P
ROMOTING TRAILS, CONNECTING COMMUNITIES

    
     P.O. Box 1215, Norwich, VT 05055. Tel (802)649-9075

   About Us | Become a Member

   Click for our latest newsletter.

Trails

Groups

Maps

Events

Resources

Projects

About UVTA

 

 

Support the
Upper Valley Trails Alliance
Click Images Below
Donate Now Through Network for Good

Support Upper Valley Trails Alliance by Shopping at Giveline
Giveline is an online store created for the community-minded shopper, offering a huge variety of useful products ranging from books and music to housewares and electronics. 
Every purchase generates a substantial donation to
support Upper Valley Trails Alliance programs, averaging 16% of store sales.

News

Trail of the Month
Saturday, April 26, 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Mount Ascutney Road

   Join the Upper Valley Trails Alliance and our Trail of the Month partner, Sierra Club, for a spring hike up Mount Ascutney Road.
    It's a great place to take in some great views of the Connecticut River Valley without impacting area trails during mud season.
   Directions: I-91 to Exit 8, east on Rte. 133 to Rte. 5 North for 2 miles towards Windsor. Turn left onto route 44A, continue for approx. 1 mile, parking in the pull off located across from the State Park.
  Contact John Taylor for details or to carpool from Lebanon.
  Distance to the upper parking lot on paved surface (possibly snow covered in upper elevations) is 3.5 miles. Road slopes moderate

TRAIL WORKERS NEEDED
Wright's Mountain Trails
Bradford, Vermont
Click Here for Spring Dates and Details

Trails Connect – Creating a Regional Trail System
was held on 3/27/08 and was a great success with over 100 people in attendance. Event flyer

Winter Weekends
WinterFest
held January 13, 2008
Skate-athon held January 20, 2008 Event photos

Thank you to everyone that helped out at the Lake Morey Winter Weekends! Volunteers’ great energy and support made the events a huge success. We hope to see you all out on the ice!

Passport to Winter Fun
Click here to learn more about the Passport to Winter Fun
for 2008 program. Developed by the Upper Valley Trails Alliance, funded by grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Active Living by Design program, the Byrne Foundation, the Wal-Mart Foundation, the Ottauquechee Health Foundation, and the Vermont Teddy Bear Company.



The 2008 Passport to Winter Fun!

The Passport to Winter Fun is a program created by the Upper Valley Trails Alliance (UVTA) that is designed to encourage children and their families to become more active outdoors during the winter months. The Passport is an 18-page booklet containing a 30-step trail. Participants move one step further along the trail each day they engage in 60 minutes or more of physical activity outdoors. In addition to the trail, the Passport provides a list of ideas for winter enjoyment, a means to record achieving each new step through travel diary entries and drawings, and a series of incentives that encourage children and families to regularly spend an hour or more outside enjoying the winter. The 2008 Passport to Winter Fun program in the Upper Valley will run from mid-January to the beginning of March.

Click Here to view more about Passport
Click Here for Grand Prize Raffle Prizes!




Tour de Taste: A Pedaling Picnic



Click Here for Tour de Taste map, menu & event details


Enjoying the Tour de Taste Stop at Fairlee Green

   Thank you to all participants, supporters and volunteers for making our first ever Tour de Taste a wonderful and tasty success. On the afternoon of Sunday, September 9, over a hundred people enjoyed traveling at their own pace on a 16 mile scenic bicycle ride - over rolling hills and along the picturesque Connecticut River with several "munch" stops along the way to sample local produce and other special foods on this progressive picnic.


"Go Walking! A Guide to Trails in the Upper Valley"

UVTA's trail guide is available in local bookstores and from the UTVA Office for $10 to individuals. "Go Walking!: A Guide to Walking in the Heart of the Upper Valley" contains routes in the towns of Hanover, Hartford, Lebanon and Norwich, with a focus on easy to moderate trails for the less experienced trail user. The guide was produced as part of Upper Valley Trails for Life, our ongoing initiative to promote active living in the region through the use of trails.

Each of the over 20 trails listed in the guide features in-depth directions, an easy-to-read map, information on who owns and maintains the trail, and suggestions for extending the route. On top of the routes themselves, the guide also includes contact information for local trail groups, a log to track your activity, information on indoor walking, and tips on everything from preparing for weather conditions to working activity into your daily routine.

"Go Walking!" is available from the UTVA Office for $10 to help cover printing costs, though some of the maps can be downloaded for free (.pdf format) from the Trails section of the UVTA webpage. The guide is also offered to patients as part of DHMC's Prescription Walking Program. Some of the maps (currently in earlier versions) can be downloaded for free (.pdf format) from the Trails section of the UVTA webpage.

Upper Valley Trails for Life is funded in part by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Active Living by Design program. For more information on active living, click here, or see the previous news article on the UVTA's grant. For specific tips on how to work activity into your daily routine, click here.


