Ibutiondistributionlocally OWNED &LOCALLY OPERATED OWNED SINCE & 1981OPERA • TED SINCE 1981 •

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ibutiondistributionlocally OWNED &LOCALLY OPERATED OWNED SINCE & 1981OPERA • TED SINCE 1981 • PP&DPP&D BrochureBrochure DistributionDistributionLOCALLY OWNED &LOCALLY OPERATED OWNED SINCE & 1981OPERA • TEDWWW.PPDBROCHURE.COM SINCE 1981 • WWW.PPDBROCHURE.COM New York Vermont 2016 BROCHUREBROCHURE DISTRIBUTIONDISTRIBUTION PP&D We Have PUBLISHES 11 PP&D Racks Detailed And Service 15 THE BLUE MAP! Road Maps other Locations In of Vermont The Dartmouth/ Northeastern NY Lebanon, NH • CELEBRATING ITS Featuring Region 32ND ANNIVERSARY! The Burlington Area, Champlain Valley and LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED SINCE 1981 • WWW.PPDBROCHURE.COM Mountain Villages • 220,000 COPIES PRINTED • OVER 400 DISTRIBUTION LOCATIONS SEE PAGE FOR 3 FOR DETAILS... Member Member Restaurants Shopping Attractions Recreation Museums Lodging 377 PINE ST, BURLINGTON,377 PINE VT 05401ST, BURLINGTON, • 802/862-4366 VT 05401 • INFO •@PPDBROCHURE 802/862-4366 • [email protected] BROCHURE DISTRIBUTION Member 377 PINE ST, BURLINGTON, VT 05401 • 802/862-4366 • [email protected] Brochure Distribution and Blue Map PP&D Is Your Best office & Shipping Address: Please 377 Pine Street • Burlington, VT 05401 call if www.ppdbrochure.com you need Brochure Distribution Choice! (802) 862-4366 Fax (802) 304-1017 Email: [email protected] help Distribution For: ___________________________________________________________ Date: _________________ Ex pe ri ence Ex po sure Contact / Phone / Fax: ____________________________________________________________________________ “Billings Farm has used PP&D Brochure Distribution We make weekly trips to the Address / E-mail: _________________________________________________________________________________ PP&D for almost three placed over five million brochures busiest locations, and check even Del. Date: (Pick-up Extra!) _________ Last year’s brochures should be: _____ used _____ recycled _____ returned last year, and logged over fifty decades. They are the the smallest es tab lish ments regu- Should we bring your brochures to: Maxham Warehouse for VT Highway Info Centers: ____ yes ____ no thou sand miles. Since 1981 we’ve most ex pe ri enced, honest larly. We’ve built re la tion ships been ex pand ing and main tain ing with hun dreds of merchants and Quantity Per Piece Rate and knowl edge able Brochures 1-6 (9" x 4" max.) panels ...................n/c our vast network of brochure lodging establishment owners. Thick brochures booklets, magazines, __________ Brochures at ______ ¢ each = __________ displays. dis trib u tors in the State.” They appreciate us keeping the & tabloids ........................................ 2X monthly fee __________ Posters/Magazines ______ ¢ each = __________ display organized and up to date. Posters ......................................75¢ plus regional fee Susan Plump, Marketing Director “Since 1985 PP&D has Billings Farm and Museum, Woodstock delivered over two million # of locations # of PP&D # of Visits Monthly Months (4 mos. min.) # of Months Visited Displays in to Area Fee Desired “I believe much of the This Area Per Year maps. We rely on their A1 Greater Burlington – Tourist Brochures 97 88 26-52 $225* ________ ______ ____________ Ex per tise incredible growth of our (Hotel, Motel, Restaurant, Attractions) great service to reach the A2 Greater Burlington – For Regional Publications 63 53 52 $250* ________ ______ ____________ tourist attraction valuable tourist market.” As Vermont’s largest brochure (Supermarkets, libraries, fast food restaurants) distributor, we have designed directly results from A3 Stowe/Waterbury Ctr. - Expert Black Diamond Run 60 54 52 $150* ________ ______ ____________ A3.5 Intermediate Blue Square Run