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48 Salmon Hole Ln. Jamaica State Park is a 772-acre state park in Jamaica, Vermont, on the shore of the West River. Activities includes camping, swimming, boating, river fishing, hiking, picnicking, mountain biking, wildlife watching, and winter sports. [1]
Harriman Dam is a hydroelectric dam in Windham County, Vermont in the town of Whitingham. The water from the dam flows through a penstock to a power generation plant in the adjacent town of Readsboro. The dam was built in 1923 by the New England Power Company. [1] Some 215 feet (66 m) high and 1,250 feet (380 m) long as its crest, it is one of ...
The location of the State of Vermont in the United States of America. Topographic map of Vermont. There are approximately 92 species of fish that have been recorded in the U.S. State of Vermont. 11 of which are introduced. [1] The main source for this list is Fishes of Vermont, a list created by the Vermont Fish & Wildlife. [2]
Seymour Lake is located in the town of Morgan in Orleans County, Vermont, an area known as the Northeast Kingdom. The lake was named for Israel Seymour, one of the original grantees. Natives called it Namagonic ("salmon trout spearing place"). [1] The lake is on a tributary of the Clyde River in Orleans County, Vermont.
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. It is the Connecticut River's second-longest tributary in ...
Max. depth. 129 ft (39 m) Echo Lake is located in the town of Charleston in Orleans County, Vermont within a region known as the Northeast Kingdom. It is one of only two deep, cold, and oligotrophic lakes in the Clyde River system, the other being nearby Lake Seymour. [1] The first Surveyor General of Vermont, Whitelaw, gave it the name of Echo ...
Camel's Hump State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of Vermont. [1] The park straddles the northern Green Mountains in an area bounded by Vermont Route 17 on the south and the Winooski River on the north. As of 2017, the park covered a total of 21,224 acres (8,589 ha), [2] making it the largest state park in Vermont.
Huntington Gap Wildlife Management Area is a wildlife management area in the U.S. state of Vermont. It consists of 1,602 acres (648 ha) in the towns of Huntington, Buels Gore, and Fayston. The area is owned by the State of Vermont and administered by the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department. [2]