Wild Ice Skating Trails

The Upper Valley Trails Alliance collaborated with local skating enthusiasts to keep two lake skating trails open over the winter of 2006-07. Thanks to a grant from the Davis Conservation Foundation, the Lake Morey Skating Trail (up to 2 ½ miles long) in Fairlee and Deweys Pond (1 mile loop) in Quechee were open for skaters to enjoy. If you are interested in receiving ice condition updates, e-mail Jamie@nordicskater.com to be included on their listserve. Skate rentals: Nordic Skater, Norwich www.nordicskater.com
Wilderness Trails, Quechee www.scenesofvermont.com/wildernesstrai ls


UVTA Supports Bicycle and Pedestrian Initiatives

The Hanover Community Action Plan Workshops, a series of workshops that took place between March 2005 and January 2006, brought together residents of northwest Hanover to discuss and rate the "walkability" and "bikeability" of several proposals for the Lyme Road ("Dresden") Village Center (the neighborhood surrounding the Richmond and Ray Schools). The outcome of the workshops will be a prioritized list of actions that the community can take to improve walking and biking in the area.

The workshops were organized by UVTA together with a volunteer committee of community members, the Town of Hanover, the National Park Service's Rivers & Trails Program, and NH Celebrate Wellness' Livable, Walkable Communities program.

UVTA also worked with the City of Lebanon to help plan and host the Lebanon Community Trails Forum, a facilitated public forum about the future of trails, trail connections, and bicycle, wheelchair and pedestrian pathways throughout the City.Close to 100 people attended the three-and-a-half hour evening session on March 2 to generate ideas and come up with an action plan which will inform the City's master plan for trails.

UVTA continues to work with both communities on walkability and bikeability as part of Upper Valley Trails for Life, which seeks to increase opportunities for Upper Valley residents to incorporate physical activity into their daily lives. Trails for Life is is one of 25 initiatives in the country funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Active Living By Design Program.


'Trailbuilder' Email List

UVTA receives large amounts of information on opportunities and resources for people who build and maintain trails, such as representatives of local or regional trail organizations, community trails committees or conservation commissions, planners, and regular volunteers. However, due to the wide-ranging interests of the current UVTA email list, this information is not sent out to avoid congesting inboxes with unwanted mail. Therefore, a separate 'Trailbuilder' email list is being compiled to disseminate trail-specific information. If you are interested in joining this list, send an email to Trails@Valley.net. There is no obligation to join this new list, nor will joining it affect your status on UVTA's current email list.

.

Prescription Walking Program Now Underway

In an effort to increase awareness about the importance of physical activity as part of Upper Valley Trails for Life, UVTA, in association with Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, has initiated a perscription walking program. Clinicians at DHMC have now been trained to write perscriptions for a set amount of physical activity to sedentary patients.

Posters, brochures, trail guides and pedometers provided by UVTA are now available in the exam rooms of DHMC, to further encourage and motivate inactive patients, while providing them tips to get going, and ways to track their progress.

Additionally, many medical students have volunteered to serve as "coaches" in this program, offering advice and support to individual patients, as well as leading easy hikes and other activites geared toward those just starting to increase their activity level.

UVTA and DHMC's prescription walking program has gained nationwide media attention thanks to an AP report out of Concord, NH. The story has been reproduced across the country, in such notable papers as USA Today and the San Francisco Chronicle. A search on Google News reveals at least 93 versions of the story online. For the full text from USA Today, click here

For additional coverage, click here to read the Valley News report, and click here to see the DHMC Community News story (2.7 MB - download may take a few minutes).

   
 

 

Notable Grants and Awards

     In late 2003, the Upper Valley Trails Alliance (UVTA) received a five-year grant of $200,000 from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to support "Upper Valley Trails for Life," a local multidisciplinary partnership and program developed to increase "active living" through the use of trails and walking/biking routes. [read more]

In 2005, L.L. Bean gave $25,000 to the Upper Valley Trails Alliance in support of local trail projects in connection with the opening of its new retail store in West Lebanon. The gift was used, in collaboration with the Lebanon Recreation & Parks Department and the Lebanon Conservation Commission, to install informational kiosks at trailheads on conservation lands in Lebanon to help users find trails and to educate them about wise and sustainable trail use. In addition, UVTA allocated part of the gift to a new Trail Stewardship Fund to support projects of local grassroots trail organizations. 


Also in 2005, the Upper Valley Trails for Life partnership, in which UVTA is the lead organization, received the "Community of Excellence" Award in May at the annual meeting of Active Living by Design grantees in Chapel Hill, NC. The award recognizes Trails for Life as the top project among the 25 grantees from around the country during the first year of the five-year grant cycle funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

 

Trail Groups Online

     The Upper Valley Trails Alliance lists over 200 organizations on this website. You can find these organizations by town in which they are active, or by the type of activity that they promote. Of the 200, some two-dozen are dues-paying organizational members of UVTA. For a complete list of these organizational and more information on them, click here.

Support Our Sponsors

Please support and thank the Upper Valley businesses who are investing in our quality of life and the trail system of the Upper Valley.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


site maintained by mediasolutionsltd.com

   

Last updated 4-08.