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<channel>
	<title>The Great Outdoors</title>
	<atom:link href="http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?feed=rss2" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog</link>
	<description>A Blog for The Upper Valley Region of New Hampshire and Vermont.</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 09 Feb 2011 01:54:35 +0000</pubDate>
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			<item>
		<title>News Letter 2011</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=27</link>
		<comments>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=27#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Feb 2011 01:54:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=27</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The 2011 newsletter
Loch Lyme Lodge
Wow!
That’s what we have to say about 2010! Because of you and with a little help from Mother Nature, we recorded the best season in years! We started last May with several groups and a small local wedding (the Robinson clan) then some more June activities that
included the Dartmouth College graduation, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>The 2011 newsletter<br />
Loch Lyme Lodge</strong><br />
Wow!<br />
That’s what we have to say about 2010! Because of you and with a little help from Mother Nature, we recorded the best season in years! We started last May with several groups and a small local wedding (the Robinson clan) then some more June activities that<br />
included the Dartmouth College graduation, followed by a sizzling summer chock full of returning guests and sprinkled with some new ones, and then&#8230; a packed Labor Day house! All we can say is Thank-you! Everyone of you contributed to a fun year full of great times! We had ball games and theatre workshops and Sunday buffet concerts, and<br />
topping it all off was the weather - summer just the way it should be…..sunny and warm!<br />
Lovely September brought us more beautiful weddings and another round of fun and festivities at the Lodge!<br />
Congratulations to Dave &amp; Michelle and Jen &amp; Buddy. They tied the knot here in Lyme and celebrated in big tents set up in the ball fields behind the barn!<br />
Amy and I both agree that it hardly seems like work when you’re planning events with such friendly and enthusiastic people! They and their families are wonderful and we wish them all the very best!<br />
We had our last couples leave us on October 12, after hiking the area,<br />
enjoying the fireplaces in the cabins as well as a picture perfect fall in New Hampshire.<br />
We want to welcome all the new comers to the Lodge and note how seamlessly they melded with our families who have been coming here for decades! How nice is it to feel right at home after just one day on vacation! We do have the best guests here and year after year we know it more and more! We look forward to seeing you all again this summer and hope to make it as fun and relaxing and refreshing as last year!<br />
Thanks again!<br />
We think our guests are going to love to see the independent movie that was shot in and around the Upper Valley last summer. The film is called “ Brief Reunion” and was written and directed by John Dashbach and produced by Ben Silberfarb. Two locally raised<br />
Dartmouth grads who moved to NYC but ended up back in the area for this film.<br />
You’re sure to recognize a few scenes and cabins from LLL!<br />
They also shot scenes with Lyme’s July 4th fireworks, so who knows?<br />
If you were here then, you might be in the movie!<br />
We heard they were planning to show the film at the Independent Festivals this summer, then hopefully a broader release. Keep your eyes open for our, “movie of the year”!<br />
Let’s go to the movies!!!<br />
What a wonderful year it was!<br />
JANUARY 2011<br />
HAPPY NEW YEAR!<br />
<strong>~ Jay’s Corner ~ (Only it isn&#8217;t in a corner)</strong><br />
It snowed again yesterday. A lot. Maybe even too much. Even for here! Juliet wanted to go out in the stuff, so did I.<br />
We pulled on wool socks, donned our long underwear, slipped into our bibbed snow suits, threw on some vests, piled into our heavy winter coats, got our hats and goggles, made sure to have our snow boots thoroughly encased like sausages with our snow trouser legs, fitted our fingers carefully in our thermal gloves and headed out the back door.<br />
Once outside Juliet looked up at me and said, “Daddy….would you come inside with me, I have to go to the bathroom.” So I did.<br />
<strong>Calling all thespians!</strong><br />
Faith Catlin and her band of charismatic assistants will once again lead intergenerational theatre workshops in the barn for 3 weeks, 7/15-7/29 this year. They will met Mon.-Fri. from 10-1 with a performance each Fri. at 5 pm. Cost for participants is $150 per person per session. To register please call Faith at 603-795-4103. Together you will make</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Loch Lyme Lodge Photos</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=17</link>
		<comments>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=17#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jul 2008 03:13:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Loch Lyme Lodge and Cabin News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=17</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Thanks to Clint Williford for these pics of the lodge. Will probably use some of these on the website when I figure out a good place to put them . Please feel free to publish your own pics for consideration.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thanks to Clint Williford for these pics of the lodge. Will probably use some of these on the website when I figure out a good place to put them . Please feel free to publish your own pics for consideration.</p><div class="ngg-galleryoverview" id="ngg-gallery-1"><div class="slideshowlink"><a class="slideshowlink" href="/blog/?feed=rss2&amp;show=slide">[Show as slideshow]</a></div><div id="ngg-image-1" class="ngg-gallery-thumbnail-box ">
