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Branbury State Park: Salisbury: Addison: West Central: 69 acres, center open seasonally Brighton State Park: Island Pond: Essex: Northeast Kingdom: Center open seasonally Burton Island State Park: St. Albans Bay: Franklin: Burlington Metro: 253 acres, accessible only by boat, park and center open seasonally Button Bay State Park: Vergennes ...
The Huntington Gap Wildlife Management Area is approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Vermont Route 17 in Chittenden and Washington counties. The area is wholly contained within Camel's Hump Forest Reserve. It is bordered by Camel's Hump State Park on the north, south, and west. Its far western boundary extends to Lewis Creek Wildlife ...
Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge was established in 1997 to conserve, protect and enhance the abundance and diversity of native plant, fish and wildlife species and the ecosystems on which they depend throughout the 7,200,000-acre (29,000 km 2) Connecticut River watershed.
Lake Parker (Vermont) Lake Rescue (Vermont) Lake Saint Catherine (Vermont) Lake Willoughby; Lincoln Peak (Vermont) List of United States Coast Guard stations; List of ski areas and resorts in the United States; Ludlow Mountain; Magic Mountain Ski Area; McIndoes Reservoir; Mendon Peak (Vermont) Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge; Moore Dam ...
The park and wildlife management area lie within a rare, freshwater coastal barrier environment that consists of beaches, sand dunes, embayments and marshes. The wildlife management area is also the Lakeview Marsh and Barrier Beach National Natural Landmark , which was cited in 1973 as "One of the best and most extensive marshlands that lie in ...
The White Rocks National Recreation Area was created by the Vermont Wilderness Act of 1984. [1] On January 17, 2006 President George W. Bush signed Pub. L. 110–1 (text) (PDF) , which renamed the park to the Robert T. Stafford White Rocks National Recreation Area, after Robert Stafford , former Governor of Vermont , United States ...
The George D. Aiken Wilderness is one of eight wilderness areas in the Green Mountain National Forest in the U.S. state of Vermont.The wilderness area, created by the Vermont Wilderness Act of 1984, [2] is named in honor of George Aiken (1892–1984), former U.S. Senator from Vermont who advocated for the passage of the Eastern Wilderness Areas Act of 1975. [3]
The wilderness area was created by the Eastern Wilderness Areas Act of 1975, [2] which makes it one of the oldest wilderness areas in the state. The area was expanded by both the Vermont Wilderness Act of 1984 and the New England Wilderness Act of 2006. [3] [4] The Lye Brook Wilderness consists of 18,122 acres (7,334 ha) northwest of Stratton ...