On December 28, 2017

Join Vermont State Parks for fun, guided, First Day Hikes

Monday, Jan. 1—VERMONT—Start the new year on the right foot with a hike in a Vermont state park. On Jan. 1, everyone is invited to join a free, guided, family-friendly hike taking place at many state parks and forests across Vermont. Hikes will be led by professional guides and outdoor educators eager to share their knowledge and love of Vermont’s outdoors. Don’t need a guide? No matter where you live in Vermont, a state park or state forest is always close by, and you can still get outside to enjoy it. State park entry is free on New Year’s Day (and all winter long). You’ll discover a whole new world in winter.

This year, a First Day bike option is available at Seyon Lodge State Park. Bring your fat bike and helmet for this guided ride! If you’ve never tried fat biking, demo bikes will also be available (but please still bring a helmet). See below for more details.

Please dress for the weather and bring snowshoes if the snow is deep. Please also bring beverages and snacks. Dogs are welcome on leash unless otherwise noted. There’s no need to pre-register — just show up! To check the status of the hikes, call the First Day Hikes Hotline at 802-249-1230. Updated messages will be posted to the Hotline on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1.

Check out our website at https://bit.ly/VTFirstDayHikes2018 and Facebook and Twitter feeds for more information and more hikes as they are added.

State parks currently offering guided first day events:

Bomoseen State Park, Fair Haven
Guide: Caitlin Gates (Vermont State Park Interpreter)
Meet: 1 p.m. at park entrance station
Hike: 1-plus hour, easy terrain
Button Bay State Park, Vergennes
Guide: Ron Payne (Otter Creek Audubon Society)
Meet: 9 a.m. at park entrance
Hike: 3 hours, easy terrain

Camp Plymouth State Park, Ludlow
Guide: Scott Davison (The Woodstock Naturalist)
Meet: 10 a.m. at the plowed parking area just south of park entrance
Hike: 2 hours, easy to moderate terrain

Groton Nature Center, Big Deer State Park, Groton
Guide: Dave Spencer (local expert)
Meet: 1 p.m. at Groton State Forest Nature Center parking area on Boulder Beach Road, 1.6 miles from Route 232
Hike: 1-plus hour loop, easy terrain.

Little River State Park, Waterbury
Guides: Jes Halterman (Park Manager) and Lorne Currier (Green Mountain Club)
Meet: 10 a.m. at CCC Trailhead (park at the bottom of the hill below the dam — please don’t block the gate). Follow signs/guide to trailhead.
Hikes: Two options, 1 hour, easy or 2-3 hours, moderate

Lake Willoughby South Shore Trail Loop, Westmore
Guide: Jean Haigh (Green Mountain Club)
Meet: 10 a.m. at the South End Beach parking area off Route 5a
Hike: 2 hours, 3 miles, easy to moderate terrain

Seyon Lodge Fat Bike/Hike, Groton
Guides: Sarah Galbraith (Riders in Plainfield-Marshfield), Darren Ohl (Vermont Bicycle Shop), and Greg Western (Cross Vermont Trail)
Note: Parking is limited at this location: please carpool!
First Day Bike: Helmets are required! Bring your own fat bike for the guided ride.
Meet: 10 a.m. Fat bike demos for all abilities, short and easy loop; ride sign-ups
11 a.m. Guided rides depart, beginner 45 minutes and intermediate 90 minutes, easy to moderate terrain
Hike: 11 a.m., 1-hour, easy hike around the pond
Snacks: 12 noon, hot cocoa and waffles

Taconic Mountain Ramble State Park, Hubbardton
Guide: Alyssa Bennett (Bat Biologist)
Meet: Noon at the Hubbardton Battlefield parking lot on Monument Hill Road
Hike: 2-3 hours, easy to moderate terrain, followed by fresh baked cookies
Underhill State Park, Underhill
Guide: John Connell (Greenmont Farms)
Meet: 1 p.m. at gate just below Underhill State Park on Mountain Road, in Underhill Center
Hike: 3 hours, easy to moderate terrain. Bring a snack and warm beverage to share.

Photo courtesy of Vt. State Parks
Get a fresh start in the New Year with a free guided hike at one of many Vermont State Parks.

 

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

A sign of the times? 

January 15, 2025
By James Kent Perhaps you’ve seen it as you drive along Route 7. In an abandoned lot next to Godnick’s on the corner of 259 N Main St. in Rutland City, erected atop a leftover sign from a long-shuttered mini golf course, a Trump/Vance election sign is affixed overhead. Even those with a cursory knowledge…

Killington, ahead of the pack

January 15, 2025
By Karen D. Lorentz Editors Note: This is Part 3 of a three-part series that explores how innovations at Okemo and Killington enabled them to become successful and popular ski resorts that also contributed to the growth of the ski industry in Vermont and the East. Killington’s pioneering approach Killington co-founder Preston Leete Smith had…

Nationwide data breach affects Vermont student, staff information 

January 15, 2025
By Corey McDonald/VTDigger According to state education officials, the personal data of students and staff at several dozen Vermont school districts may have been compromised in a nationwide data breach of a student information system. PowerSchool, a California-based company that provides a student information system and cloud software used by 39 school districts in Vermont,…

Mind the Telephone Gap: Rally calls for preservation of state’s old growth forests

January 15, 2025
By James Kent Below-freezing temperatures and icy snow conditions couldn’t deter 50 supporters from across New England from gathering at the Green Mountain National Forest Service building in Mendon on Jan. 11. Their goal: to halt the Telephone Gap Integrated Resources project, which proposes logging 11,000 acres, including 800 acres of rare old-growth forests, and…