Side-To-Side Patch Trails List (Pdf)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Side-To-Side Patch Trails List (Pdf) Side Trails of the Long Trail 84 Trails / 164.5 miles Hiking all of these trails qualifies for a Green Mountain Club Side-to-Side patch Completion Date Completion Date Division 1 Division 9 ____/____/____ 1 Appalachian Trail - (MA-2 to VT ____/____/____ 40 Allis - 0.3 border) - 3.8 ____/____/____ 41 Alpine - 1.7 ____/____/____ 2 Broad Brook Trail - 4.0 ____/____/____ 42 Burrows - 2.1 ____/____/____ 3 Pine Cobble Trail - 3.3 ____/____/____ 43 Dean - 1.0 ____/____/____ 44 Forest City - 2.2 Division 2 ____/____/____ 45 Monroe - 3.1 ____/____/____ 4 Bald Mtn - 2 sections - 5.4 ____/____/____ 46 Hedgehog Brook - 2.0 ____/____/____ 5 West Ridge - 7.8 Division 10 Division 3 ____/____/____ 47 Adam's Apple - 0.2 ____/____/____ 6 Branch Pond - 8.3 ____/____/____ 48 Amherst - 0.3 ____/____/____ 7 Lye Brook - 9.7 ____/____/____ 49 Beaver Meadow - 2.3 ____/____/____ 8 North Shore - 0.7 ____/____/____ 50 Butler Lodge - 1.8 9 Stratton Pond - 3.7 ____/____/____ 51 Cantilever Rock - 0.2 ____/____/____ 52 Canyon North Extension - 0.6 Division 4 ____/____/____ 53 Canyon North - 0.6 ____/____/____ 10 Baker Peak - 0.9 ____/____/____ 54 Canyon - 0.6 ____/____/____ 11 Green Mountain & Connector - 4.1 ____/____/____ 55 Chilcoot - 0.8 ____/____/____ 12 Homer Stone Brook - 2.3 ____/____/____ 56 Clara Bow - 0.4 ____/____/____ 13 Keewaydin - 0.4 ____/____/____ 57 Cliff Trail - 1.1 ____/____/____ 14 Lake - 3.3 ____/____/____ 58 Elephant's Head Spur - 0.2 ____/____/____ 15 Little Rock Pond Loop - 0.4 ____/____/____ 59 Elephant's Head - 0.7 ____/____/____ 16 Old Job - 5.4 ____/____/____ 60 Forehead Bypass - 1.2 ____/____/____ 17 White Rocks Cliff (overlook) - 0.2 ____/____/____ 61 Frost - 1.4 Division 5 ____/____/____ 62 Halfway House - 1.1 ____/____/____ 18 Black Swamp - 2.2 ____/____/____ 63 Haselton - 2.1 ____/____/____ 19 Bucklin - 3.3 ____/____/____ 64 Hell Brook Cutoff - 0.7 ____/____/____ 20 Killington Peak Spur - 0.2 ____/____/____ 65 Hell Brook- - 1.5 ____/____/____ 21 Pico Link - 0.4 ____/____/____ 66 Lake Mansfield - 1.6 ____/____/____ 22 Sherburne Pass (south) - 2.9 ____/____/____ 67 LakeView - 0.8 ____/____/____ 23 Shrewsbury Peak - 4.0 ____/____/____ 68 Laura Cowles - 1.4 ____/____/____ 69 Maple Ridge - 1.3 Division 6 ____/____/____ 70 Nebraska Notch - 1.5 ____/____/____ 24 AT (VT-100 to Maine Junction) - ____/____/____ 71 Profanity - 0.5 2.3 ____/____/____ 72 Rock Garden - 3.6 ____/____/____ 25 Chittenden Brook - 3.7 ____/____/____ 73 Sterling Pond - 1.1 ____/____/____ 26 Deer Leap - 1.7 ____/____/____ 74 Sunset Ridge - 2.1 ____/____/____ 27 New Boston - 1.2 ____/____/____ 75 South Link - 0.6 ____/____/____ 28 Sherburne Pass (north) - 0.5 ____/____/____ 76 Subway - 0.3 ____/____/____ 77 Wampahoofus - 0.8 Division 7 ____/____/____ 78 Whiteface or Beaver Meadow cut- ____/____/____ 29 Burnt Hill Trail - 2.2 off - 0.5 ____/____/____ 30 Clark Brook - 3.0 ____/____/____ 79 Whiteface - 1.0 ____/____/____ 31 Cooley Glen - 3.2 ____/____/____ 32 Emily Proctor - 3.5 Division 11 ____/____/____ 33 Silent Cliff - 0.4 ____/____/____ 80 Babcock & Extension - 1.8 ____/____/____ 34 Skylight Pond - 2.6 ____/____/____ 81 Davis Neighborhood - 1.8 ____/____/____ 35 Sucker Brook - 1.0 ____/____/____ 82 Forester's - 2.1 ____/____/____ 83 Frank Post - 2.0 Division 8 ____/____/____ 36 Barton - 0.3 Division 12 ____/____/____ 37 Battell - 2.0 ____/____/____ 84 Journey's End - 1.3 ____/____/____ 38 Beane - 1.5 . ____/____/____ 39 Jerusalem - 2.4 Longtrailpodcast.com 8/14/09 Compiled by Tumble .
Recommended publications
  • Okemo State Forest - Healdville Trail Forest - Healdville Okemo State B
    OKEMO STATE FOREST - HEALDVILLE TRAIL North 3000 OKEMO MOUNTAIN RESORT SKI LEASEHOLD AREA OKEMO MOUNTAIN ROAD (paved) 2500 2000 Coleman Brook HEALDVILLE TRAIL 1500 to Ludlow - 5 miles STATION RD railroad tracks HEALDVILLE RD HEALDVILLE VERMONT UTTERMILK F 103 B AL LS RD to Rutland - 16 miles Buttermilk Falls 0 500 1000 2000 3000 feet 1500 LEGEND Foot trail Vista Town highway State highway Lookout tower FORESTS, PARKS & RECREATION State forest highway (not maintained Parking area (not maintained in winter) VERMONT in winter) Gate, barricade Stream AGENCY OF NATURAL RESOURCES Ski chairlift Ski area leasehold boundary 02/2013-ephelps Healdville Trail - Okemo State Forest the property in 1935. Construction projects by the CCC The Healdville Trail climbs from the base to the include the fire tower, a ranger’s cabin and an automobile summit of Okemo Mountain in Ludlow and Mount Holly. access road. The majority of Okemo Mountain Resort’s Highlights of this trail include the former fire lookout ski terrain is located within a leased portion of Okemo tower on the summit and a vista along the trail with State Forest. Okemo State Forest is managed for Okemo views to the north and west. Crews from the Vermont multiple uses under a long-term management plan; these Youth Conservation Corps constructed the trail under the uses include forest products, recreation and wildlife direction of the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks habitat. Okemo State Forest provides an important State Forest and Recreation during the summers of 1991-1993. wildlife corridor between Green Mountain National Forest lands to the south and Coolidge State Forest to the Trail Facts north.
