Sportsman's Lodge and The Cohos Trail System
The adventure of hiking through the Cohos Trail System will lead you to Sportsman's Lodge. We look forward to hearing about your experiences along the trail. We offer a Shuttle Service for those who would like to hike only sections of the trail. Please call or email us for more information and to set up a shuttle plan. We also will accept your supply caches. Happy Hiking !
Read exerpts of John Richardson's Journal - written by 2 thru-hikers of the Cohos Trail in 2004. Photos and Journal courtesy of John Richardson.
The Sportsman's Lodge - A Cohos Trail Hostel
Sportsman's Lodge is a hostel for hikers in partnership with the Cohos Trail organization to provide shelter for those who wish to experience nature at its best. We are conveniently located just a short distance from the trail as it passes through Coleman State Park.
Reservations You can make reservations through The Cohos Trail Association (TCTA) http://www.cohostrail.org/ Sportsman's Lodge e-mail sportman@hughes.net
Or call 603 237-5211 Cost per person / night $30.00 TCTA surcharge of $3.75 to support youth groups who are employed to
work on the 162 miles of the Cohos Trail.
Amenities
Overnight
Accommodations HIKERS FROM U.S., CANADA TO STAGE INTERNATIONAL TRAIL LINKING EVENT PITTSBURG -- A Portland, Maine man and hiking enthusiasts from the Lac
Megantic region of Quebec are working with The Cohos Trail Association
(TCTA) at Pittsburg, NH to coordinate a fundraising event to support The
Cohos Trail and the Sentiers Frontaliers trail system of eastern Quebec.
The participants want to shed light on the potential for the linking and
future development of an international hiking trail system complete with
new trails, existing trails and trail structures. Carey Kish, a freelance writer and camping and hiking columnist with the
Portland Press Herald and the Maine Sunday Telegram, recently indicated he
was interested in hiking the 162-mile Cohos Trail from Crawford Notch to
the Canadian border. He proposed that the hike be billed as a fundraising
event to help TCTA raise money to support the development
of new trails in the Upper Connecticut River Valley towns of Stewartstown,
Clarksville and Pittsburg. TCTA President Peter Castine thought the idea
was an excellent one and began promoting the concept both in the region and
in Canada. The Sentiers Frontaliers hiking club of Mont Megantic, Quebec responded by
saying they would put several hikers on trails and along the boundary
clearings from Coburn Gore, Maine to the international border monuments on
the height of land between Chartierville, Quebec and Pittsburg, NH. TCTA is asking anyone interested in supporting the international event to
raise money for local hiking trails and the linking of the two trail
systems to donate anywhere from five cents a mile to a dollar a mile. Mr.
Kish hopes to complete the 162-mile trek on Friday, August 10th at
mid-day, where he plans to meet the Quebec hikers. He will exchange an
American flag with the Canadian's and receive a Canadian flag in return.
TCTA is planning to have refreshments and snacks available at the border
for any and all who wish to attend the event. If you are interested, please contact Peter and Lainie Castine at
Pittsburg, NH at 603-538-6777 or email them at prospmw@localnet.com Please
let them know if you wish to sponsor mileage on the trek and if you would
like to attend the celebration at the border, so they may have enough
refreshments on hand for everyone. LATE WINTER 2007 T H E C O H O S T R E K K E R The electronic newsletter of The Cohos Trail Association THE BORDERLINE DECISION The New Hampshire Department of Parks recently posted information regarding
the state of the land-planning process for the Connecticut Lakes Timber
Company properties (former International Paper Company lands in Pittsburg,
Clarksville and Stewartstown) surrounding the headwaters of the Connecticut
River near the Canadian border. Much of the public input is in and
recommendations recorded. Final drafts will be completed soon, apparently,
as officials want to sign off on the plan as early as April of this year,
according to the posting. That could have a big impact on the Cohos Trail. In the body of the
newsletter it states that three hiking options for the headwaters lands were
presented to the public, the first to keep the limited hiking avenues as
they are, the second to embrace new day-use trails on the lands, and the
third option to embrace new trails and the completion of the Cohos Trail
(day-use, too) the length of the property up to the boundary mountains. According to the newsletter, 50 percent of the public favored the Cohos
Trail on those lands. Some 13% of respondents favored day trails not
including the CT. One organization went on record as being opposed to the
trail. People heavily favored day-use only on the timbered property,
mimicking the use policies that have been in effect for decades in the
boundary country. All this is welcome news. At some point, it is possible we could be given
the nod to open to hiking the existing ways in the trail plan we submitted
for review, and then hopefully be permitted to flag the proposed new trail
routes so they can be inspected by land managers, the state biologist and
others to see if what we lay out is suitable for foot traffic. One major link in the new trail proposal in Pittsburg is an unmarked
snowmobile trail that is easily followed on foot now from Camp Otter Road to
Coon Brook and through to Magalloway Road where the road reaches a span over
the Connecticut River. Just opening that three-mile footway to trekker
traffic would greatly enhance the Cohos Trail experience in the north.
