News Archive
Land conserved in Canaan, VT, protecting access to the Connecticut River
Monday, February 6th, 2012
Thanks to support from the Tillotson Foundation, Davis Foundation, Plum Creek, the Upper Connecticut Mitigation and Enhancement Fund, and individual donors, the VRC has purchased a parcel in Canaan, Vermont, which serves as an important boat launch in the area. For years, anglers and paddlers have been parking illegally on this privately owned land, causing tensions and disputes between recreationalists and the landowner. The Vermont River Conservancy is now developing a plan for municipal site ownership and future site improvements including a parking lot for paddlers and snowmobile users, an official boat launch, a kiosk that contains a map and site etiquette expectations, and a riparian buffer planted with native species to provide wildlife habitat and to protect water quality.

VRC secures funding for the Connecticut River Paddlers’ Trail
Monday, February 6th, 2012
With 2012 funding secured from the Tillotson Foundation and Upper Connecticut River Mitigation and Enhancement Fund, the Vermont River Conservancy will continue developing the Connecticut River Paddlers’ Trail. With these funds we are protecting and improving boat launch areas, primitive campsites, and fishing holes along the Upper Connecticut River, and developing a volunteer campsite stewardship program. The VRC continues to facilitate a collaborative approach to managing the paddlers’ trail, which is a shared effort bringing together over 19 partner organizations.
Help us conserve river access in Enosburg Falls
Monday, February 6th, 2012
A great opportunity has arisen to enhance river access to the Missisquoi River in Enosburg Falls. Nine acres of river-front land is available for purchase to create a town-owned, permanently conserved river access park just south of the falls, including two upper lots for Habitat for Humanity affordable housing. With your help, the Village of Enosburg Falls and the Vermont River Conservancy can transform a currently posted property into a five acre public park with 1,580 linear feet of river frontage and two Habitat for Humanity building sites.

As of February 2, 2012, with help from the Vermont Housing and Conservation Board, the Fields Pond Foundation and private donors, we have already raised $126,865 of the $189,000 necessary for protecting this public access. With your help we can raise the remaining $62,135 by April 15, 2012. Several large donations and many small donations will get us to our goal.
This project will create many “wins” for the community, including:
- Protecting permanent public access to the Missisquoi River;
- Restoring fishing access to long-time small mouth bass habitat and to waters stocked with Trophy Trout since 2007;
- Restoring permanent access to a Northern Forest Canoe Trail put-in and take-out that will be safer and more attractive to paddlers, thus increasing river tourism and associated community benefits;
- Creating a permanent public park a stone’s throw from downtown for all to enjoy;

- Creating two single-family affordable housing units for the Enosburg Falls community;
- Adding property tax revenue for the Village from the creation of two Habitat for Humanity homes.
Please donate today to help make this project a success. A Healthy and Vibrant Missisquoi River Community depends on protecting the special places that we know and love, and keeping them public treasures forever. Your support is urgently needed to reach our goal by April 15th, 2012. Every gift is important.
Match offered: Now is the Time to Give!
Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011
As a nonprofit organization, the Vermont River Conservancy relies on the financial support of many individuals, businesses, foundations and governmental agencies so that it can continue to protect important lands along the waters of Vermont. Every contribution, no matter what form it takes, is critical to our conservation work.
You can now make your gift to the Vermont River Conservancy go twice as far, because an anonymous donor will match all contributions to the VRC 2011 Appeal to help us protect Vermont’s waters and keep them open for public use.
It’s simple:
• If you are a previous donor to VRC, the donor will match dollar-for-dollar any amount above your previous donation. If you double your most recent contribution, the donor will match the entire amount of your contribution! Contact us to find out your most recent contribution amount.
• If you are a new donor, the donor will match your entire contribution.
This extremely generous offer will make our work on behalf of Vermont rivers and shorelines and your contribution to VRC work harder and go farther than ever.
And it couldn’t come at a better time. In the wake of Tropical Storm Irene’s devastation, Vermonters, in and out of government, are taking a long look at the state of our rivers. Now is a crucial time to speak up for rivers, river corridors and floodplain policy.
New Campsites and Access Points Established Along the Connecticut River
Tuesday, November 15th, 2011
Paddlers heading down the beautiful and wild Upper Connecticut River have four new riverbank campsites and one new boat access to enjoy, thanks to efforts spearheaded by the Vermont River Conservancy (VRC) and several other organizations working to collaboratively develop the Connecticut River Paddlers’ Trail.
The Paddlers’ Trail links more than 35 primitive campsites between the Connecticut River’s headwaters in northern New Hampshire south to the Massachusetts border. Since 2009 the VRC has been facilitating a joint effort with more than 20 regional partners to develop and manage the Paddlers’ Trail. For more information about these campsites, or to sign up as a volunteer site steward, go to www.connecticutriverpaddlerstrail.org.
In addition to the VRC, organizations helping to develop these campsites and access points included the Vermont Land Trust, NorthWoods Stewardship Center, TransCanada Hydro Northeast, and Trout Unlimited, with support from the Tillotson Foundation, Vermont Fish and Wildlife, the Plum Creek Foundation, and the Upper Connecticut River Mitigation and Enhancement Fund.
The new sites, from north to south along the river are:
Holbrook Point Campsite, Lemington, VT: On land conserved by the VRC, this beautiful campsite is situated under a canopy of silver maples on the edge of a floodplain forest. It is in a bend in the river, about 1.3 miles south of the Colebrook, NH, bridge, about a day’s paddle from Canaan, Vermont.
Lemington River Access, Lemington, VT: VRC worked with the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources and area fishing guides to develop a new river access on land owned by Plum Creek Timber Co. A NorthWoods Conservation Corps team worked with interns from Trout Unlimited to build a set of river access stairs, an information kiosk, way-finding signage and a ramp suitable for use by drift boats. Drift boats, popular for fishing the Connecticut, are heavier than canoes and more difficult to launch. The site is just south of the Columbia, NH, covered bridge.

