Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Fireworks Are Booming at a Park Near You!

Knight Point fireworks
Celebrate Independence Day in the traditional way - watching fireworks!

Many of the state parks are celebrating with special programs or later operating hours. Check out when and where there are celebrations near you, below!

A view from the top of Mt. Ascutney
Sunday, July 3rd - Mt. Ascutney State Park: One of the few parks left with camping spaces!! Make your reservation soon (802-674-2060) to camp.  Then just drive up to mountain road to check out the fireworks! Get a great view from on top of the mountain and see multiple fireworks displays. Be sure to bring a flashlight for finding your way back to your campsite if you are hiking. For drivers, the road will close 20 minutes after the finale.

Saturday, July 2nd - Boulder Beach State Park: If you are camping in the Groton State Forest, make sure to head over to Boulder Beach for this great celebration! Free entry after 7:30pm.

Saturday, July 2nd - Brighton State Park: Island Pond puts on a celebration after dusk which can be seen from the state park. Come early to get a good spot! Mention that you are there for the fireworks and get in for free! Rain Date: Sunday, July 3rd.


Having a picnic before having more fun!
Saturday, July 2nd - Knight Point State Park: Always a crowd pleaser, Knight Point puts on a grand display of explosive color in honor of the 4th of July. Bring a picnic dinner and enjoy the fireworks over the water. Free entry after 5:00pm. Rain Date: Sunday, July 3rd.

Monday, July 4th - Near Quechee State Park: The Town of Hartford is kicking off its festivities beginning at 3pm with fireworks after dusk in Kilowatt South Park. The Billings Farm and Museum is also celebrating by having an all day affair in Woodstock.

Monday, July 4th - Crystal Lake State Park: The Barton Fire Department will be hosting this fireworks display beginning at dusk. Relax and enjoy explosions of color over the lake with your friends and family.

If you're looking to grab a last minute campsite, check out our list of parks with availability for the holilday weekend!

Happy 4th of July! Have a great weekend!

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Intern Ellie at Woodford and Molly Stark State Parks

One of the greatest things about camping in Vermont State Parks is meeting other friendly people. I have met people with many adventure stories about their travels and I have learned about some places I would really enjoy visiting in my future travels.

I spent quite a bit of time at Woodford State Park (and other parks as part of my invasive species research internship). While there, I saw another loon! At night, I heard a barred owl right above my tent site. The loons and owls together make such awesome vocal melodies.

This past weekend my family visited from New York for Fathers Day with their new puppy (seen above by my shoe). We went to the lake in Woodford and had a great time kayaking, hiking, and playing Pictionary in my tent just like we used to do when we were kids. There was plenty of laughter, great weather, and delicious campfire cooked food.

A few days later, I arrived in Molly Stark State Park where I took the Mt. Olga trail to see the fire tower where you see mountains for miles. On the way up, the trail showed off a forest of hardwoods. I was equally in awe when I discovered an awesome moth and one of the workers at the state park identified it as a Polyphemus moth (check out my photo of it to the right).

Another cool thing about the Molly Stark is that it seems to have some serious history. An old rock wall in the woods and old stone stoves remain where they were once used. Only now I have to guess when they were built or were once campsites long ago. I'd like to know more about the fire tower's history as well. I'll keep you posted as to what other discoveries I'm making soon!

-Ellie

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Monday, June 20, 2011

FREE Park Entry at Elmore State Park This Saturday as We Celebrate the Grand Re-opening of the Historic Elmore Beach House

Everything Old is New Again:  Join us in Celebrating the Grand Re-opening of the Historic Elmore Beach House
Vermont State Parks, Waterbury, Vermont, June 20, 2011
Elmore Then
If you happened to find yourself along the shores of Lake Elmore in 1936, you likely would have witnessed a crew of boys from the Civilian Conservation Corps hand-sawing local wood and sorting away at native stone as they built the original beach house at the newly created Elmore State Park.
  