Several other trail segments in the plan would require minimal clipping and
some minor water diversion to make long-abandoned ways passable for those on
foot. Other parts of the plan will take some real effort in layout and execution,
such as the proposed route up and over Mt. Covill to Round Pond and down the
high shoulder above Round Pond Brook out to Route 3 near Camp Otter Road.
The proposed path from Second Connecticut Lake boat landing to the junction
of East Inlet Road and Route 3 is relatively level, but there is a good deal
of thick young spruce and fir to shimmy through. As a policy, the
association doesn¹t take down trees larger than a human wrist, so there
would be a great deal of clipping needed to open up a fair route through
that corridor alongside beautiful Second Lake. That the state's land-use plan for the region is about to become a reality
is a heady thing as far as this trail association is concerned. We've always
believed the Cohos Trail could be one of the premier long-distance hiking
trails in the East, but Clarksville and Pittsburg presented an obstacle for
a decade. Once we are able to put the trails in and open them to foot
traffic, and once the Sentiers Frontaliers hiking club from Lac Megantic,
Quebec links their big trail system to the CT where the Canadian and U.S.
customs stations sit at the border (see more on this below), the Cohos Trail
may begin to approach the status we always hoped it would enjoy. YURTS: NO NEED TO GO TO MONGOLIA Received word recently that Phillips Brook Backcountry Recreation (PBBR)
company is in the final negotiations with landowners for the right to
improve low-impact-use trails and place overnight yurt structures from the
eastern flanks of Dixville Peak and Mt. Gloriette all the way east to
Millsfield Pond. This would put at least several yurts within easy walking
distance of the Cohos Trail as it crosses by the topmost lift towers at
Balsams Wilderness Ski Area. According to PBBR founder Bill Altenburg, it is likely half a dozen yurts
will be open by 2008 in the forests of western Millsfield and Dixville (a
dozen yurts are planned for the entire system and some are in place already
to the east). If that comes to pass, then a trekker on the CT could veer off
the trail down a link path downhill into the yurt complex in the forests
below and, provided he or she had a reservation, could overnight in comfort
half way between the location of the Baldhead lean-to on Baldhead Mountain
and the Panorama lean-to on North Sanguinary Ridge. onversely, an overnight guest at one of PBBR's yurts could move uphill to
the Cohos Trail and then turn north or south to start a long-distance trek
or to stay at one of the lean-tos. Said Altenburg, there would be a
parking/orientation area for the yurt and trail complex in the forests to
the east, affording yet another jumping off point for the CT on high ground
to the west. For those who are not familiar with a modern yurt, the structure had its
origins millennia ago among nomadic herdsmen on the frigid steppes of
Mongolia. Yurts are circular in design and sport conical roofs. Kit yurts
available from half a dozen manufacturers today can be put up in several
days. They are extremely light weight yet strong enough to withstand high
winds and heavy snow loads. Space-age fabrics cover the structures (the
Mongolian¹s used animal skins) and make them water and wind tight. They have
windows and a door and most owners build them on a wood deck. Shove a
woodstove in one and you could sleep like a baby at 30 below. Bring a bottle
of wine in with you and invite your main squeeze and, well.... To learn more, go to www.phillipsbrook.org POWER UP THE MOUNTAINS On North Sanguinary Ridge, there is a new research tower, a tall skinny
structure outfitted with ananometers that record wind speed. The Cohos Trail
slips right past it on the recently created access lane. Why record wind
speed there? It's to determine if the ridgeline is suitable for the
installation for windpower generating turbinesthat's windmills, for short. The same sort of thing is underway at Whitcomb Mountain, miles of ridgeline
that extend from Long Mountain in the Nash Stream Forest at Stark to Mt.