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<div class='ngg-navigation'><span>1</span><a class="page-numbers" href="/blog/?feed=rss2&amp;nggpage=2">2</a><a class="next" href="/blog/?feed=rss2&amp;nggpage=2">&#9658;</a></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fairlee Drive In Movie Theatre</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=15</link>
		<comments>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=15#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jul 2008 02:00:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Fairlee Drive In Movie Times]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=15</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We hope to add what is showing and showtimes here.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We hope to add what is showing and showtimes here.</p>
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		<title>Hiking</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=13</link>
		<comments>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=13#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jul 2008 01:55:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Hiking]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=13</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Please post Hiking trail information here.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Please post Hiking trail information here.</p>
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			<wfw:commentRss>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?feed=rss2&amp;p=13</wfw:commentRss>
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		<title>Restaurants</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=12</link>
		<comments>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=12#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jul 2008 01:50:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Eating Out]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=12</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Restaurants will appear here.  Of course we recommend the restaurant at Loch Lyme Lodge.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Restaurants will appear here.  Of course we recommend the restaurant at <a title="Dining at Loch Lyme Lodge" href="http://www.lochlymelodge.com/restaurant.html">Loch Lyme Lodge</a>.</p>
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		<title>Scenic Drive - Appalachian Trail ROUTE 10: NORTH HAVERHILL AND LYME</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=11</link>
		<comments>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=11#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jul 2008 01:34:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=11</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[While hikers along the Appalachian Trail have to struggle up and over several mountaintops, we drivers get to amble along a few miles to the west, following scenic Route 10 along the east banks of the lazy Connecticut River. Winding past pastures and cornfields, Route 10 is a nonstop pleasure to drive (or cycle); uneventful [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="body">While hikers along the Appalachian Trail have to struggle up and over several mountaintops, we drivers get to amble along a few miles to the west, following scenic Route 10 along the east banks of the lazy Connecticut River. Winding past pastures and cornfields, Route 10 is a nonstop pleasure to drive (or cycle); uneventful perhaps, but giving seemingly endless pastoral views framed by white rail fences, occasional farmhouses, and the voluptuous peaks that rise to the east and west. The first hamlet you reach along this part of Route 10, North Haverhill, is a real museum piece, with a necklace of distinctive colonial-era homes flanking an oval town green, and one of New Hampshire’s oldest cemeteries close by.</p>
<p class="body">Further south spreads Loch Lyme, where the fine restaurant, rustic lodge, and cabins of <a title="Loch Lyme Lodge" href="http://www.lochlymelodge.com">Loch Lyme Lodge</a> ($80 and up; 603/795-2141 or 800/423-2141) have been welcoming generations of New Englanders since 1946. Swim, sail, or float out on the small lake, which has an idyllic location between the mountains and the river.<span id="more-11"></span></p>
<p class="body">A mile south of Loch Lyme, eight miles north of Hanover, the tidy town of Lyme presents yet another Kodak-worthy scene, with a Soldiers and Sailors Monument standing at the center of a slender green, a large church at one end and an equally large stable at the other.</p>
<p class="body">Lyme, which feels more like a part of the Virginia hunt country than New England, also has a fully stocked general store and a pair of nice places to stop for a night or three. The 1809 Alden Country Inn ($100 and up; 603/795-2222) has period-decorated rooms, a very fine restaurant, and a cozy pub with a heartwarming fireplace. If you want to build up an appetite before dinner, the innkeepers will rent you a bike and point you toward some of the area’s best routes. The equally pleasant white clapboard Dowd’s Country Inn ($100 and up; 603/795-4712) is right across the green.</p>
<p class="body"><em>courtesy of RoadTripUSA</em></p>
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		<title>Scenic Drive - 41 Miles</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=10</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jul 2008 01:26:38 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Scenic Drives]]></category>

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General description: A 41-mile scenic route along the pastoral Connecticut River Valley between Claremont and Orford in western New Hampshire.Location: Western New Hampshire.