Karen Ballard routes throughout Vermont and Stowe/Waterbury Ctr. - 38 32 52 $110* ________ ______ ____________ A4 Sugarbush/Waterbury/Mad River Valley 56 40 20 $130* ________ ______ ____________ Vermont Attraction Association PP&D’s brochure upstate New York. We work with A5 Smuggler's Notch/Rt. 15 30 27 18 $95 ________ ______ ____________ major attractions and small inns; distribution.” A6 Grand Isle/St. Albans 37 25 18 $95 ________ ______ ____________ perform multi-state and local A7 Jay/Newport 50 46 17 $120 ________ ______ ____________ We serve hundreds of clients Gary Coffey, Retail Manager distributions. PP&D can target the A8 Northeast Kingdom/St. Johnsbury 42 35 17 $120 ________ ______ ____________ including Ben & Jerry's, Stowe Lake Champlain Chocolates, Burlington customers you want, within your Mountain Resort, Farmway, B1 Montpelier/Barre 43 34 26 $130* ________ ______ ____________ budget. Vermont Country Store, Morse B1.5 Montpelier – Exclusive (sold out) 18 15 26 $30 ________ ______ ____________ B2 Farm, Billings Farm, Magic Hat Middlebury/Vergennes 50 39 26 $130* ________ ______ ____________ We’ve installed over seven B3 So. Addison County 44 27 18 $110 ________ ______ ____________ and White Mountain As so ci a tion. hun dred brochure displays in “Last year PP&D C1 Vermont, New Hampshire and Killington/Mendon/Rutland 95 81 26 $140* ________ ______ ____________ We are in tune with the tourism C2 White R. Jct./Woodstock/Quechee 62 39 26 $140* ________ ______ ____________ dis trib ut ed our brochure New York. Our service means industry. We are members of C3 Okemo/Ludlow/Bridgewater 51 39 24 $95 ________ ______ ____________ your brochure can be seen in the Vermont, Lake Champlain, to ten regions across more locations, in more visible D1 Lebanon/Hanover, NH 30 13 20 $95 ________ ______ ____________ Hartford, Addison, Mad River, E1 Vermont… We have com­ displays, and visited more often. Plattsburgh/Ausable, NY 35 22 18 $105 ________ ______ ____________ Jay, Okemo, Newport, Killington E2 Lake Placid/Saranac Lake, NY 68 26 18 $105 ________ ______ ____________ Our displays have the vital Chambers of Com merce, Stowe plete con fi dence in their E3 Tupper Lake Region, NY 42 0 5 $85 ________ ______ ____________ combination of brochures from Area Association, Waterbury E4 Ticonderoga/Crown Pt/Schroon Lake, NY 71 32 17 $105 ________ ______ ____________ thorough and enthusiastic local shops, restaurants, and state- Tourism Council and Burlington wide attractions, making them the Business Association. Bill Orleans service.” Subtotal Per Piece & Area Fees $ ____________ showcase of each establishment. has also served on the boards Laurie Callahan, Retail Manager *6 consecutive month minimum contract. All other areas 4 month minimum. ___10% discount–12 mo. contract $ ___________ We knows where your bro chure Payments and terms: of the Vermont Travel Industry Cabot Creamery, Cabot Multi-region/brochure discount $ ___________ will be popular and we’ll be there Conference, Vermont Hospitality Blue Map listing $ ___________ to keep them stocked and fully Council and The International Customer Fee $ ___________ exposed. Association of Professional Extra Special locations Cost ___________ ____________ Brochure Distributors. Net 30. 11⁄2% monthly interest assessed on accounts over 30 days. Over 60 days, brochures are subject to removal. Although we strive for perfection, we cannot guarantee placement in every location. Final decisions are made by where the material is delivered. 11/13 Total $ ___________ All this assures you the maximum return on your brochure. ___ P ___ To A/R ___ Ent W/W William A. orleans Client Signature Contents Rate Card ..................................................2 Shipping Instructions .............................2 Printing Tips ............................................2 Brochure Distribution Blue Map ..................................................3 Route Information: Extra Special Locations .................. 