    [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]
  • Summer 2021 Long Trail News
    NEWS Quarterly of the Green Mountain Club SUMMER 2021 555 New End-to-Enders The Most Ever Recorded [FROM AGE 7 TO 80] CONTENTS Summer 2021, Volume 81, No. 2 The mission of the Green Mountain Club is to make the Vermont mountains play a larger part in the life of the people by protecting and maintaining the Long Trail System and fostering, through education, the stewardship of Vermont’s hiking trails and mountains. Quarterly of the Green Mountain Club Michael DeBonis, Executive Director Chloe Miller, Communications Manager & Long Trail News Editor Richard Andrews, Volunteer Copy Editor Sylvie Vidrine, Graphic Designer Green Mountain Club 4711 Waterbury-Stowe Road Waterbury Center, Vermont 05677 Phone: (802) 244-7037 Fax: (802) 244-5867 E-mail: [email protected] Website: greenmountainclub.org The Long Trail News is published by The Green Mountain Club, Inc., a nonprofit organization founded in 1910. In a 1971 Joint Resolution, the Vermont Legislature Julia LanzDuret-Hernandez on Mount Mansfield. designated the Green Mountain Club the “founder, sponsor, defender and protector of the Long Trail System...” FEATURES Contributions of manuscripts, photos, illustrations, and news are welcome from ❯ The Mountains That Made Me members and nonmembers. 5 by Julia LanzDuret-Hernandez The opinions expressed byLTN contributors are not necessarily those of GMC. 6 ❯ Congratulations to the 2020 End-to-Enders The Long Trail News (USPS 318-840) is published quarterly by The Green Mountain and Side-to-Siders Club, Inc., 4711 Waterbury-Stowe Road, ❯ Waterbury Center, VT 05677. Periodicals 8 A Day in the Life: Long Trail Thru-Hiker postage paid at Waterbury Center, VT, and additional offices.
    [Show full text]
  • Calcite Marble and Dolomite of Eastern Vermont
    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GEORGE OTIS SMITH, DIRECTOR BULLETIN 589 THE CALCITE MARBLE AND DOLOMITE OF EASTERN VERMONT BY T. NELSON DALE WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1915 CONTENTS. Page. Preface, by David White.................................................... 5 Intrpduction................................................................ 7 Bibliography............................................................... 8 Geographic distribution...................................................... 9 Deposits by counties and towns.............................................. 10 Franklin County........................................................ 10 Richford........................................................... 10 Bakersfield......................................................... 11 Lamoille County........................................................ 11 Waterville......................................................... 11 Johnson............................................................ 12 Washington County...................................................... 14 Moretown............................................................ 14 Orange County......................................................... 15 Topsham........................................................... 15 Washington......................................................... 17 Addison County.......................................................... 19 Hancock..................................:.......................
    [Show full text]
  • Winter 2020 Long Trail News
    NEWS Quarterly of the Green Mountain Club WINTER 2020 Codding Hollow Property Conserved | Managing Trails During a Global Pandemic | Winter Hiking Safety Side-to-Side in Less Than a Week | Skiing Vermont’s Highest Peaks CONTENTS Winter 2020, Volume 80, No. 3 The mission of the Green Mountain Club is to make the Vermont mountains play a larger part in the life of the people by protecting and maintaining the Long Trail System and fostering, through education, the stewardship of Vermont’s hiking trails and mountains. Quarterly of the Green Mountain Club Michael DeBonis, Executive Director Alicia DiCocco, Director of Development & Communications PHOTO BY ALICIA DICOCCO Becky Riley and Hugh DiCocco on Mt. Mansfield Ilana Copel, Communications Assistant Richard Andrews, Volunteer Copy Editor Sylvie Vidrine, Graphic Designer FEATURES Green Mountain Club 4711 Waterbury-Stowe Road ❯ Waterbury Center, Vermont 05677 6 Celebrating Success after 34 years: Phone: (802) 244-7037 Codding Hollow Property Conserved Fax: (802) 244-5867 E-mail: [email protected] by Mollie Flanigan Website: greenmountainclub.org ❯ The Long Trail News is published by The 10 Managing Trails During a Global Pandemic: Green Mountain Club, Inc., a nonprofit Field Staff Reflections of the 2020 Season organization founded in 1910. In a 1971 Joint Resolution, the Vermont Legislature by John Plummer designated the Green Mountain Club the “founder, sponsor, defender and protector of 12 ❯ Hiking Trails During a Global Pandemic: the Long Trail System...” Hiker Reflections of the 2020 Season Contributions of manuscripts, photos, illustrations, and news are welcome from by Rick Dugan members and nonmembers. ❯ The opinions expressed byLTN contributors 16 Going the Distance: are not necessarily those of GMC.
