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The Mountains Offer a Lot to do When it Gets Warm

Swimming, golf and the bumper sticker challenge are all part of the fun.

As skiers and snowboarders, most of us just want to flash half a peace sign at what wasn't the 2011-12 season.

It was, well, less than stellar as a whole.

But that does not mean we have to forget about the mountains as we get deeper into the spring and then into summer. Because, as they say, "There is plenty to do in them thar hills!"


Just about every mountain has some sort of mountain biking route and the hiking can be outright adventurous and first-rate.

Take Stratton, for example. In about two hours from the Greater Hartford area, you can get to the Southern Vermont resort and, in an intermediate hike, get to the summit, where the Green Mountain State's Long Trail, America's first long-distance hiking trail, and the storied Appalachian Trail meet at the summit. A favorite pastime of day hikers and long-distance trekkers is to sit on the porch of the Ski Patrol hut and share food, beverages and stories.

There is also the theory of "Mad River Glen — Hike It If You Can," a play on the challenging mountain's famed "Ski It If You Can" bumper sticker.

The Glen turns into a hiker’s paradise in the summer. Several scenic trails meander up the flanks of Gen. Stark Mountain and connect with the Long Trail. After the descent, stories can be swapped at Gen. Stark’s Pub for a crisp and cool Single Chair Ale.

Of course summer vacations turn into the bumper sticker challenge. The Glen has a deal with its fans — get a picture taken at an interesting place with the sticker and get posted on the pub wall.

The sticker has been photographed on an Israeli tank, at Mt. Everest, at the pyramids in Egypt, underwater, on an NYPD rescue helicopter and one astronaut used a sticker as his one personal item to have it photographed in space.

One snow sports writer convinced a chef in Las Vegas to grab two 12-pound lobsters out of his restaurant's tank, put bumper stickers in their claws, and pose with them under the "welcome" sign at the beginning of The Strip.   

Many of the poses can be seen on the MRG Facebook page.

In the Berkshires, Jiminy Peak has a mountain coaster and both Jiminy and Catamount have adventure parks. Okemo in Vermont also has a coaster.

Want to hang with a friendly ghost? Then ask for Room 314 at the Mount Washington Hotel in New Hampshire. That is the Princess Room, the former residence of owner Caroline Stickney. It is said (and it has been experienced too) that she often pays a visit to guests during both day and night and her hauntings even have a touch of humor to them. 

The Mount Washington used to feature a pro tennis stop. Tennis is huge there still, but golf also has a presence, a movement several resorts undertook several years ago. 

Stowe and Jay have top-notch courses in Northern Vermont and the courses stretch down to Okemo and Woodstock centrally and Mount Snow, the first big mountain in Vermont, has a world famous golf school. 

And never short-change swimming. The town of Ludlow in Vermont has Buttermilk Falls, right across from Okemo's Jackson Gore access road, a warm-weather paradise that features waterfalls and swimming holes.

Back up north, Smugglers' Notch has one of the great kiddie pools of all-time, a motion-detected indoor aquatic playground that even makes the adults happy.

Of course just driving through the Notch itself to Stowe when the road is open is an adventure. If your brakes survive the trip, there is plenty more to do up north when the snow has melted.

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q May 21, 2013 at 01:25 pm
"Minimal impact" means some. Retiring debts over the next few years is a good thing andRead More doesn't mean you should borrow more. Perhaps when those debts are paid off there will be a little more money available to meet the basic needs of the schools and the town departments. As wonderful as the expansion sounds, it is not an immediate need - it is a "want". We know the potential benefits of the expansion. Please give specifics as to the cost per taxpayer per year and for how long to pay off this specific project. Thank you.
Betty-Lou Griffin May 21, 2013 at 11:48 am
The "complete reworking of the library" only included HVAC renovations being done on theRead More whole building, repair of the leaking roof and skylight that was ruining the library, and replacement of the circulation desk. No space was added. I am glad to hear that you recognize the benefits of expanded library space. Town Manager Steven Werbner has indicated that Tolland will be retiring several debts over the next several years, and this expansion would therefore have minimal impact on Tolland's debt burden or tax level. If we wait, multiple existing grant opportunities may disappear. Let's NOT wait another decade to address this problem. Let's at least send it to public hearing and referendum so that we can have a sincere and wide-reaching community discussion on this important issue, and allow our citizens the OPPORTUNITY TO VOTE.
q May 21, 2013 at 09:33 am
Love the idea of an expanded library space, but is the time really now? We couldn't even afford toRead More fully fund our school and town budgets for next year. We will be experiencing a lower quality of education and reduced town services and until we can bring that back up to par we should not be taking on new debt. Just a quick look at next year's budget shows we are still paying on the new High School, the Geothermal project, bonding for roads improvement, sewers, open space bonds, Cross Farms development, the new Library roof, and now the artificial turf/lights project at THS. Even if some grants are available to help with the cost, the Library Expansion Project will add more debt for the town (taxpayers). Is this really the time to do that?
q May 21, 2013 at 10:10 am
Love the idea of an expanded library, but we saw with this latest school/town budget that this townRead More cannot afford to maintain the level of education and town services we now have. How much will this library extension cost per year per taxpayer? Perhaps we should pay off some of our existing debt (including all the new debt incurred in just the past 3 years) before taking on new. Also, you mention the need for quiet tutoring rooms. Are these paid tutors you're referring to? If so, will they be charged rental fees for using the spaces paid for by the taxpayers? Aren't there spaces available at the new Rec Center at Parker? How about space at the schools? With fewer teachers and fewer students there are now empty classrooms.