4-5 January 2016 Lake Champlain Ferries .....................6 Greater Burlington, VT .................. 8-9 Stowe/Waterbury Ctr., VT ............ 10 Sugarbush/Mad River Valley, VT ..11 Smugglers’ Notch, VT .................... 12 Thank you so much for considering PP&D (celebrating our 35th Grand Isle/St. Albans, VT ...............13 anniversary!) for your brochure distribution. We value all of our Jay/Newport, VT ..............................14 customers and work very hard to stock and restock brochures at all N. E. Kingdom/St. Johnsbury, VT ..15 the best locations year round. In 2015 we placed over five million Montpelier/Barre, VT ................ 16-17 brochures to over a thousand places! Middlebury/Vergennes, VT ............18 So. Addison County, VT ...................19 I’m very excited to announce that after thirty years, we finally Killington/Rutland, VT ............. 20-21 placed a brochure display at the Burlington International Airport! White River Jct./Woodstock, VT ....22 Did you know that over a million people travel through the BTV! Okemo/Ludlow, VT .........................23 Lebanon/Hanover, NH ....................24 Last year we also placed dozens of other new displays, includ- Plattsburgh/Ausable, NY ................25 ing The Hilton Garden Inn in Downtown Burlington, The Phantom Lake Placide/Saranac, NY ...............26 Restaurant in Waitsfield, Rice Restaurant in Middlebury, The Lawrence Ticonderoga/Crown Pt., NY ...........27 References .............................................28 House in Bristol, Foley Brothers Brewery in Brandon, and The Key ..........................................................28 Chop House in Ludlow. Coming soon a PP&D brochure display at Contract .................................................29 Waterbury Center’s new Marriott Fairfield Inn. A Small Sampling of In 2015 we published our second edition of the BLUE MAP. Be sure Our 700 Displays to check out all the great changes.
Recommended publications
  • 2002 Yearbook and Annual Report
    2002 Yearbook and Annual Report Teaching individuals to take personal responsibility for all of their actions -The VYCC Mission Statement A Message from the President Dear Friends, I am pleased to report that the VYCC has never been stronger. We made it work with our extraordinary staff, board members, and volunteers who are extremely talented, committed, and a lot of fun to work with. Thank you! While this is a time when we can take great pride in our accomplishments, it is not a time when we can rest, even for a minute…the needs in our communities are greater than ever and growing, and the Thomas Hark with children Eli (left), VYCC is an important part of the answer. Zachary (middle), and newborn Rosie (right). Our mission of teaching individuals to take personal responsibility for their own actions, what one says and does, is absolutely vital and essential to creating strong and healthy communities. It is these lessons learned in the Corps that will make the difference in the years and decades to come. While it is true that we operate state parks and do incredible trail and other natural resource work, and that this work all by itself makes the VYCC vital to Vermont, the true value of this organization is what individuals learn from their experiences, and then take with them and use the rest of their lives…it is the values of respect, hard work, and personal responsibility that become imbedded in an individual after a stint in the Corps. Many people think of the VYCC as that small group who built a local trail…though few realize over 350 Staff and Corps Members were enrolled in 2002 and completed over 80,000 hours of important conservation work on 800 distinct projects in every corner of Vermont.