Drive route numbers: New Hampshire Highways 12A and 10.
Travel season: Year-round.
Special attractions: Cornish-Windsor Covered Bridge, Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site, Connecticut River, Dartmouth College, Hood Museum of Art, Orford Street Historic District, Appalachian Trail, [...]]]></description>
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<td class="dataText" colspan="2" valign="top"><strong>General description:</strong> A 41-mile scenic route along the pastoral Connecticut River Valley between Claremont and Orford in western New Hampshire.<strong>Location:</strong> Western New Hampshire.</p>
<p><strong>Drive route numbers:</strong> New Hampshire Highways 12A and 10.</p>
<p><strong>Travel season:</strong> Year-round.</p>
<p><strong>Special attractions:</strong> Cornish-Windsor Covered Bridge, Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site, Connecticut River, Dartmouth College, Hood Museum of Art, Orford Street Historic District, Appalachian Trail, scenic views, fishing, hiking, nature study.</p>
<p><strong>Camping:</strong> No campgrounds along the drive. Nearby campgrounds in Vermont include Ascutney State Park (49 sites) northwest of Ascutney (VT); Quechee Gorge State Park (54 sites) just west of White River Junction and Lebanon; and Thetford Hill State Park (16 sites) west of East Thetford and Lyme.</p>
<p><strong>Services:</strong> All services in Claremont, Lebanon, and Hanover. Limited services in towns along the drive including Plainfield, Lyme, and Orford.</p>
<p><strong>Nearby attractions:</strong> Cardigan State Park, Sculptured Rocks Natural Area, Mount Sunapee State Park, Gile State Forest, White Mountains National Forest, Bedell Bridge State Park, Ascutney State Park (VT), Quechee Gorge State Park (VT), Woodstock (VT).<span id="more-10"></span></td>
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<td class="bodyText" bgcolor="#ebf4fd"><a name="Description"><strong>Description</strong></a></td>
<td class="captionText" align="right" bgcolor="#ebf4fd"><a href="http://www.weather.com/outlook/driving/scenicdrives/?sd=nhconnriver.jsp&amp;param1=USNH0043&amp;param2=USNH0102&amp;param3=USNH0180#Snapshot">Snapshot</a> | <a href="http://www.weather.com/outlook/driving/scenicdrives/?sd=nhconnriver.jsp&amp;param1=USNH0043&amp;param2=USNH0102&amp;param3=USNH0180#Description">Description</a> | <a href="http://www.weather.com/outlook/driving/scenicdrives/?sd=nhconnrivermap.jsp">Map</a> | <a href="http://www.weather.com/outlook/driving/scenicdrives/?sd=nhconnriver.jsp&amp;param1=USNH0043&amp;param2=USNH0102&amp;param3=USNH0180#Top">Top</a></td>
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<td class="dataText" colspan="2" valign="top"><strong>The drive:</strong> This route explores some of New Hampshire&#8217;s most charming scenery as it winds through hill country along the east bank of the mighty Connecticut River in the Upper Valley. The rural secondary roads along the drive pass not only superb views, but also some of New Hampshire&#8217;s famed cultural and historic shrines including the home of Augustus Saint-Gaudens, perhaps the nineteenth-century&#8217;s greatest sculptor; the longest covered bridge in the United States at Cornish; and the beautiful Orford Street Historic District at the drive&#8217;s northern end.The Connecticut River, New England&#8217;s longest and largest river, cleaves the region politically, forming the boundary between New Hampshire and Vermont, and geologically. Some geologists interpret the zone that the river follows as a tectonic boundary between two crustal plates &#8212; North American bedrock on the west and a slice of an exotic plate from Europe or Africa on the east. The river existed well before the long glacial episodes that have intermittently covered and shaped New England&#8217;s topography. The last episode, called the Wisconsin glaciation, choked the valley with ice and chiseled it deeper into underlying bedrock.</p>
<p>Later, as the glaciers melted, the valley was filled by Lake Hitchcock, a long, thin lake that stretched 200 miles north from the moraine that blocked the river&#8217;s course near Middleton, Connecticut. Sediment and silt deposited in the lake by the melting glacier allow geologists to study the rate of glacial recession from New England. Studies of the distinctly laminated varved clays, each layer representing a single year&#8217;s deposit, shows that it took 4,300 years at an average of 245 feet annually for the glacier to recede from Middletown to St. Johnsbury, Vermont. Much of the drive crosses terraced floodplains above the riverbanks.</p>
