Vermont in Photos

I’m wrapping up my park photos for each of the 48 contiguous states this year, just three left in New England, full of childhood memories. Like Connecticut & New Hampshire, Vermont has only one national park unit, Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller, a long-protected wooded area. Only one park photo, but the state is well worth celebrating. The Green Mountain State also has parts of the Appalachian and North Country trails and the Champlain Valley heritage area.

Adirondack Biosphere & Champlain Valley National Heritage Partnership

Much of upstate New York belongs to the Adirondacks, with old mountains, lakes, forests, wildlife and scenery. Two of the more famous tourist spots are the High Falls Gorge (above) and the Ausable Chasm (below), both on the Ausable River—from the French ‘au sable’ meaning ‘sandy’—which is fed from Lake Placid and flows down to Lake Champlain. Since they’re well developed old trails, walking along the secure walkways and overlooks costs about $20 each, but I think they’re still worth it, though neither is quite the scale I imagined for the ‘Grand Canyon of the East’.

Lake Champlain is part of the water route from New York City to Quebec, so several key battles were fought in the area, including at Saratoga and during the War of 1812. The British were winning in 1814, having sacked DC, but Thomas Macdonough won the Battle of Lake Champlain aboard his ship, the USS Saratoga, thwarting a British invasion down the Hudson in 1814.

This National Heritage Area preserves both history and beautiful nature, including Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller in Vermont. The Champlain-Adirondack Biosphere is also recognized by UNESCO for its forests, wetlands and mountains in both upstate NY and about 1/2 of Vermont. Unfortunately, the Trump administration ended the only other UNESCO Biosphere in the North Atlantic Region at New Hampshire’s Hubbard Brook hardwood forest research. Still, there are many other fascinating places to visit in this diverse heritage area, such as the Antique Boat Museum in Clayton New York on the St Lawrence River, as well as the scenic homelands of the Algonquin and Iroquois people near the Canadian border.

Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park

Long before this was a park, as children we used to walk quietly past Laurance Rockefeller’s country mansion, up the hill and through the woods to this small lake, ‘The Pogue’ (or ‘The Kiss’ in Gaelic), and swim out to cool off from the summer heat. While there are carriages, fine art, antique furniture, a pool a formal garden and farm animals to see in or near the mansion, the star of this place is the forest itself. Hike deep into the woods!

The whole state was deforested, mostly for ranching, to only 20% forest, resulting in erosion and floods. Marsh was an early environmentalist, inspired by Thoreau, and he sold the property to Billings, who after making his fortune through exploitation, had a change of heart and planted trees “scientifically” to regrow the forest. Billings’ granddaughter married Laurance Rockefeller of Grand Teton fame, and the ‘experimental forest’ continued to regrow. Vermont has now reached 80% forest due to dedicated efforts like the ones here. Now protected, the park is invaluable to foresters trying to figure out the nearly impossible task of reversing deforestation.

I’ve ranted on this subject before, so all I’ll ask is that you try to remember your favorite memories of nature and be inspired to do something to help save it.

“I cannot be weaned

Off the earth’s long contour,

her river-veins”

Seamus Heaney