    [Show full text]
  • Southeast Region
    VT Dept. of Forests, Parks and Recreation Mud Season Trail Status List is updated weekly. Please visit www.trailfinder.info for more information. Southeast Region Trail Name Parcel Trail Status Bear Hill Trail Allis State Park Closed Amity Pond Trail Amity Pond Natural Area Closed Echo Lake Vista Trail Camp Plymouth State Park Caution Curtis Hollow Road Coolidge State Forest (east) Open Slack Hill Trail Coolidge State Park Closed CCC Trail Coolidge State Park Closed Myron Dutton Trail Dutton Pines State Park Open Sunset Trail Fort Dummer State Park Open Broad Brook Trail Fort Dummer State Park Open Sunrise Trail Fort Dummer State Park Open Kent Brook Trail Gifford Woods State Park Closed Appalachian Trail Gifford Woods State Park Closed Old Growth Interpretive Trail Gifford Woods State Park Closed West River Trail Jamaica State Park Open Overlook Trail Jamaica State Park Closed Hamilton Falls Trail Jamaica State Park Closed Lowell Lake Trail Lowell Lake State Park Closed Gated Road Molly Beattie State Forest Closed Mt. Olga Trail Molly Stark State Park Closed Weathersfield Trail Mt. Ascutney State Park Closed Windsor Trail Mt. Ascutney State Park Closed Futures Trail Mt. Ascutney State Park Closed Mt. Ascutney Parkway Mt. Ascutney State Park Open Brownsville Trail Mt. Ascutney State Park Closed Gated Roads Muckross State Park Open Healdville Trail Okemo State Forest Closed Government Road Okemo State Forest Closed Mountain Road Okemo State Forest Closed Gated Roads Proctor Piper State Forest Open Quechee Gorge Trail Quechee Gorge State Park Caution VINS Nature Center Trail Quechee Gorge State Park Open Park Roads Silver Lake State Park Open Sweet Pond Trail Sweet Pond State Park Open Thetford Academy Trail Thetford Hill State Park Closed Gated Roads Thetford Hill State Park Open Bald Mt.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix a Places to Visit and Natural Communities to See There
    Appendix A Places to Visit and Natural Communities to See There his list of places to visit is arranged by biophysical region. Within biophysical regions, the places are listed more or less north-to-south and by county. This list T includes all the places to visit that are mentioned in the natural community profiles, plus several more to round out an exploration of each biophysical region. The list of natural communities at each site is not exhaustive; only the communities that are especially well-expressed at that site are listed. Most of the natural communities listed are easily accessible at the site, though only rarely will they be indicated on trail maps or brochures. You, the naturalist, will need to do the sleuthing to find out where they are. Use topographic maps and aerial photographs if you can get them. In a few cases you will need to do some serious bushwhacking to find the communities listed. Bring your map and compass, and enjoy! Champlain Valley Franklin County Highgate State Park, Highgate Vermont Department of Forests, Parks, and Recreation Temperate Calcareous Cliff Rock River Wildlife Management Area, Highgate Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife Silver Maple-Sensitive Fern Riverine Floodplain Forest Alder Swamp Missisquoi River Delta, Swanton and Highgate Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Protected with the assistance of The Nature Conservancy Silver Maple-Sensitive Fern Riverine Floodplain Forest Lakeside Floodplain Forest Red or Silver Maple-Green Ash Swamp Pitch Pine Woodland Bog
    [Show full text]
  • North Hero Map and Guide
    North Hero State Park FORESTS, PARKS & RECREATION VERMONT North Hero, Vermont AGENCY OF NATURAL RESOURCES Stephenson North Point Lake Champlain PRIVATE PRIVATE Bull Rush Point PRIVATE PROPERTY Lakeview Dr. 0 150 300 600 900 to N. Hero village feet & 2 LEGEND Staff Quarters Cartop boat launch Parking Portable toilet Swimming area Trail Picnic area Park boundary ephelps-revised 03/2019 Isle LaMotte North Hero State Park ● St. Anne’s Shrine ● Ancient coral reef Welcome to North Hero State Park. Land for North Hero this 399-acre park was purchased in 1963. North Hero Nearly one-third of the land area lies below 100 ●Knight Point State Park feet in elevation. Lake Champlain normally State Park fluctuates from about 95 to 101 feet above sea Milton level, subjecting much of the park to seasonal ● Sand Bar State Park Map & Guide inundation. The forest type in the floodplain area is uncommon in Vermont, found only around Alburgh Lake Champlain. The lakeside floodplain forest ● Alburgh Dunes State Park at North Hero is noted for its size, relatively ● Lake Champlain Bikeways undisturbed condition and the valuable wildlife habitat it provides. For More Information contact: Wildlife habitat improvements at North Hero North Hero State Park State Park have yielded tangible results. White- 3803 Lakeview Drive tailed deer are common, as are a variety of North Hero, VT 05474 migratory waterfowl - mallards, black and wood (802) 372-8727 (Operating Season) ducks nest in the wooded wetlands. Ruffed Or Call grouse and American woodcock find suitable VT State Parks Reservations Center breeding and nesting habitat here as well.
