Agriculture Forestry Legacy Program Forest Service Forestry Legacy Program National Report Legacy Program Forestry 2004 for Fiscal Year National Report for FS-816 December 2004 Fiscal Year 2004 United States Department of Agriculture Forest Legacy Program Forest Service National Report for FS-816 December 2004 Fiscal Year 2004 For more information, contact the following: Director, Cooperative Forestry 202–205–1389 Forest Legacy Program Manager 202–205–1469 Web site: http://www.fs.fed.us/spf/coop/programs/loa/flp.shtml Photo Credits Cover and page 7: Nicatous Lake in Hancock County, Maine, courtesy of Alan Hutchinson. Back cover and page 2: Wooden Fence in Bar J, Utah, courtesy of Ann Price. Page i: View from Homestead, Colorado, courtesy of Susan Gray. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activi- ties on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, or marital or family status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To f ile a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room 326-W, Whitten Building, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call (202) 720- 5964 (voice and TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. Message From Larry Payne, Director, Cooperative Forestry Forests provide communities with a variety of benefits, including jobs, timber and other forest products, healthy water supplies, recreational opportunities, cultural and historic resources, habitat, carbon sequestration, and aesthetics and scenic views, just to name a few.
    [Show full text]
  • State of New Hampshire Ohrv Trails
    STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Third Connecticut Lake 3 OHRV TRAILS Second Connecticut Lake First Connecticut Lake Great North Woods Riders ATV Trails ATV, UTV 3 Pittsburg Lake Francis 145 Metallak ATV Trails Colebrook ATV, UTV Dixville Notch Umbagog ATV Trails 3 ATV, UTV 26 16 ErrolLake Umbagog N. Stratford 26 Millsfield ATV Trails 16 ATV, UTV North Country ATV Trails LEGEND ATV, UTV Stark 110 Groveton Milan Success Trails OHRV TRAIL SYSTEM 110 ATV, UTV, TB Jericho Mountain State Park ATV, UTV, TB RECREATIONAL TRAIL / LINK TRAIL Lancaster Berlin TB: TRAILBIKE 3 Jefferson 16 302 Gorham 116 OHRV operation is prohibited ATV: ALL TERRAIN VEHICLE, 50” 135 Whitefield on state-owned or leased land 2 115 during mud season - from the UTV: UP TO 62” Littleton end of the snowmobile season 135 Carroll Bethleham (loss of consistent snow cover) Mt. Washington Bretton Woods to May 23rd every year. 93 Twin Mountain Franconia 3 Ammonoosuc The Ammonoosuc, Sugar River, Recreational Rail Trail 302 16 and Rockingham Recreational 10 302 116 Jackson Trails are open year-round. ATV, UTV, TB Woodsville Franconia Crawford Notch Notch Contact local clubs for seasonal opening and closing dates. Bartlett 112 North Haverhill Lincoln North Woodstock Conway Utility style OHRV’s (UTV’s) are 10 112 302 permitted on trails as follows: 118 Conway Waterville Valley Blackmount Line On state-owned trails in Coos 16 ATV, UTV, TB Warren County and the Ammonoosuc 49 Eaton Orford Madison and Warren Recreational Trails in Grafton Counties up to 62 Wentworth Tamworth Warren Recreational Rail Trail 153 inches wide. In Jericho Mtn Campton ATV, UTV, TB State Park up to 65 inches wide.
    [Show full text]
  • Download It FREE Today! the SKI LIFE
    SKI WEEKEND CLASSIC CANNON November 2017 From Sugarbush to peaks across New England, skiers and riders are ready to rock WELCOME TO SNOWTOPIA A experience has arrived in New Hampshire’s White Mountains. grand new LINCOLN, NH | RIVERWALKRESORTATLOON.COM Arriving is your escape. Access snow, terrain and hospitality – as reliable as you’ve heard and as convenient as you deserve. SLOPESIDE THIS IS YOUR DESTINATION. SKI & STAY Kids Eat Free $ * from 119 pp/pn with Full Breakfast for Two EXIT LoonMtn.com/Stay HERE Featuring indoor pool, health club & spa, Loon Mountain Resort slopeside hot tub, two restaurants and more! * Quad occupancy with a minimum two-night Exit 32 off I-93 | Lincoln, NH stay. Plus tax & resort fee. One child (12 & under) eats free with each paying adult. May not be combined with any other offer or discount. Early- Save on Lift Tickets only at and late-season specials available. LoonMtn.com/Tickets A grand new experience has arrived in New Hampshire’s White Mountains. Arriving is your escape. Access snow, terrain and hospitality – as reliable as you’ve heard and as convenient as you deserve. SLOPESIDE THIS IS YOUR DESTINATION. SKI & STAY Kids Eat Free $ * from 119 pp/pn with Full Breakfast for Two EXIT LoonMtn.com/Stay HERE Featuring indoor pool, health club & spa, Loon Mountain Resort slopeside hot tub, two restaurants and more! We believe that every vacation should be truly extraordinary. Our goal Exit 32 off I-93 | Lincoln, NH * Quad occupancy with a minimum two-night stay. Plus tax & resort fee. One child (12 & under) is to provide an unparalleled level of service in a spectacular mountain setting.