<p>The drive begins just west of Claremont at the junction of New Hampshire Highways 12A and 103. This junction is on the east side of the Connecticut River opposite Exit 8 on Interstate 91 and Ascutney, Vermont. The journey&#8217;s first leg, following NH 12A, travels 18 miles north from here to the southern outskirts of West Lebanon.</p>
<p>The rural highway runs north along the river&#8217;s east bank past orderly cornfields, apple orchards, and rich farmlands studded with strikingly plain barns and adjoining houses. Low, undulating hills border the riparian floodplain to the east. Pyramid-shaped Mount Ascutney, a 3,144-foot peak, looms above the valley to the west in Vermont. This dominating mountain, standing alone and aloof, is a monadnock or high point that towers almost 2,000 feet above the lower, older erosional surface that surrounds it. Ascutney&#8217;s summit is reached by a 3.8-mile, paved toll road in Mount Ascutney State Park. The mountain is formed of igneous rocks that are part of the White Mountain magma series deposited some 200 million years ago. The mountain&#8217;s commanding height along the Atlantic Flyway makes the peak a popular spot for birds and birders. The state park offers a 49-site campground and an excellent trail to Mount Ascutney&#8217;s apex.</p>
<p>At 4.2 miles the drive route passes the private Chase House, the 1808 birthplace of Salmon Portland Chase. Educated at nearby Dartmouth, Chase defended runaway slaves as a lawyer before becoming an Ohio senator and governor, helping found the Republican Party, and serving as Lincoln&#8217;s Secretary of the Treasury and Chief Justice of the United States. Other old homes dating from the 1770s also line the road.</p>
<p>About 0.5 mile later the road enters Cornish. Two covered bridges lie just east of this village on Townhouse Road. The first, Dingleton Hill Bridge, is 81 feet long. The second, Blacksmith Shop Bridge, spans 96 feet across Mill Brook and was built in 1881. Back on the highway, the drive reaches New Hampshire&#8217;s most famous covered bridge in another mile. The Cornish-Windsor Bridge (or the Windsor-Cornish Bridge, depending on what side of the river you&#8217;re on), is the longest covered bridge in the country. The 460-foot, two-span bridge, one of the most photographed bridges in America, was built in 1866 at the cost of $9,000. It was engineered and constructed by James Tasker, a construction genius who couldn&#8217;t read or write. Tasker used heavy, squared timbers rather than thinner planks to form the lattice work, making a very strong design. Today&#8217;s bridge, a designated National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark, is the fourth one on the site.</p>
<p>The bridge was also the last Connecticut River bridge to charge a toll. The cost was two cents on foot, four cents for a horse, two cents for a cow, fifteen cents to tote a cord of wood across, and twenty cents for a four-horse carriage. A sign across the bridge entrance still says: &#8220;Walk your horse or pay two dollars fine.&#8221; Over time the State of New Hampshire slowly bought out the bridge companies and opened them for free passage, a popular move to discontinue what was called &#8220;interstate holdup.&#8221; The last toll on the Cornish Bridge was collected on May 31, 1943. The next day the bridge was ceremoniously opened for non-paying customers.</p>
<p>The bridge is still open for traffic and is now a popular tourist stop. Pull off at the designated parking area just south of the bridge and walk up to have a look inside. Vendors across the highway sell postcards, drawings, and other bridge paraphernalia.</p>
<p>Windsor, the historic town on the other side of the river, is acclaimed as the Birthplace of Vermont. New Hampshire, as part of its boundary agreement with Vermont, owns the Connecticut River to its west-bank, normal high-water mark.</p>