    [Show full text]
  • Cyanobacteria Monitoring on Lake Champlain Summer 2013
    Cyanobacteria Monitoring on Lake Champlain Summer 2013 Final Report for the Lake Champlain Basin Program May 2014 Prepared by Angela Shambaugh Watershed Management Division Vermont Agency of Natural Resources Montpelier, Vermont in conjunction with Andy Chevrefils Mike Winslow Radiation and Toxicological Section Lake Champlain Committee Vermont Department of Health Burlington, VT 1 Executive Summary Cyanobacteria monitoring on Lake Champlain in 2013 continued to integrate qualitative observations, photographic documentation, quantitative analysis of algae populations, and microcystin concentrations into guidance for Lake Champlain users. Additional monitoring on four Vermont lakes (Carmi, Elmore, Iroquois and Memphremagog) was made possible by a CDC Climate Change grant awarded to the Vermont Department of Health. Objectives continue to monitor cyanobacteria at locations on Lake Champlain through the established partnership between state and local officials, the Lake Champlain Committee and citizen volunteers; continue to provide consistent quantitative data at selected locations around Lake Champlain; test for the presence of microcystin and anatoxin when algal density and composition triggers are reached; facilitate communication about lake conditions through weekly updates to stakeholders via email and to the general public through the Vermont Department of Health webpage; continue to provide outreach and assistance to beach managers, lakeshore property owners and the general public so they can learn to recognize and respond appropriately to the presence of cyanobacteria blooms More than 800 site-specific reports were submitted during 2013 from 83 locations on Lake Champlain and the four inland lakes. Fifty-four Champlain locations were monitored by citizen volunteers trained by the Lake Champlain Committee. Blooms, defined as category 3 of the visual protocol and alert level 2 of the tiered alert protocol, were reported 14 times in 2013.