    [Show full text]
  • 1992 October
    VERMONT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY NEWSLETTER Number 70 October 1992 the Ticonderoga Ferry operates from and secured VAS Annual Meeting there in the water. It remained there until the late on November 7 fall of 1991, when it was removed to Chimney Point by the DHP. At this time it still is at the Chimney The 1992 Annual Meeting of the VAS will be Point site, but there are plans to move it to Plymouth, held on Saturday, November 7, in Burlington, Vermont, and store it under cover there until such possibly at the Econolodge.Joe Popecki, Vie time as it is determined how to preserve it and Rolando, and Bob Sloma are working on the site exhibit it. selection and program. The final announcement plus the slate of candidates for the Board will be Meanwhile, Bruce Hedin, a Board member of the mailed in early October. Mount Independence Coalition, realized that he had seen another log of similar configuration the previous October in Catfish Bay. He brought this to the atten- Bridge Footings Slip tion of the President of MIC, Bernie Noble. Both of by Bernie Noble them went to Catfish Bay in September of 1991 to Mount Independence Coalition examine the second log more closely. On July 28, 1991 at the northern end of Mount In- Measurements were done on the log, detailed draw- dependence, a log was found floating near the shore. ings were made, and photographs were taken in order It was examined by members of the Division for to document the artifacts. The Catfish Bay log was Historic Preservation, officials from the Fort quite different from the one which floated ashore in Ticonderoga Association, various re-enactors and July.
    [Show full text]
  • THE C OOLIDGE R ANGE SUMMER RECREATION TR AILS Legend Giff
    VERMONT THE COOLIDGE RANGE Long Trail North 100 Tucker Johnson 2000 Thundering North SUMMER RECREATION TRAILS Brook Rd Willard Gap Giord Woods Kent Pond Coolidge State Forest State Park Giord Woods State Park 3 Coolidge State Park Deer Leap Mtn Plymsbury Wildlife Management Area 2782’ Rd River Green Mountain National Forest Deer Leap Old Maine Jct. Appalachain Trail Corridor Overlook Rutland City Forest 2000 k West Hill Rd o o Forest Legacy Public Access Easments r B t n e 4 K 4 Killington Rd Pico Pond VERMONT 3000 100 3 Wheelerville Rd 4 3800 Churchill Scott Pico Camp/ spring Pico Peak 3957’ Little Pico Gre o k 3110’ at R oaring Bro Ottauquechee River Rams Head Mtn 3618’ East Roaring Brook Rd Brewers Corners Shagback Mtn Brewers Brook 7 Snowdon Peak 2688’ 3592’ 1800 Skye Peak 2000 3816’ 1600 2200 Cooper Lodge Ed dy 2400 Bro ok 2600 4 Killington Peak ok 2800 s ro 4235’ Fall B 3000 3 Bear Mtn Wheelerville Rd Ottauquechee 3262’ River Notch Rd Mendon Peak 3800 3840’ 3600 Little Killington Peak 3939’ 3200 Ma 3000 dden Brook Reservoir Brook Giord Woods State Park Trails VERMONT North VERMONT Shrewsbury Peak 100 100 3710’ Smith Peak ok Robinson Hill ro 3205’ B t n 2747’ e Shrewsbury Peak rg a S 6 Kent Pond 3200 9 Gov. Clement 3000 1 2800 5 2600 Woodard Jockey Hill Reservoir 2400 2640’ Russell Stone Hut Hill CCC Road 1800 Ingalls Hill Russell Hill 1600 2654’ 2545’ 2000 Tinker Brook 8 Black Pond ko Thundering T ro Brook Rd i n B 2200 k e r 1000 500 0 1000 2000 4 feet Tin Shanty Rd Shanty Tin Black River North Coolidge State Park Trails Upper Cold River Rd Burnt Mtn 2803’ VERMONT 1200 100A 2000 Cold River Rd 2 Northam Rd Round Top Mtn Rd 1400 VERMONT North Shrewsbury Old Plymouth Rd 100 k to Coolidge State Park oo Br ing via Rt 100A 3 mi.