Seventy-five years later, with only a few interior changes since the CCC first built it, that original beach house has been completely restored to its former glory, with the historic feel preserved and modern features added to accommodate today’s visitors.

Come see it for yourself, first hand, and join us on Saturday, June 25th to celebrate the dedication of the Elmore beach house to the next seventy-five years of enjoyment and recreation for all Vermonters and their visitors:
Saturday, June 25, 2011 
  • 9:00AM Park opens – FREE park entry all day
  • 10:00 AM Celebration Begins:
  • Fun presentation of park’s history
  • ANR Dept. Secretary Chris Recchia and Governor Peter Shumlin dedicate building
  • Refreshments
  • CCC Displays
  • Interpretive Programs
  • Enjoy swimming, hiking and picnicking in the park all day.
    Come one, come all – everyone is invited!
Some additional information about this project:

Elmore Now
The beach house has a community room that can be rented for meetings and functions and can provide tables and chairs for up to 50 people. At certain times of the year, the entire building can be rented for group functions. Soon wifi connection will be available throughout the building.

There is also a new café seating area and revamped concession stand. Visitors will also be able to enjoy fresh food from the Elmore store and bread from Elmore Mountain Bread.

The new tables, stools and benches were hand crafted in Alburgh from the wood of a large, old white pine tree that needed to be cut down at Big Deer State Park in Groton, and out of cedar from the Champlain Islands . The couches came from Brattleboro.

The Civilian Conservation Corps was created to put people to work during the Great Depression and they built many of Vermont’s earliest state parks. Seventy-five years later, this project, funded by the state capital construction program intended to stimulate the Vermont construction economy illustrates the same commitment to providing the opportunity for outdoor recreation and putting people to work during times of economic stress.

The Division of Historic Preservation and the Department of Forests, Parks & Recreation collaborated with the Waitsfield firm of William Maclay Architects & Planning to interpret and preserve the history of the building. Donald Blake Construction, the general contractor from Morrisville used Vermont subcontractors and many Vermont sourced materials. Travis Cutler, Vice President and the Construction Project Manager, grew up in Elmore.

For more information, call Elmore State Park at 802-888-2982. Hope to see you there.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Intern Ellie: Starting Fires, Loons and Raspberry Honey

Wood up close
Let it be known that today, Sunday, June 12th I have built a fire outdoors with damp firewood. This is my first fire starting ever. It took more fire starters then probably acceptable for a boy scout but I needed a fire to dry off my long socks, the two pairs of shoes I brought and my warmest sweatshirt so I was persistent. The wood was sizzling, foaming and dripping water from the end of its logs for a long time and for quite a while the wood was just some coals and then all of a sudden it became a lasting fire and I kept running back to the car to get more things to dry off. It's so nice to have these articles of clothing back. When your outside everything somehow gets wet. I wanted to have a dog when I went camping but my loyal car which I call Siddhartha is just like one. It travels with me as a companion, it protects me, and smells like a wet dog. I don't know if that means I smell dog like but I try to keep it under control.
pink lady's slipper

This weekend was great even with the rainy days. I met an awesome nature interpreter in Branbury State Park, Rachelle, and she took me on a kayak trip to see the loons. They were nesting on an island. I got to see my first loon ever and the noise it made was amazing although you have to stay at a distance or else the loon can abandon there nest.

Both the male and female spend time on the nest. The name of the bird sounds like the noise they make which resonates within the lake. I have only been kayaking one other time and it was great. I hope to do it again this summer.

One fact I learned about Honey Suckle, an invasive species that the forest service is removing this summer, is that it's berry lack the nutritional benefits for the birds and although the birds feel full, they are not getting there proper nutrition which could lead to there decline in population.

Sunset at Lake St. Catherine State Park
At Lake St. Catherine State Park, I met a gentlemen who was telling me stories of his family who owned an entertainment center on the Lake where there was dancing and a bowling ally with a dock to go on rides with a wooden boat around the lake. I wish there were more classy social places like this around. It would be great to meet locals and have a local hang out and what better a place then on a lake.

