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The park encompasses 127 acres (51 ha) in Dixville Township where New Hampshire State Route 26 passes through Dixville Notch (New England's terminology for mountain gap or pass). Within the park there are a scenic gorge, waterfalls on two mountain brooks, and hiking trails that lead to the summits of nearby mountains.
It begins at Notchland, near Crawford Notch State Park, and follows a series of trails to the hamlet of Fabyans, then over Cherry Mountain to the town of Jefferson, over Mount Waumbek, along the Kilkenny Ridge Trail to Stark, through Nash Stream Forest to Dixville Notch, and north to the Connecticut Lakes and finally the Canada–US border at ...
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The Hike: Notch Trail An easy 1.5-mile round-trip, this trail tours the best of the Badlands' otherworldly assortment of eroded rock and clay, splashed with a brilliant array of red, white, and black.
The notch lies within Dixville Notch State Park. (The term "notch" is the local equivalent of "pass" or "gap", and refers to a low place between mountains or mountain ranges.) Nearby Dixville Peak, at 3,482 feet (1,061 m), is the highest point in the township. New Hampshire Route 26 crosses the
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US Forest Service signs on hiking trails at tree line state that the mountain summit areas have "the worst weather in America". [10] The claim is also used by the observatory [11] near the summit of Mount Washington which once recorded a surface wind speed of 231 miles per hour (372 km/h). [12]
The final vote tally at Dixville Notch is a dramatic shift from the 2020 election, when Joe Biden swept the town’s vote, winning all 5 votes before taking the state by a 7% margin.