Stevenson Campsite, Monroe, NH: VRC built the site on land opened to the public by the generosity of a farming family on a shady river terrace situated on the New Hampshire side of the river. The site is across from the north end of Stevens Island, 1.5 miles south of the Connecticut’s confluence with the Passumpsic River. It has a picnic table, box privy, register box and way-finding signage to help paddlers locate the site from the river. It was built with a grant from Transcanada Hydro Northeast, operators of power dams on the nearby Moore and Comerford reservoirs.
Scott Devlin Memorial Campsite, Maidstone, VT: Working with the Vermont Land Trust, VRC constructed a site on the farm of Scott and Heather Lefoll. Its development was incorporated into a conservation easement. Seven volunteers built and installed access stairs, a picnic table, a fire ring, way-finding signage, a sign-in register, and a composting privy. It is named in honor of Scott Devlin, a professional pilot and aircraft builder, who loved the outdoors and died at 33 in an air crash.
Dalton Primitive Campsite, Dalton NH: Developed by TransCanada Hydro Northeast, this new paddler campsite is in a secluded bay on the north end of Moore Reservoir. It includes several tent platforms.
Moore Reservoir Tailrace Primitive Campsite, Littleton, NH: Also developed by TransCanada Hydro Northeast, this paddler campsite is situated on river left, just downstream of Moore Reservoir. It includes several tent platforms nestled below a stand of red pines.
9/18 (date change) & 9/24 CT River Paddlers’ Trail Work Trips
Wednesday, August 10th, 2011
Please join us for campsite construction, lunch and paddling on the Connecticut River. The Vermont River Conservancy is developing new campsites as part of the Connecticut River Paddlers’ Trail, a series of primitive campsites and river access points spanning 240 miles from the river’s headwaters to the Massachusetts border, and we need your help!
Date Change due to Hurricane Irene: Volunteer Sunday, September 18th to help build and install a picnic table, small box privy, register box and access signage at a newly designated campsite in Monroe, New Hampshire.
Volunteer Saturday, September 24th to construct a two-bin mouldering privy at a campsite in Maidstone, Vermont.
Lunch will be provided for both workdays. After the work party, join us paddling to explore these scenic stretches of the river.
For more information and to register, please contact Noah Pollock at noah.pollock (AT) gmail.com or (802) 540-0319.
Canaan Connecticut River Access Project
Tuesday, April 12th, 2011
Thanks to support from the Tillotson Foundation, Davis Foundation, Plum Creek, the Upper Connecticut Mitigation and Enhancement Fund, and individual donors, the VRC has purchased a parcel in Canaan, Vermont. Anglers and paddlers have instead been parking illegally on this privately owned land, causing increased tensions and disputes between recreationists and the landowner. The VRC is now working to developing a plan for municipal site ownership and to completion site improvements.
This spring, VRC is seeking to convey the parcel to the town of Canaan and retain a conservation easement for public access. VRC plans to construct a parking lot for paddlers and snowmobile users, an official boat launch, and a kiosk that contains a map and site etiquette expectations this summer. We also plan to create a riparian buffer of native species, providing wildlife habitat and protecting water quality.
Consider supporting this project. Your contributions will be greatly appreciated! All supporters will be acknowledged in the media, online, at a kiosk installed at the access, and in other ways, unless you indicate otherwise. Donations are accepted online or by mail.
Another Paddlers’ Trail Campsite on the Upper Connecticut River
Friday, February 25th, 2011
Located in Brunswick on the Upper Connecticut River, the Maine Central Railroad Trestle Campsite is now permanently protected for public access. The easement on this parcel was donated to VRC by Mary and Bruce Sloat. Located along the Northern Forest Canoe Trail, this campsite, improved with a picnic table and outhouse, looks out on a beautiful granite bridge abutment situated in the middle of the river channel. Accessible only from the river, the campsite is located about seven miles south of the DeBanville Landing in Bloomfield.