Knowing Vermont was known for Cabot Cheese and Ben and Jerry's I knew eating here might be an issue being allergic to dairy protein (Casein and Whey). Luckily Vermont has amazing food co-ops and natural food selections where I can find food without dairy in it. My favorite food co-op find was a local honey with raspberry flavor and they have other flavors like lemon and blackberry which means I'll have to buy two of each next time I see it. Before I go home at some point I am definitely stocking up on Vermont natural food products.

-Ellie

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Intern Ellie's Excellent Adventure: Coolidge State Park

I have been living in Vermont State Parks for a week now and it has been awesome. I am taking pictures for Invasive Species Research and various other subjects for the state parks. Everyone who I have met working for the parks are very friendly. So far I have seen many chipmunks, red squirrels, newts, garter snakes, turtles and one skunk.

My favorite campsite so far has been the Ash lean-to in Coolidge State Park. There you overlook the green mountains and it looks like they go on for an eternity. Branbury is a great park with the beautiful falls of Lana and crystal clear lake to lounge or swim in. I am really looking forward to the rest of the summer exploring new places and finding myself in various adventures for the rest of the summer.

-Ellie

Friday, June 17, 2011

New Intern Ellie Stover Makes Small Things Big

Currently, a junior majoring in Biomedical Photographic Communications at the Rochester Institute of Technology, Ellie Stover is into Macrophotography. Basically, she takes pictures of microscopic things, like cells and creates images that we can see.

Born and raised in Middletown, New York, Ellie has lived in New York all her life; however, she’s been lucky enough to do some traveling all over the world. From New Zealand to Europe to across the U.S., Ellie has been aware of and interested in the natural world around her, which lead her to taking certain courses at RIT and choosing her major. GIS mapping and remote sensing are two fields involving her background that Ellie feels will be used to survey invasive species in the future. She explained that certain plants radiate a unique infared signature which can distinguish them from other plants. Using this technology, huge areas could be surveyed accurately, showing where invasive species have the greatest density.

For her degree, Ellie is required to complete a ten-week co-op (or internship). Being an avid camper, photographer, and outdoor enthusiast, she typed “state parks” and “photography” into a search to get some ideas. Her search resulted in Vermont State Parks Photography Interns. It was a great match.

Ellie wanted to find something that would combine her interests and skills. Specifically, she is passionate about conserving biodiversity in forests. By helping to eradicate invasive species, she will move closer to this goal. Even better, she loves to camp. Since the job involves living in Vermont State Parks, she was excited to have the opportunity to stay in different state and national parks. She’ll start her tour in Lake St. Catherine State Park before heading out to other state parks as well as Green Mountain National Forest campsites. Ellie hopes that her experience this summer will help give her a foundation with the forest service.

Her internship will be with State Lands Forester, Jeff Briggs, who is heading up a program to catalog and eradicate invasive plant species in Vermont’s national and state lands. Some of the plants she will target this summer include honeysuckle, buckthorn, goutweed, barberry, and other well known invasives.
Ellie will chronicle her internship with weekly blogs and regular updates, and of course, lots of photos. When asked about her pursuit, Ellie described all that goes into a day of taking pictures. She carries with her a camera and four different lenses, a wide angle lens, a telephoto lens, a macro lens, and a portrait lens. She can’t wait to start capturing life in the parks.

Ellie wants her work go beyond academia and internal uses saying that it is important for the public to know about invasive species. Her work this summer is a big job, and we are very appreciative to have such an enthusiastic and skillful intern to do it! Welcome Ellie!

Thursday, June 9, 2011

FREE Park Day Entry This Weekend!

The Annual Vermont Days Celebration is this weekend, June 11-12th. Free day entry into any Vermont State Park, free fishing on Saturday, June 11 (no fishing license required that day!), and free entry into any Vermont Historic Site are some of the many perks of the weekend.

