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Woodstock, Vermont (Population 3,200)
Green Mountain Playground By Melissa Wagenberg
No
strip malls, no billboards, no Starbucks, no sprawl—even the power
lines are underground in this quintessential New England village. Your
only risk of overstimulation comes from the surrounding Green
Mountains: Mount Tom and Mount Peg sandwich the town. By September, the
region's famous foliage is emerging, the air is crisp, and it's prime
time for the first two sports of the Woodstock Holy Trinity of fishing,
biking, and skiing.
Road riders have long flocked to Vermont's vast and traffic-free
network of intertwining country roads. But follow the knobby tracks out
of town and you'll likely stumble across a local secret. Curvy
singletracks traverse the forest, and primitive backroads connect
quaint villages. Rentals at the Biscuit Hill bike shop are $20 a day
(+1 802 457 3377; www.biscuithillbikes.com).
To absorb the shimmering foliage at a slower pace, drive to the nearby
section of the Appalachian Trail (off State Highway 12) for a rolling
hike through farmland and sugar maple stands (Green Mountain Club; +1
802 244 7037; www.greenmountainclub.org).
Anglers can join the local quest for rainbow trout beneath the covered
bridge by the Taftsville Country Store (fishing license, $15; worms,
$2.29; 800 854 0013 [U.S. and Canada only]); rookies should enlist the
help of a guide from Wilderness Trails ($135 for a half-day; +1 802 295
7620; www.scenesofvermont.com/wildernesstrails) and understand that fly-tying is as sacred as foliage here—Orvis was founded in nearby Manchester back in 1856.
Visitor Vitals: Woodstock is a 20-minute drive from New
Hampshire's Lebanon Municipal Airport, two and a half hours from
Boston, and five hours from New York City. The triathlon-addicted
owners of the Winslow House ($125 and up; 866 457 1820; www.thewinslowhousevt.com)
let pets board free in their heated barn. The original Woodstock Inn,
on the village green, opened in 1793; now it's a luxurious resort
property with the town's best health club ($210 and up; 800 448 7900
[U.S. and Canada only]; www.woodstockinn.com). The Jackson House Inn (+1 802 457 2065; www.jacksonhouse.com)
offers some of Vermont's finest dining. Locals get dreamy-eyed about
any of the 30 made-to-order sandwiches from the Woodstock Farmers'
Market (+1 802 457 3658; www.woodstockfarmersmarket.com).
Relocation Plan
Why Stay? A small-town lifestyle with big-city pleasures (a movie theater, gourmet food, boutiques).
$300,000 Buys: A three-bedroom, two-bath, 1,800-square-foot
(167-square-meter), circa-1800 clapboard cottage on 2.3 hilly acres
(about 1 hectare) with a small pond.
Job Market: Mom-and-pop shops and cottage industries (antiques,
homemade jam) that cater to tourists, plus Dartmouth College and
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in nearby Hanover, New Hampshire.
Meet the Locals: Liberal-minded ex-urbanites and A-list
environmentalists like Roger Payne, founder of the Ocean Alliance, who
would make the town's original resident conservationists—George Perkins
Marsh, author of Man and Nature, and forest advocate Frederick Billings—grin in their graves.
Winter Salve: Two nearby ski areas—Killington and the town hill,
Suicide Six—plus 40 miles (64 kilometers) of cross-country terrain
satisfy this historically snow-smitten lot. Powered by a Model T Ford
engine, the country's first ski tow rope started pulling.
Photograph by Natalie Stultz |