Winooski River Access Parcel Conserved
Thursday, February 3rd, 2011
A Winooski River access parcel in Moretown, just downstream of the confluence of the Mad River, was acquired for permanent conservation at the end of January, 2011. Jonathan Larsen of Moretown generously gave the property to VRC, and we are now (February 2011) in the process of preparing a conservation easement, deed and other documents to transfer the property to the town and, simultaneously, to make access improvements, including a trail and directional signage. We hope to have the site open for the coming paddling season. This 4.25-acre parcel, situated between Route 2 and the Winooski River, just west of the new Route 2 bridge crossing the Winooski, is part of a growing Winooski River Paddlers’ Trail initiative.

New VRC Project Recognized by Willem Lange
Wednesday, January 26th, 2011
In his weekly Times Argus column, Willem Lange, a well-known Vermont writer, storyteller and avid paddler and hiker, recently recognized VRC’s current work to conserve a small parcel on the Kingsbury Branch in East Montpelier as well as on-going conservation of “traditional swimming holes, waterfalls, picturesque gorges, small-craft access points and wild riparian habitats all over the state”. Thanks to Willem for his recognition of the Kingsbury Branch and other VRC projects. We have included a portion of his column here.
…..For us members of the Geriatric Society, anticipating a couple of weeks in canoes up on the Arctic coast, it’s a time of e-mails (the current default mode of communication with folks north of 60 degrees) — canoe renters, charter pilots, satellite phone companies — and reflecting how much things have changed since the old days when messages traveled by snowshoe couriers in the winter and canoe brigades in the summer.
If I can talk her into it, Mother and I will take a couple of days in May, between the snow and black fly season (neither of which is for her an attractive feature of northern life) and paddle and camp along a local river: Connecticut, Missisquoi or Winooski. They’re all beautiful rivers; they all have native names; and they have different geological histories.
Whichever one we choose to paddle, we’ll be benefiting from the support and labor of at least a dozen organizations and hundreds of volunteers who monitor, clean and maintain the rivers for recreational users.
The Connecticut now boasts campsites for river travelers all the way from the headwaters to beyond the Massachusetts border; the Missisquoi is part of the already famous Northern Forest Canoe Trail, which stretches from Old Forge, N.Y., to Fort Kent, Maine; and the Winooski falls under the purview of the Friends of the Winooski, which runs an annual six-day trip down that river, featuring history — and natural science-related lectures along the way.
There’s one great organization that has its fingers in, if you will, all three of those pies: the Vermont River Conservancy. Its website shows the number of locations it’s already managed to conserve and protect from development — traditional swimming holes and waterfalls, picturesque gorges, small-craft access points and wild riparian habitats all over the state.
At the moment the conservancy is hoping to save a five-acre parcel of overgrown streamside land on the Kingsbury Branch of the Winooski River in East Montpelier. Rising in a complex of ponds and eskers near Woodbury, the tiny Kingsbury Branch meanders languidly through postglacial sandbanks to a confluence with the main river just below the desired property.
Public access there would open to canoeists and kayakers about 30 miles of paddling on both branches. The conservancy would build a launch site and off-the-road parking for boaters, anglers and snowmobilers. (The Vermont Association of Snow Travelers maintains a snowmobile trail crossing the Kingsbury Branch on the property.)
The Vermont River Conservancy, the Friends of the Winooski and the Vermont Association of Snow Travelers are anything but wealthy organizations. Staffed largely by volunteers, they rely for their funding upon state and federal agencies and private contributions. The budget for this entire project, including an endowment fund to guarantee future protection and maintenance, is quite modest. But the difference between preserving this 1,900-foot strip of stream bank (you can see it on GoogleEarth) and its fate if it’s developed is immense.
A contribution to the fund to save the mouth of the Kingsbury Branch will make you feel a sense of ownership when you visit. More important, it’ll save a part of the state that otherwise might be lost.
If, however, you have no idea where this project is located, and most likely never will paddle there, don’t forget the mighty Connecticut, New England’s longest river. Its expanding string of lovely campsites is in constant need of support. Stop by one (though, like us, you might want to wait until ice-out), spend the night, and send a contribution to the address in the campsite register.












