On July 10, 2024
Local News

Preston Bristow wins recognition for Long Trail advocacy

Submitted - Preston Bristow

By Curt Peterson

The Green Mountain Club (GMC) bestowed their President’s Award to Woodstock resident Preston Bristow at their June 15 annual meeting.

The non-profit organization, founded in 1910, has focused on finishing the Long Trail’s hiking route for the entire length of Vermont, “From Bolton to the Canadian Border,” Bristow said.

“Only about 3% of the trail leading to the Canadian border has not been successfully acquired and converted to National Park status yet,” Bristow told the Mountain Times. The hiking route is called the Long Trail National Park.

GMC’s strategy has been to build relationships with owners of properties through which the Long Trail passes, such as it does in Killington. Those relationships usually lead to transactions where GMC acquires an easement for Long Trail’s path, then resells that easement to the National Park Service, ensuring permanent conservation. “They absorb any administrative costs involved with the transfer,” Bristow said, “and the National Park Service pays the same price GMC paid — they are not doing this to make money.”

The organization has raised $3-$4 million to be used to expand Park ownership of the Trail. Bristow became a GMC board member, then treasurer, vice-president and, ultimately, president. He has also been fundraising committee chair — often there is matching funds to help close the purchase deals.

Some agencies and organizations, Bristow said, use strongarm tactics to convince property owners to sell — sometimes employing “condemnation” to take land from unwilling owners.

“That’s not our process,” Bristow said. “We believe in building relationships with our prospective landowners, and being prepared to execute a purchase when the seller decides it’s a ‘go.’ Slow and steady wins the race,” he said. “Most property owners think it’s a good deal, and help us progress towards GMC’s goal.”

Bristow, now 70, started hiking long distances with a friend right after they graduated from high school in Connecticut. Their explorations took them all over the White Mountains, then they began hiking the entire length of the existing Long Trail in 1972, the first long-distance trail in the U.S.

“I’ve always been an avid fan of distance-hiking,” he said. “Now my knees are showing their age, and I’m putting off replacing them as long as possible. But that precludes climbing the steep spots on the Long Trail.”

Bristow is now the planner and zoning administrator in Chester. He has also been select board administrator in Barnard and planner and zoning administrator in Killington.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Subaru WinterFest returns for a weekend of music, gear demos, and winter fun

January 29, 2025
Jan. 31 - Feb. 2 — KILLINGTON — Subaru WinterFest is back, bringing an action-packed weekend of live music, outdoor adventure, and winter lifestyle experiences to Killington Resort. Running from Friday through Sunday, this free event invites skiers, snowboarders, music fans, and adventure enthusiasts to celebrate their love for winter with gear demos, live performances,…

Pieciak announces plan to eliminate $100m in medical debt

January 29, 2025
 Last Tuesday, Jan. 21, Treasurer Mike Pieciak, Senator Ginny Lyons, and Representative Alyssa Black announced a proposal to provide medical debt relief to thousands of Vermonters. The proposal would eliminate up to $100 million in medical debt for a one-time investment of $1 million. Further, the proposal would protect Vermonters’ credit scores by eliminating the…

Women’s First Fridays at Okemo grows in popularity

January 29, 2025
By Victoria Gaither Okemo’s Women’s First Fridays series is off to a great start, connecting female skiers and riders. The series kicked off Dec. 6 at Okemo’s Jackson Gore and has since gained popularity among women searching for something different on the slopes. Fran Madson from Ludow attended the first Dec. 6 event and said,…

Jerry LeBlond: From engineer to skier, photographer

January 29, 2025
By Karen D. Lorentz What started out as a fun winter sport on a school trip and a hobby — perhaps inspired by his artistic mother — led to a new vocation and lifestyle for Jerry LeBlond. Born in 1946 and raised in Biddeford, Maine, a coastal French speaking community, until the  6th grade when…