Check out the events page for a full listing of what's happening in the parks - VINS Raptor Encounter programs, music, treasure hunts, loon watch boating, arts and crafts, nature hikes, birding, and many other fun events are being held in specific parks. If you are still looking for things to do, try completing a few Venture Vermont challenges and play your way towards earning the big prize.

Take some time to explore a few hiking trails and get some of the best views of Vermont. Many of the trails have incredible summit views. On a clear day, you can see for miles! Great summit trails include Mt. Mansfield out of Underhill or Smugglers' Notch State Park, Rattlesnake Point out of Branbury State Park, Deer Leap Overlook out of Gifford Woods State Park, and any trails going up at Mt. Ascutney State Park. Families with children will especially enjoy these kid friendly hikes. Visit the hiking link on the Vermont State Parks webpage to find the perfect one for you.

Bring your friends and family for an outdoor celebration in the parks and enjoy! If you need more information, visit http://www.vermontdays.com/ or http://www.vtstateparks.com/.

See you out there!

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Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Will You Take the Motorcycle Challenge This Summer?

This challenge is for you, if you ride a motorcycle or scooter and want to explore Vermont this summer!

Green Mountain Harley-Davidson has teamed up with Vermont State Parks to offer The Vermont State Parks Motorcycle Challenge. Participants will receive four day passes to any Vermont State Park to get them on their way. In addition, each park picture along your journey is entered into drawings for prizes held at the end of the riding season. These prizes include a stay at the Canterbury House Bed & Breakfast in Woodstock VT, Motorcycle Services, Vermont State Park camping passes, Green Mountain Harley-Davidson gift cards, and more. The first 10 riders to visit all 45 parks will be entered into a special drawing for a $100 gift card. All challengers who visit the 45 parks before the deadline, will receive a special award certificate. The contest is open to motorcycles and scooters of all makes and models.

From now until September, riders are challenged with cruising to 45 or more of the 52 state parks. If you choose to take on the challenge, register first at the Green Mountain Harley-Davidson website. Once you're registered and begin, be sure to document each visit by taking photos of you, your bike, and the state park sign at each of your visits.

Since you have traveled to the park, why not spend some time enjoying it? Before revving up for your journey, visit the park webpage to see what each park has to offer.
To register sign up at Green Mountain Harley-Davidson, 157 Pearl Street, Essex Junction, VT (just west of the Champlain Valley Expo). Registration costs $15 and includes a map with park locations and 4 free day passes to Vermont State Parks. The first 43 riders to sign up will also receive a 1 GB Green Mountain H-D flash drive memory stick. Contact co-owner of Green Mountain Harley-Davidson, Debby Pearson, at info@GreenMtnHarley.com or call 802-878-4778.

For information on Vermont State Parks visit http://www.vtstateparks.com/.

Good Luck!

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Friday, June 3, 2011

Saturday June 4 is National Trails Day - Here are some great trail resources to help you get out there!

Its looking like perfect hiking weather for National Trails Days this Saturday!

Check out our favorite hiking links below:

Our favorite parks for hiking:
Top 5 Parks for Hiking

Looking to get kids out hiking for the first time?
Check out Family-Friendly Hikes

Want to hike with your dog? Here is what you need to know:  Pets in the Parks

Did you know there are a bunch of Trail Maps and Guides online that you can download? Check out our Publications Page

Want to climb some of the most popular summits in Vermont? Check out hiking maps for Camel's Hump, West Side of Mount Mansfield, East Side of Mount Mansfield and Mount Ascutney?

How about a beautiful, quiet nature trail? See our guide to Nature Trails

New to hiking?  Learn about Hiking Safety Tips

You also might want to check out some friends of ours:

Green Mountain Club, for Long Trail and its side trails

Local Motion, for trails of all kinds

Moosalamoo National Recreation Area for many trails in the Green Mountain National Forest area for even more ideas.

And of course, Green Mountain National Forest

Don't forget Vermont Outdoor Guides Association hiking page

Okay, so now get out there - let us know which hikes you liked and send us your pics!

Happy Trails!

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