    [Show full text]
  • Where-To-Go Fifth Edition Buckskin Lodge #412 Order of the Arrow, WWW Theodore Roosevelt Council Boy Scouts of America 2002
    Where-to-Go Fifth Edition Buckskin Lodge #412 Order of the Arrow, WWW Theodore Roosevelt Council Boy Scouts of America 2002 0 The "Where to Go" is published by the Where-to-Go Committee of the Buckskin Lodge #412 Order of the Arrow, WWW, of the Theodore Roosevelt Council, #386, Boy Scouts of America. FIFTH EDITION September, 1991 Updated (2nd printing) September, 1993 Third printing December, 1998 Fourth printing July, 2002 Published under the 2001-2002 administration: Michael Gherlone, Lodge Chief John Gherlone, Lodge Adviser Marc Ryan, Lodge Staff Adviser Edward A. McLaughlin III, Scout Executive Where-to-Go Committee Adviser Stephen V. Sassi Chairman Thomas Liddy Original Word Processing Andrew Jennings Michael Nold Original Research Jeffrey Karz Stephen Sassi Text written by Stephen Sassi 1 This guide is dedicated to the Scouts and volunteers of the Theodore Roosevelt Council Boy Scouts of America And the people it is intended to serve. Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one less traveled by, And that made all the difference...... - R.Frost 2 To: All Scoutmasters From: Stephen V. Sassi Buckskin Lodge Where to Go Adviser Date: 27 June 2002 Re: Where to Go Updates Enclosed in this program packet are updates to the Order of Arrow Where to Go book. Only specific portions of the book were updated and the remainder is unchanged. The list of updated pages appears below. Simply remove the old pages from the book and discard them, replacing the old pages with the new pages provided. First two pages Table of Contents - pages 1,2 Chapter 3 - pages 12,14 Chapter 4 - pages 15-19,25,26 Chapter 5 - All except page 35 (pages 27-34,36) Chapter 6 - pages 37-39, 41,42 Chapter 8 - pages 44-47 Chapter 9 - pages 51,52,54 Chapter 10 - pages 58,59,60 Chapter 11 - pages 62,63 Appendix - pages 64,65,66 We hope that this book will provide you with many new places to hike and camp.
    [Show full text]
  • Ibutiondistribution LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED SINCE 1981 •
    LOCALLY OWNED &LOCALLY OPERATED OWNED SINCE & 1981OPERA • TEDWWW.PPDBROCHURE.COM SINCE 1981 • WWW.PPDBROCHURE.COM PP&DPP&D BrochureBrochure DistributionDistribution LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED SINCE 1981 • WWW.PPDBROCHURES.COM New York Vermont 2018 BROCHUREBROCHURE DISTRIBUTIONDISTRIBUTION PP&D We Have PUBLISHES 11 PP&D Racks And Service 15 VT/NY MAP! other Locations In • The Dartmouth/ Lebanon, NH Region • CELEBRATING ITS 34TH ANNIVERSARY! LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED SINCE 1981 • WWW.PPDBROCHURE.COM • NEW "VT/NY MAP" HEADING INCREASES PICKUP! • 200,000 COPIES Member PRINTED • OVER 400 DISTRIBUTION LOCATIONS Member Member SEE PAGE 4 FOR Mid Blue - Hex: 0f75bd RGB: R-15 G-117 B-189 CMYK: C-86 M-50 Y-0 K-0 DETAILS... Light Blue - Hex: 00adef RGB: R-0 G-173 B-239 CMYK: C-69 M-15 Y-0 K-0 Magenta - Hex: ed008c RGB: R-237 G-0 B-140 CMYK: C-0 M-100 Y-0 K-0 Green - Hex: 8cc63e RGB: R-140 G-198 B-62 CMYK: C-50 M-0 Y-100 K-0 Orange - Hex: f1592a RGB: R-241 G-89 B-42 CMYK: C-0 M-80 Y-94 K-0 377 PINE ST, BURLINGTON,377Font -377 Helvetica pine Neue PINE VT st, 05401S Tburlington,, BURLINGTON, • 802/862-4366 vt VT 05401 05401 • INF O• • @PPDBROCHURE 802802/862-4366/862-4366 • •I. NFCO infoOM@[email protected] BROCHURE DISTRIBUTION Member 377 PINE ST, BURLINGTON, VT 05401 • 802/862-4366 • [email protected] PP&D Is Your Best Brochure Distribution Choice! Ex pe ri ence Ex po sure “Billings Farm has used PP&D Brochure Distribution We make weekly trips to the placed over five million brochures PP&D for almost three busiest locations, and check even last year, and logged over fifty decades.