    [Show full text]
  • Trial Backcountry Skiing Project Decision Memo
    Trial Backcountry Skiing United States Department of Project Agriculture Forest Decision Memo Service Eastern Region Green Mountain National Forest September 2015 Rochester and Middlebury Ranger Districts Towns of Rochester, Chittenden and Goshen Addison, Rutland and Windsor Counties, Vermont For Information Contact: Holly Knox District Recreation Program Manager Rochester and Middlebury Ranger Districts Green Mountain National Forest 99 Ranger Rd. Rochester, VT 05767 (802) 767-4261 (ext. 530) [email protected] Responsible Official: Christopher Mattrick District Ranger Rochester and Middlebury Ranger Districts Green Mountain National Forest 99 Ranger Rd. Rochester, VT 05767 (802) 767-4261 (ext. 513) [email protected] Bear Brook Drainage: representative view of project area In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the responsible Agency or USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339.
    [Show full text]
  • 110 Woodhaven Place Oberlin, Ohio 44074 28 July 1989 End-To-End
    110 Woodhaven Place Oberlin, Ohio 44074 28 July 1989 End-to-End Committee Green Mountain Club 43 State Street, P.O. Box 889 Montpelier, Vermont 05602 Hello: I am surprised, as I review my memories of twenty-one years of backpacking, to find that I have taken only five hikes in Vermont. Somehow of all the states and all the trails and all the terrains I have hiked, it is the Green Mountains which are, to me, the most varied, the most lovely, the most precious. Other backpacking trips are visits away; on the Long Trail I am at home. This explains, I am sure, why in those five trips (indeed, in only three of them) I have completely covered the Long Trail. With this letter I am applying for end-to-end certification. I have attached a brief report detailing my daily activities. Sincerely, Dan Styer 1 End-to-End Report Dan Styer 1982: Sherburne Pass to Camel's Hump June 21 Bus to Rutland, hitchhike to Sherburne Pass. Walk in about a quarter mile and camp. June 22 My first sighting of Braun's Holly Fern. At David Logan Shelter, a hummingbird flies among the Cow-Parsnip. Sleep alone there. Torrential downpour at night, during which porkie enters shelter. June 23 Rain on-and-off all day. My first sightings of Twisted Stalk, of White Bog Orchis (Habenaria dilatata), and of Three-toothed Cinquefoil. Impress a family at Sunrise Shelter by building a fire in the soaking wet woods. Slip and fall on wet puncheon, hurting knee. Sleep at Sucker Brook Shelter, which is full.
    [Show full text]
  • Deer Leap Recreation Opportunity Guide
    Green Mountain National Forest Caring for the Land and Serving People Trail Facts: Length: 3.1 mile loop Feature: Views, Appalachian Trail Access Max. Elevation Change: 600 feet USGS maps: Pico Peak Quad Amount of use: Heavy Hiking level: Difficult Average trip time: 1 ½ – 2 hours loop Trail Description: From the parking lot at Sherburne Pass, the hike begins just east of The Inn at Long Trail on the north side of US Route 4. If you park on the south side, use extreme caution crossing US Route 4: it is a busy highway. Please stay on the marked trails. Short-cutting to the Deer Leap overlook is very dangerous. In addition to hiker safety considerations, we ask people to stay out of this lower area to give the eroded, denuded surfaces a chance to "heal" and to protect some areas special to Abenaki people. Follow the Sherburne Pass Trail north to the Junction with the Appalachian Trail at 0.5 miles. The Appalachian Trail North continues to the right in an easterly direction to Gifford Woods State Park (1.0 mile), on its way to New Hampshire and Maine. To continue the Loop, take the Appalachian Trail South, which travels northerly for a short stretch, and you will almost immediately reach the junction with Deer Leap Trail, marked with blue blazes. The Appalachian Trail South continues northerly to its junction with the Long Trail at 0.9 miles. Take the Deer Leap Trail as it climbs quickly to a small ridge and through an open birch forest to another junction at 0.9 miles.
