Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of lakes in Vermont. Swimming, fishing, and/or boating are permitted in some of these lakes, but not all. The Vermont Department of Health and Department of Environmental Conservation establish the limits of Escherichia coli allowed before swimming is permitted.
Lake Bomoseen nestles in a valley surrounded by some of the lower hills on the western side of the range. The Taconics are the slate-producing region of Vermont, and the area's history parallels the rise and fall of Vermont's slate industry. [citation needed] Bomoseen State Park has several quarry holes and adjacent colorful slate rubble piles.
Deerfield River Swimming in the Deerfield River in Shelburne Falls. Deerfield River is a river that runs for 76 miles (122 km) [1] from southern Vermont through northwestern Massachusetts to the Connecticut River. The Deerfield River was historically influential in the settlement of western Franklin County, Massachusetts, and its namesake town.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Activities includes boating, swimming, camping, fishing, hiking, bicycling, picnicking, wildlife watching and winter sports. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The Glen Lake Trail connects the Half Moon campground (52 tent/RV sites, 5 cabins and 11 lean-to sites) with the Bomoseen campground (66 campsites including 10 lean-tos.
A 1977 Upstate story about local “swimming holes” mentioned Mendon Ponds. “The swimming area…reaches a depth of 15 feet, has a slow-pitched sandy bottom, and a sandy beach for idle sunning ...
South Yuba River – Hoyts Crossing is an area of swimming holes on the South Yuba; Riverside County. Anahata Springs Spa and Retreat near Palm Springs, a clothing-optional zen spa and retreat; Desert Sun Resort [98] in Palm Springs; Glen Eden Nudist Resort in Corona, membership-only naturist club; Living Waters Spa in Desert Hot Springs [99]
Emerald Lake State Park is a 430-acre (170 ha) state park in the town of Dorset, Vermont, United States, 3 miles (5 km) north of the village of East Dorset, the park's mailing address. It is the home of 20-acre (8.1 ha) Emerald Lake, called such because of its emerald color .