    [Show full text]
  • Sanitary Disposals Alabama Through Arkansas
    SANITARY DispOSAls Alabama through Arkansas Boniface Chevron Kanaitze Chevron Alaska State Parks Fool Hollow State Park ALABAMA 2801 Boniface Pkwy., Mile 13, Kenai Spur Road, Ninilchik Mile 187.3, (928) 537-3680 I-65 Welcome Center Anchorage Kenai Sterling Hwy. 1500 N. Fool Hollow Lake Road, Show Low. 1 mi. S of Ardmore on I-65 at Centennial Park Schillings Texaco Service Tundra Lodge milepost 364 $6 fee if not staying 8300 Glenn Hwy., Anchorage Willow & Kenai, Kenai Mile 1315, Alaska Hwy., Tok at campground Northbound Rest Area Fountain Chevron Bailey Power Station City Sewage Treatment N of Asheville on I-59 at 3608 Minnesota Dr., Manhole — Tongass Ave. Plant at Old Town Lyman Lake State Park milepost 165 11 mi. S of St. Johns; Anchorage near Cariana Creek, Ketchikan Valdez 1 mi. E of U.S. 666 Southbound Rest Area Garrett’s Tesoro Westside Chevron Ed Church S of Asheville on I-59 Catalina State Park 2811 Seward Hwy., 2425 Tongass Ave., Ketchikan Mile 105.5, Richardson Hwy., 12 mi. N of on U.S. 89 at milepost 168 Anchorage Valdez Tucson Charlie Brown’s Chevron Northbound Rest Area Alamo Lake State Park Indian Hills Chevron Glenn Hwy. & Evergreen Ave., Standard Oil Station 38 mi. N of & U.S. 60 S of Auburn on I-85 6470 DeBarr Rd., Anchorage Palmer Egan & Meals, Valdez Wenden at milepost 43 Burro Creek Mike’s Chevron Palmer’s City Campground Front St. at Case Ave. (Bureau of Land Management) Southbound Rest Area 832 E. Sixth Ave., Anchorage S. Denali St., Palmer Wrangell S of Auburn on I-85 57 mi.
    [Show full text]
  • Upland Shores
    Upland Shores Rivershores ctober, 1927, was a wet month in Vermont. Rainfall had been higher than usual. The ground was saturated, and rivers and streams were full. On the first Oday of November, an unusual series of meteorological events began to converge on Vermont. By November 3, rain was falling in unprecedented amounts, and by the end of the day on the 4th, nine inches had fallen in some parts of the state. The already full streams and wet ground could not handle all this water, and the result was the greatest natural disaster in Vermont’s written history: the Great Flood of 1927. Curiously, New Englanders from outside Vermont’s borders do not count the 1927 flood as a major event. There was some damage in neighboring states, but the bulk of the rainfall, and most of the damage, occurred in Vermont. Eighty-four Vermonters lost their lives, 55 of them in the Winooski Valley alone. River towns throughout Vermont keep the history of the Great Flood alive. City Hall in Montpelier, on the Winooski River, is decorated with photographs of water lapping the steps of the Capitol. A marker in Cambridge, on the Lamoille River, shows that the floodwaters reached the second stories of buildings in the village. Gaysville, on the White River, was washed away completely and is remembered only in pictures. The loss of human life and property caused by the flood of 1927 and lesser floods is well documented. Changes to the natural communities of rivershores and floodplains are not as well understood, however. How did the plants and animals of the rivershores respond to so much water? Local lore in the town of Sharon, on the White River, tells us that a huge amount of floodplain land was lost in the 1927 flood.