<p>Two miles north of the bridge is another unique and important historic site. Turn right at a park sign and follow a short uphill road for 0.6 mile to Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site. The site, operated by the National Park Service from May through October, preserves the elegant hilltop home and studio of Augustus Saint-Gaudens, the premier American sculptor of the nineteenth century. Born in Ireland and reared in New York City, Saint-Gaudens worked as an apprentice cameo cutter as a teenager before studying in Paris. He returned to New York and in 1876 at age twenty-seven he received his first commission, the Farragut Monument in today&#8217;s Madison Square Park. In 1885 he found this lovely spot above the Connecticut River and bought it as a summer residence. Here he executed some of his most famous works, including the Standing Lincoln, a Robert Louis Stevenson memorial relief, and the Shaw Memorial, a brilliant Civil War relief of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw and his Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Black Volunteer Regiment that took fourteen years of exacting work. The site is scattered with various replicas of Saint-Gaudens&#8217;s heroic works, sketches, drawings, and casting molds. Visitors can tour the sculptor&#8217;s house, studio, and exhibition room along with 150 acres of manicured formal gardens and the small Greek temple where Saint-Gaudens is buried. From his deathbed on August 13, 1907, he looked out a window at sunset toward Mount Ascutney and said, &#8220;It&#8217;s very beautiful, but I want to go farther away.&#8221;</p>
<p>Back on the drive, NH 12A passes a historic marker for the Cornish Colony. In the latter part of the nineteenth century, Saint-Gaudens&#8217;s presence made the rural Cornish area into a thriving artist&#8217;s colony. Some of the creative artists who lived at the Cornish Colony were the nation&#8217;s most popular novelist, Winston Churchill (not the British Prime Minister), and painter Maxfield Parrish. One of Churchill&#8217;s novels, Richard Carvell, sold more than a million copies. The writer hosted President Theodore Roosevelt&#8217;s 1902 visit to Cornish. Parrish used the surrounding landscape in his colorful, fanciful illustrations for numerous books and magazine covers. Other luminaries who lived and worked here were sculptor Herbert Adams, poet Percy McKaye, architect Charles A. Platt, and artist Kenyon Cox.</p>
<p>The highway continues north past small Freeman&#8217;s Cemetery and a side road that leads to Tasker&#8217;s Blow-Me-Down Bridge, a 90-foot covered bridge over Blow-Me-Down Brook. The bridge name is a Yankee corruption of the name Blomidon, an early settler. Past the turn, the roadway bends away from the river to the 1761 village of Plainfield. A red brick community church topped by a white spire dominates the residential town.</p>
<p>A series of low wooded hills &#8212; Freeman Hill, Stevens Hill, Home Hill, and Short Knoll &#8212; separate the highway from the river as it journeys northward. The road crests a low rise between two hills and drops through forest alongside Beaver Book to the river. Here it flattens and runs through thick pine and hardwood forests interrupted by occasional floodplain farms. Hills hem the road in on the east, keeping it along the riverbank. At Bloods Brook the highway passes Lebanon Wildlife Management Area, a swamp studded with cattails and twisted dead tree trunks. The road passes a gravel quarry and enters the southern outskirts of West Lebanon.</p>
<p>The next 6 miles are mostly developed. The drive continues along NH 12A under Interstate 89 and enters West Lebanon. In the town center, go straight on New Hampshire Highway 10 toward Hanover. For a short distance the drive emerges back into bucolic farm country. A roadside picnic area overlooks Wilder Dam and its accompanying hydroelectric plant. Nearby is the Pine Grove Rim Trail. After 3 more miles the highway enters Hanover.</p>