    [Show full text]
  • Mountain View
    Randolph, N.H. April 2011 Volume 21, Number 3 Mountain View A newsletter by and for the Randolph Community, published by the Randolph Foundation A Wild Pursuit By Scott Lang This is the third and final segment of a top 10 placing es- say in the Annual Waterman Fund Contest written by former Jefferson resident, RMC member and author Scott Lang. On the edge of my vision I began to notice stretches of white and gray, like lines at first, but they had height to them. They were intermittent, but they had the look of being somewhat organized, a pattern. This simply could not be, I told myself, not here amidst such isolation. Was this really possible? A stone wall? I had to know, this potential discovery could be the greatest of my young years. As I ap- proached, much to my amazement it was unbelieva- bly true. Like the spine of some forsaken animal, it arose from the earth. These stones had been inten- Night time visitor to Grassy Lane. B. Arnold photo tionally set, and I might add, a good job at that. I could not fathom this, and I knew that no one else One might conclude that this discovery ruined my would either. I walked away in a daze, my mind try- wild experience. Quite to the contrary, it taught me a ing to engage rational thought. Had I been cheated lesson about wild, forlorn places. I had come here to out of what I thought was pristine wilderness? Could empty myself and let the pervasive wild fill me in.
    [Show full text]
  • Member Reference Library
    PVHC Member Reference Library All items listed on this page are available to paid members to sign out for a short term loan at hike planning meetings, and by arrangement through one of the executive board members as a benefit of your membership. GUIDEBOOKS 150 Hikes in Connecticut (4th Edition) 250 Hikes in the Adirondaks (2nd Edition) 250 Hikes in New Hampshire (3rd Edition) 150 Hikes in Vermont (4th Edition) 1 AMC Guide MA & CT (10th Edition) 1 AMC White Mountains Guide (25th Edition) 1 AMC White Mountains Guide (26th Edition) 1 Adirondaks High Peaks Region 1 New England Hiking 1 Quite Water Canoe Guide (NH/VT) 1 Hiking the Pioneer Valley-25 circuit hikes (2nd Edition)t 1 Long Trail Guide Book 1 Connecticut Walk Book (17th Edition) 1 Guide for the Trusteees of the Reservation 1 Metacomet/Monadnock Guide (8th Edition) 1 Metacomet/Monadnock Guide (9th Edition) 1 Highest Peaks of the Northeast 1 The hikers Guide to NH 150 Hikes of MA (2nd Edition) 150 Hikes of MA (3rd Edition) 50 Hikes in Connecticut (3rd Edition)- Missing 50 Hikes in Maine (3rd Edition) Missing MAPS 2 Northfield Topo 1 Southwick Topo 1 Ashley Falls Topo 1 Stockbridge Topo 1 Orange Topo 1 Great Barrington Topo 2 Pittsfield-East Topo 2 Pittsfield-Wast Topo 1 Williamsburg Topo 1 Berlin Topo 1 East Lee Topo 1 Rowe Topo 1 Mount Holyoke Topo 2 Waterbury, VT Topo 2 Huntington, VT Topo 1 Quabbin Reservoir Topo 1 Carter Dome Topo 1 S. Canaan, CT Topo 2 New Hartford, CT Topo 1 Hancock Topo 1 Norfolk, CT Topo 1 New Britian, CT Topo 1 White Memorial Foundation Map 1 Bald Mtn, VT Topo
    [Show full text]