Attractions

  • Gifford Woods State Park

    Address:
    Gifford Woods State Park, Gifford Woods Access, Killington, VT, USA .

    Gifford Woods State Park is a state park located at the base of Pico Peak in Killington, Vermont. The wooded park provides camping, picnic, and fishing facilities, and has hiking trails, including a portion of the Appalachian Trail. It preserves an area of old-growth forest that has been designated a National Natural Landmark, and is accessible via an interpretive trail. The park was established in 1931. Part of it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, for facilities developed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s.

     

    Photo By: Paul Carney / Courtesy State of Vt.

  • Thundering Falls

    Address:
    Thundering Brook Falls Trail, River Road, Killington, VT, USA .

    Thundering Falls is said to be the sixth tallest waterfall in Vermont. It is part of Kent Brook which flows out of Kent Pond just north of where the AT and the Long Trail split. At high water it is a magnificent cascade as the stream tumbles 140 feet through a steep and narrow cataract. The falls are also the site of a historic mill powered by the energy of the falling water.

  • Killington Adventure Center

    Address:
    3861 Killington Rd, Killington, VT 05751 .

    Summer Activities at Killington Resort

    Beast Mountain Coaster
    Zip Line Racer
    Skye Ropes Course
    The Soaring Eagle
    Trampoline Jump
    Amaze'n Maze
    Downpour Derby
    Jump Tower
    Alpine Tubing

  • Paramount Theatre

    Address:
    30 E Center St, Rutland, VT 05701, USA .

    Theatre and the Arts

    Rutland’s historic Paramount Theatre is open year-round and has attracted the likes of bluegrass favorites Alison Krauss and Jerry Douglas, plays by Neil Simon, family favorites like Pinocchio and Peter Pan, and just about everything in between. 802-775-0570

  • Pico Ski Area

    Address:
    73 Alpine Drive Mendon, Vt. 05751 .

     57 trails, 7 lifts and 19 miles of terrain is enough to keep even the most avid skier or rider busy

  • Killington Ski Resort

    Address:
    3861 Killington Rd, Killington, VT 05751 .

    Killington Mountain Resort & Ski Area is a ski resort in Rutland County, Vermont, United States, near the town of Killington. It is the largest ski area in the eastern U.S., and has the largest vertical drop in New England at 3,050 feet.  "Beast of the East."

  • Green Mountain Golf Course

    Address:
    476 Barrows Towne Rd, Killington, VT 05751, USA .

    “Best Public Golf Course in Vermont”

    Consistently ranked “Best Public Golf Course In Vermont” by Golf Digest, Green Mountain National welcomes golfers of all levels.

    Vermont golf has a lot to offer it’s residents and visiting guests and Green Mountain National is a must play for every golfer.

     

    Green Mountain National - The Best of Vermont Golf » Green Mountain National Golf Club (gmngc.com)

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  • Pond Hill Ranch Rodeo's & Trail Rides

    Address:
    1683 Pond Hill Rd, Castleton, VT 05735, USA .

    Horses@pondhillranch.com

    Spring / Summer 2021!

    Rodeo's we are planning to start on July 3

    Trail Rides will begin in May

     

     

  • Calvin Coolidge Historic Site

    Address:
    3780 VT-100A, Plymouth, VT 05056 .

    The Coolidge Homestead, also known as Calvin Coolidge Homestead District or President Calvin Coolidge State Historical Site, was the childhood home of the 30th President of the United States, Calvin Coolidge and the place where he took the presidential oath of office. Located in Plymouth Notch, Vermont, Coolidge lived there from age four in 1876 to 1887, when he departed for Black River Academy for education.

  • Killington Golf Coarse

    Address:
    227 E Mountain Rd, Killington, VT 05751, USA .

    Killington Resort's golf course is open to the public from May 23 through October 12, 2020. Designed by Geoffrey Cornish, the course takes full advantage of unique mountain terrain, and it shows. Snowmelt streams, a 2,000’ elevation and signature vistas set the scene.

  • Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park

    Address:
    54 Elm St, Woodstock, VT 05091, USA .

    Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park is a United States National Historical Park in Woodstock, Vermont. The park preserves the site where Frederick Billings established a managed forest and a progressive dairy farm. The name honors Billings and the other owners of the property: George Perkins Marsh, Mary Montagu Billings French, Laurance Rockefeller, and Mary French Rockefeller. The Rockefellers transferred the property to the federal government in 1992. It is the only unit of the United States National Park System in Vermont.

  • Silver Lake State Park

    Address:
    20 State Park Beach Rd, Barnard, VT 05031 .

    Silver Lake State Park is a 35-acre state park located near Barnard, Vermont. It is situated on the northern shoreline of 84-acre Silver Lake and offers swimming, picnic areas and camping. Other activities include fishing, paddling and winter sports.

     

     

    Photo By: Nate McKeen / Courtesy state of Vt.

  • Long Trail Brewing Company Inc

    Address:
    5520 U.S. 4, Bridgewater Corners, VT 05035, USA .

    www.longtrail.com

    Specialties

    Our riverside brewery and brew pub offers a seasonally rotating pub menu utilizing locally-sourced ingredients and beer fresh from the source. Don't miss out on our summer music series beginning every Thursday from July to October. Our brewers have been busy! Look for weekly pilot brews from our farmhouse pilot brewery all summer, including our all new Summer Fruit Farm Series. Please note: Due to the volume of private events, our summertime hours are subject to change. Follow our Facebook, Instagram and Twitter channels for the most up-to-date information.

    History

    Established in 1989.

    The first batch of Long Trail Ale rolled off the line in 1989. Back then the brewery--known as the Mountain Brewers--was a modest brew house tucked into the basement of the Old Woolen Mill in Bridgewater Corners, with the goal to brew an affordable, American-made alternative to the pricey German and English exports that filled the shelves. At the time, the craft brewing industry in America was on the rise and Vermont was better known for maple syrup than beer. In 1989, Long Trail Ale hit the taps at local watering holes blazing the trail for Vermont's craft brewing industry. With the Mountain Brewers leading the pack, Long Trail Ale slowly weaved its way into the Green Mountain landscape--becoming as much a Vermont tradition as the hiking trail itself. Commonly referred to as "the Long Trail guys," we eventually changed our name. When we outgrew the 8,000 barrel-a-year system in the Old Mill basement in 1995, we decided to take a hike on up the road to where we reside today.

     

    Photos Courtesy: Long Trail Brewing Co.

  • Indian Stones

    Address:
    VT-106, Perkinsville, VT, USA .

    The Indian Stones are a pair of historic markers on Vermont Route 106 in Reading, Vermont. Erected in 1799 in commemoration of a 1754 Native American raid, they are the oldest commemorative markers in the state, and among the oldest in the United States. They were mounted in a single granite slab in 1918, and were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

  • Wilsons Castle

    Address:
    Wilson Castle, W Proctor Rd, Proctor, VT, USA .

    Wilson Castle is a nineteenth-century estate located at Proctor in the U.S. state of Vermont. The house was built in 1867 in a mix of nineteenth-century architectural styles including Dutch neo-renaissance, Scottish baronial, Queen Anne, and Romanesque Revival. It is now operated as a house museum and is open late May until late October for an admission fee.

  • Kent Pond

    Address:
    M5FV+R4 Killington, Vermont, USA .

    Park Fishing Tips

    Try fishing for trout from the dam breast on the pond’s eastern shore, or in Kent Brook on the west side of the pond. Kent Pond is stocked with trout each spring, and anglers are typically most successful in targeting stocked fish on the east side of the pond.

    Anglers may encounter native trout as they work their way up Kent Brook. Typical trout offerings such as a drifted worm—with or without a bobber, small spinners or flies, can be effective.

    For targeting Kent Pond’s bass try using spinners, jigs or soft plastic lures. There is a slot limit on Kent Pond bass, which requires all fish between 10 and 12 inches to be released. The daily limit of bass is ten, with only one being over 12 inches. To catch perch and sunfish, try using small spinners, tube jigs or grubs.