<p>Hanover, home of Dartmouth College, remains a bastion of culture and diversity in what seems like the New Hampshire backwoods. The college motto, Vox Clamantis in Deserto or &#8220;A Voice Cries in the Wilderness,&#8221; reflects this still-remote character. The college offers a classic Ivy League campus with a grassy quad surrounded by impressive buildings and spreading maple trees. The town of Hanover, originally a farming village, was granted in 1761. The college came eight years later when Eleazar Wheelock decided to move his Indian Charity School from Connecticut to New Hampshire &#8220;for the education of Youth of the Indian Tribes, English Youth, and any others.&#8221; Hanover&#8217;s citizens offered Wheelock 3,000 acres of land, free labor, and cash to move his school to their town. Governor John Wentworth gave a royal charter to officially establish the school, and the Earl of Dartmouth in England made a generous donation. In gratitude, Wheelock named his college after the Earl.</p>
<p>Dartmouth College and its town of 9,000 residents has since flourished. The college dominates both the town and region&#8217;s economy and cultural life. Dartmouth itself boasts numerous beautiful buildings, including the famed Dartmouth Row on the east flank of the college green. These four Greek Revival buildings are the 1829 Wentworth Hall; Dartmouth Hall (a 1904 reproduction of the 1791 original destroyed by fire); Thornton Hall; and Reed Hall. The college&#8217;s brick Webster Hall, fronted by tall columns, is named for Daniel Webster, its most famous alumnus. The 1928 Baker Memorial Library is modeled after Philadelphia&#8217;s Independence Hall. In the library&#8217;s basement is a spectacular, must-see series of frescoes called The Epic of American Civilization, painted by noted Mexican artist JosZ Clemente Orozco in the early 1930s. The nearby Hood Museum of Art owns an interesting collection of African art, Assyrian bas-reliefs, and paintings by Italian, Dutch, and American artists.</p>
<p>The highway follows Main Street, leading right through Hanover to Dartmouth&#8217;s campus before skirting around the quad on its east side. Stop and walk around the town and campus. Beside the classic buildings and museums are numerous bookstores, coffee shops, and interesting shops to browse through. During Winter Carnival in February, fantastic ice sculptures cover the quad.</p>
<p>The Appalachian National Scenic Trail, running 2,140 miles from Georgia to Maine, crosses the river and threads through Hanover before bending north and tackling the White Mountains. The New Hampshire portion of the trail totals 157 miles.</p>
<p>Back on NH 10, the road edges around the east side of campus before heading north. The scenic drive&#8217;s next leg runs 17 miles from here to Orford along the terraced riverbank. Past the Hanover Country Club golf course is the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, a research center on glaciers and polar conditions. The flat road passes a few homes and businesses before leaving town and re-entering the countryside. A few miles upstream is Hanover Boat Landing, a popular put-in spot for canoeists. The generally wide and placid Connecticut River offers superb canoeing on its flat water. There are lots of canoe rental places, some offering shuttle service between put-ins and take-outs on the river. As the tar road rolls north, good views unfold of the green Vermont hills to the west.</p>
<p>Almost 10 miles from Hanover, the drive edges the east side of Lyme Hill and enters the village of Lyme. This rural farming community is dominated by the narrow town green and its white-washed, wood-frame Lyme Congregational Church topped by a spire with a small octagonal dome. The church still has twenty-seven numbered and painted horse stalls that were assigned in bygone days to Sunday parishioners. Nearby is a cemetery filled with old gravestones. The town, settled in 1761 and named for England&#8217;s Lyme Regis, also offers the 1809 Lyme Inn and the excellent Lyme Country Store.</p>
<p>Past Lyme the highway passes Post Pond Preserve, a town recreation area with good canoeing and fishing. The road then crosses a low gap and follows Clay Brook north onto the flat river floodplain. Large cornfields and prosperous-looking farms with large barns spread across the fertile bottomland. The 154-foot-long Lyme-Edgell Covered Bridge crosses Clay Brook just west of the drive route. The bridge, built in 1885, was pre-constructed on Lyme Common and transported to the bridge site for assembly &#8212; a precursor of modern prefabrication. Farther north is 64-acre Reeds Marsh, a state wildlife area that offers excellent birding on a swampy bend of the wide river.</p>