    [Show full text]
  • A Guide to the Hiking Capital of Southern Vermont
    A guide to the Hiking Capital of Southern Vermont 1 Introduction Welcome to Mendon, known throughout Vermont as the “Gateway to the Green Mountains.” Mendon is blessed with the best mountain scenery in southern Vermont. Killington Peak (Vermont’s second highest summit), Mendon Peak (the highest summit in Vermont without a marked trail to the top), Blue Ridge (overlooking the Otter Creek Valley) and Bald Mountain and East Mountain (both overlooking Rutland City and beyond) are all within our town boundary. Nearby Pico Peak further adds to the dramatic mountain skyline that we all enjoy. Over 90% of our town is forested and over 50% is protected in the Green Mountain National Forest, three Vermont State forests (Coolidge, Aitken and Jeffords) and the Rutland City forest. Hiking trails abound in Mendon, from the world-famous Long Trail/Appalachian Trail corridor to casual saunters like the Tamarack Notch loop to opportunities for bushwhacking up untrammeled summits like Mendon Peak. You can understand why we proclaim Mendon to be the hiking capital of southern Vermont. This ”Hike Mendon” trail guide is your ticket to mountain adventure. It is not intended as a comprehensive tenth-of-a-mile by tenth-of-a-mile trail guide. You will not find GPS coordinates anywhere. Many sources available in print and on-line do all that very well. Rather it is a guidebook that will help you find trail heads, alert you to where the trail goes left or right or straight up and what to expect in different seasons, including winter. There are also sections on hiking our snowmobile and back country ski trails and descriptions on where to start your bushwhack for those trail-less summits.
    [Show full text]
  • Resource Management Plan, Appalachian National Scenic Trail
    Appalachian National Scenic Trail Resource Management Plan – September 2008 – Recommended: Casey Reese, Interdisciplinary Physical Scientist, Appalachian National Scenic Trail Recommended: Kent Schwarzkopf, Natural Resource Specialist, Appalachian National Scenic Trail Recommended: Sarah Bransom, Environmental Protection Specialist, Appalachian National Scenic Trail Recommended: David N. Startzell, Executive Director, Appalachian Trail Conference Approved: Pamela Underhill, Park Manager, Appalachian National Scenic Trail Concur: Chris Jarvi, Associate Director, Partnerships, Interpretation and Education, Volunteers, and Outdoor Recreation Foreword: Purpose of the Resource Management Plan The purpose of this plan – the Appalachian Trail Resource Management Plan – is to document the Appalachian National Scenic Trail’s natural and cultural resources and describe and set priorities for management, monitoring, and research programs to ensure that these resources are properly protected and cared for. This plan is intended to provide a medium-range, 10-year strategy to guide resource management activities conducted by the Appalachian Trail Park Office and the Appalachian Trail Conservancy (and other partners who wish to participate) for the next decade. It is further intended to establish priorities for funding projects and programs to manage and protect the Trail’s natural and cultural resources. In some cases, this plan recognizes and identifies the need for preparation of future action plans to deal with specific resource management issues. These future plans will be tiered to this document. Management objectives outlined in the Appalachian Trail Resource Management Plan are consistent with the Appalachian Trail Comprehensive Plan (1981, re-affirmed 1987), the Appalachian Trail Statement of Significance (2000), and the Appalachian Trail Strategic Plan (2001, updated 2005). These objectives also are based on the resource protection mandates stated in the NPS Organic Act of 1916 and the Trail’s enabling legislation, the National Trails System Act.
    [Show full text]