    [Show full text]
  • Massachusetts Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism, 10 Park Plaza, Suite 4510, Boston, MA 02116
    dventure Guide to the Champlain & Hudson River Valleys Robert & Patricia Foulke HUNTER PUBLISHING, INC. 130 Campus Drive Edison, NJ 08818-7816 % 732-225-1900 / 800-255-0343 / fax 732-417-1744 E-mail [email protected] IN CANADA: Ulysses Travel Publications 4176 Saint-Denis, Montréal, Québec Canada H2W 2M5 % 514-843-9882 ext. 2232 / fax 514-843-9448 IN THE UNITED KINGDOM: Windsor Books International The Boundary, Wheatley Road, Garsington Oxford, OX44 9EJ England % 01865-361122 / fax 01865-361133 ISBN 1-58843-345-5 © 2003 Patricia and Robert Foulke This and other Hunter travel guides are also available as e-books in a variety of digital formats through our online partners, including Amazon.com, netLibrary.com, BarnesandNoble.com, and eBooks.com. For complete information about the hundreds of other travel guides offered by Hunter Publishing, visit us at: www.hunterpublishing.com All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a re- trieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechani- cal, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher. Brief extracts to be included in reviews or articles are permitted. This guide focuses on recreational activities. As all such activities contain ele- ments of risk, the publisher, author, affiliated individuals and companies disclaim any responsibility for any injury, harm, or illness that may occur to anyone through, or by use of, the information in this book. Every effort was made to in- sure the accuracy of information in this book, but the publisher and author do not assume, and hereby disclaim, any liability for loss or damage caused by errors, omissions, misleading information or potential travel problems caused by this guide, even if such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident or any other cause.
    [Show full text]
  • St. Lawrence – Champlain Valley Ecoregion Biodiversity Conservation Plan
    St. Lawrence – Champlain Valley Ecoregion Biodiversity Conservation Plan FIRST ITERATION JULY 2002 FINAL DRAFT July 18, 2002 (minor revisions – 11/08/02) (minor edits – 5/20/03) The Nature Conservancy Authors: Elizabeth Thompson, Katherine Moss, David Hunt, Paul Novak, Eric Sorenson, Ana Ruesink, Mark Anderson, Arlene Olivero, Charles Ferree, and Shyama Khanna The Nature Conservancy gratefully acknowledges all Heritage Programs, their cooperating institutions, and other cooperators for the time and energy that has gone into collecting and maintaining the data contained in this report. This information was assembled for use by The Nature Conservancy and the Natural Heritage Network in conservation planning for the St. Lawrence – Champlain Valley Ecoregion. TABLE OF CONTENTS PARTICIPANTS IN THE PLANNING PROCESS.................................................................................. 1 A CONSERVATION VISION FOR THE ST. LAWRENCE – CHAMPLAIN VALLEY ECOREGION ............................................................................................................................................... 3 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION................................................................................................................ 4 ECOREGIONAL PLANNING........................................................................................................................... 4 CHAPTER 2: INTRODUCTION TO THE ST. LAWRENCE – CHAMPLAIN VALLEY ECOREGION ..............................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Cyanobacteria Monitoring on Lake Champlain Summer 2012
    Cyanobacteria Monitoring on Lake Champlain Summer 2012 Final Report for the Lake Champlain Basin Program May 2013 Prepared by Angela Shambaugh Watershed Management Division Vermont Agency of Natural Resources Montpelier, Vermont in conjunction with Andy Chevrefils Mike Winslow Dr. Mary Watzin Radiation and Toxicological Section Lake Champlain Committee North Carolina State University Vermont Department of Health Burlington, VT Raleigh, NC Burlington, Vermont 1 Executive Summary Beginning in 2012, oversight of the established cyanobacteria monitoring program on Lake Champlain passed from the University of Vermont (UVM) to the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation (VT DEC) as responsibility for the program transitions from the Lake Champlain Basin Program to the State of Vermont. The transition offered an opportunity to modify methodology and expand the monitoring network to underserved areas of the lake while providing the data necessary to inform recreational and public health response in a fiscally sustainable program. Objectives continue to monitor for cyanobacteria at locations on Lake Champlain through the established partnership between state and local officials, UVM, the Lake Champlain Committee and citizen volunteers continue to use the tiered alert monitoring system developed by UVM to provide consistent, quantitative data at selected locations around Lake Champlain expand the geographical monitoring coverage with the assistance of trained citizen volunteers providing weekly qualitative observations of shoreline
    [Show full text]