<p>Next the road gently turns northeast and enters the lovely old town of Orford. Set among green hills on the river&#8217;s edge, Orford is one of those charming, unforgettable villages that travelers stumble across in rural New England. It boasts the Orford Street Historic District, a collection of stately white mansions dubbed Ridge Row, set back from the tree-lined highway. The houses, built in styles including Greek Revival and Federal, were erected between 1773 and 1839 for wealthy businessmen and professionals. They perch in a long row along a low ridge east of the road, fronted by wide, manicured lawns. The town also contains two churches &#8212; the 1854 Victorian Congregational Church and the Universalist Church. In the town center is the all-purpose Weeks General Store, established in 1804, and the Orford Social Library.</p>
<p>The scenic drive ends here in the town center where New Hampshire Highway 25A crosses the river to Fairlee, Vermont, and I-91. Fairlee is dominated by the Fairlee Palisades, a series of sheer precipices that offer sport for rock climbers. From I-91, travelers can easily go north to St. Johnsbury or south to White River Junction.</td>
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<td class="dataText" colspan="2" valign="top">Adapted from the <em>FalconGuide</em> <a href="http://www.globepequot.com/globepequot/index.cfm?fuseaction=customer.product&amp;product_code=1%2D56044%2D511%2D4">Scenic Driving New England</a> by Stewart Green.</td>
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		<title>Last Minute Cabin Availibility</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=9</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jul 2008 01:16:47 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Loch Lyme Lodge and Cabin News]]></category>

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		<title>Fishing in Lyme</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=8</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jul 2008 01:12:15 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Fishing]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Post Pond
From the center of Lyme, continue north on Route 10 past the cemetery. Post Pond is on the left after about 1 mile; you can’t miss it. The public entry point and boat launch is a left turn from the main road. This pond is loaded with trout, but they are often difficult to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Post Pond</strong></p>
<p>From the center of Lyme, continue north on Route 10 past the cemetery. Post Pond is on the left after about 1 mile; you can’t miss it. The public entry point and boat launch is a left turn from the main road. This pond is loaded with trout, but they are often difficult to take because of all the natural food available to them. Try worms through minnows; deep-running shiny spoons to flies. I have had my best luck with a Gray or Black Ghost, trolled deep for the early season. As the big ones go deeper, the yellow muddler, a large black gnat, and the woolly bear or bugger on a fast sinking line have worked well. When fish are on top, try something tiny. Also try something yellow and/or brown, and make a gentle presentation.</p>
<p>Don’t forget to try Trout Brook, the feeder to this pond.</p>
<p><span id="more-8"></span></p>
<p><strong>Grant Brook</strong></p>
<p>After heading north on Route 10 until Lyme, take the right fork at the church in the center of Lyme toward the Dartmouth Skiway. In about a half mile, you will see Grant Brook on your left. Obvious roadside pull-offs indicate heavy fishing activity on this picturesque stretch. It is stocked frequently; don’t hesitate to give it a try. There is a nice deep pool at the foot of a waterfall about a mile from the village. Take a dip here if the fishing is slow. The brook meanders near this road for miles. It can be fished all the way to the Appalachian Trail crossing on the Lyme-Dorchester Road at Lambert Ridge.</p>
<p>Be sure to follow along the unpaved road (Dorchester Road, the left fork), not the Canaan Turnpike that goes to the Skiway and beyond.<br />
<strong>Reservoir Pond and Cummins Pond</strong></p>
<p>After the fork, follow the Dorchester Road to Hinman Cabin and Reservoir Pond for bass, perch (small), and pickerel. Canoes are at the DOC cabin if you have rented it. If not, there is a small public launch site a quarter-mile after you first sight the pond. Leave room for others to launch their boats.</p>
<p>Continue past Hinman Cabin on the Dorchester Road, always staying on the well-traveled dirt road. In the proper vehicle, one can reach the boat launch at Cummins Pond. The road does get rough along the way, but there is a sign to the public access. It comes shortly after you have passed the Laffer Woodlands buildings, two miles in. Don’t try this spot after a spate of wet weather! You could get stuck without four-wheel drive.</p>
<p>A branch of the Mascoma River rises in this region. You cross the brooks on the way to both ponds. There are nice wild brookies in the flowage (a secret spot!). The local anglers get in here early after the season opens. If you decide to try, be prepared for a long walk out should you get mired. Be sure to take a pal or two along on this jaunt.</p>
<p><strong>Northeast of Lyme<br />
Lakes Catherine, Armington, and Tarleton</strong></p>
<p>About fifteen miles north of Lyme on Route 10, the town of Piermont is reached. Make a right turn onto Route 25C toward Pike and Warren. About seven miles along this road, at the height of land, one comes first to Lake Catherine — a small pond on the right-hand side of the road. It is good for pickerel. Park under the first lone pine.</p>
<p>Lake Tarleton is on the left side of the road. It is a large, deep lake, which supports sizable browns, lake trout of lesser stature, rainbow, smallmouth, and perch. The public access is on the left, just after the Boys Camp sign, about a quarter-mile further on. Unless you have a powered boat, the winds make it difficult to fish in a canoe during the mid-day hours — try early morning or in the evening.</p>
<p>Lake Armington is toward the east, but not visible from the road. The public access road is on the right, about a quarter-mile further east past the one to Tarleton. It is signed. Should you miss it, go to the Piermont Road and reverse direction on Route 25C. The first dirt road on the left is the access road. Look for wooden fence posts.</p>
<p>Try Armington for trout, bass, or perch. Fly, spin, or bait casting rods all work. If you rent Armington Cabin, there are canoes for your use. Fish the west side for bass, and try spinner baits. Troll for trout along the eastern shore, down to the point and back. Smelt or perch imitation streamers have worked for me. Crayfish and night crawlers will work in the summer.<br />
<strong>The Baker River</strong></p>
<p>At the north end of Route 25C, where it joins Route 25, you enter Warren. The great Moosilauke View Restaurant is located here, near the fire station and the famous rocket. The Baker River, originally called the Asquamchumauke, also flows through town. It begins running at the base of Jobildunc Ravine, flows past the Moosilauke Ravine Lodge, along Route 118, through Warren, along Route 25, and south to Plymouth. It is a great river. Pick spots where the river is visible and be adventuresome. Big fish have been caught here. Stop at the fish hatchery just south of Warren to see some of these fish on display.</p>
<p><em>Courtesy of Dartmouth.edu</em></p>
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		<title>Kiddies Playgrounds</title>
		<link>http://lochlymelodge.com/blog/?p=4</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 02:24:22 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Kids Playgrounds]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Playgrounds New Hamopshire Upper Valley]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Ok, so you are on vacation, and the kids have been in the car for a while, so you want to let them run around a bit. If only you knew where the hell to find a playground around here. They should have a site for that shouldn&#8217;t they&#8230; whats that? they do? You can [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ok, so you are on vacation, and the kids have been in the car for a while, so you want to let them run around a bit. If only you knew where the hell to find a playground around here. They should have a site for that shouldn&#8217;t they&#8230; whats that? they do? You can find that info here.  Please update with any playgrounds you find in the region.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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