Muise in Columbia township. A wind energy firm, Noble Environmental Power,
is proposing a large wind farm on the height of land along the ridge, the
bases of the windmills just east of the divide between the Nash Stream
Forest and the Phillips Brook watershed. Why the interest in these locations and more high ridge locations in New
Hampshire, Vermont and Maine? Clean, renewable energy at an inland locale
that has among the highest ratings for sustained wind availability year
Oround, that's why. A good number of points high in Coos County are in the
99 percentile for wind speeds suitable to turn a wind turbine. Only the New
England coasts and the near-shore ocean yield a better rating. Clean, renewable energy production -- wind, solar, tidal, biomass -- is a
growth industry, like it or not. If you have ever driven through the immense
desert wind farms west of Palm Springs, California, you know that wind
turbine technology is already here and generating power. The East is about
to play catchup. Farmers, timberland owners and energy corporations are all
investigating how to jump into the renewable energy game. The only incentive
needed is this: money. When one can generate a commodity such as electricity
when the resource to generate it is as free as the wind, there are dollars
to be made perpetually. There is the likelihood that, in the future, a trekker on the CT will move
somewhere beneath the blades of wind turbines, looping lazily in the summer
breeze. And speaking of biomass energy, not one but two corporations are interested
in investing in forest-resource energy generation, including liquid
bio-diesel fuel distillation on sites in the community of Groveton, home to
the Wausaw Paper mill on the Upper Ammonoosuc River (standing beneath the
twin cones of the Percy Peaks ten miles off). ADDING PEAKS The Cohos Trail slips over 30 peaks on its way end to end in Coos County,
NH. Peter and Lainie Castine have suggested we add another, a small hillock
but one with a mind-bending view. To do it, a series of landowners who own
relatively small parcels of land have agreed to permit the use of existing
ways from River Road to Young's Store, and from that supply depot north on
existing paths to Prospect Mountain, a low summit at the end of Danforth
Road in Pittsburg. From the summit, the way would cross to the northeast
over to Ramblewood Cabins and Campground and the CT, largely on existing
trails. If all goes according to the Castine's plan, the trail could then get away
from Route 3 altogether, except a direct crossing at Young's Store. The new
route would put that supply outlet right on the trail, making life much
easier for long-distance trekkers coming up from the Whites more than a long
week's hike away or coming down from the border. The new CT stretch would also pass through or near three private camping
facilities, Mountain View Cabins and Campground, Bear Ledge Campground and
Ramblewood, giving hikers a choice of places to pitch the tent. The big attraction here is Prospect Mountain. That bump of a summit is a
cleared one without a tree blocking a 40-mile view into Canada and Maine. A
foot trail/snowmobile trail and a dirt lane now reach the top. The vista
takes in all of Pittsburg and Clarksville east of Route 3. Big summits such
as Pisgah, Magalloway, Diamond Ridge, Stub Hill, Rump, Kent, and the
boundary peaks D'Urban, Trumbull, Salmon, Saddle Hill, and Marble (in
Canada) are visible close at hand. Other peaks are visible farther south,
including Vermont's Monadnock in the west, and the tall ridges from
Stratford township through to the Nash Stream Forest and over to the
Phillips Brook watershed. At the foot of all this is the 3,000-acre
Connecticut Lakes behemoth, First Connecticut Lake -- all of it. You can
even make out spray from the fat jet of outflow water from the big
TransCanada dam (unseen behind a low ridge). So routing the Cohos Trail away from Route 3 to Young's Store, by the
campgrounds, up to Prospect summit and over to Ramblewood (and then on to
Eagle Pond and over Mt. Covill to Round Pond as the original plan calls for)
would greatly improve the experience for trekkers and help make Pittsburg a
hiker's destination. Linking the little twin elevations of Prospect and
Covill, with their luxury box seats above sublime country, would create a
day hike, even a day-hike loop, that would be better than an
all-expenses-paid cruise up the Oqavongo. BACK ON HIGH GROUND The metamorphosis of The Cohos Trail Association is moving ahead apace.
People from Pittsburg, NH to Florida to Pennsylvania to Arkansas to Nevada
to Fairbanks, Alaska, have pledged support or offered to work on the trails.
A new board will be seated, and some of the day-to-day work of running the
trail has already shifted to Coos County where it belongs. We have applied for an organizational grant to solidify the effort to create
a strong Coos-based organization, and an all-out effort is already underway
to encourage local schools, scouting troops and civic organizations to get
involved in improving this big county-long recreational resource. The website is being upgraded a good deal, starting with a rolling slide
show on the home page. The new maps are off to the printer, and the
guidebook is in stock. Although not revised, the guide contains an inserted
color page directing people who buy the book to go to the website to
download information about changes in the trail route for 2007. That will
give us a whole year to reformat the book and make substantial changes so it
is better than ever. The Cohos Trail databook will go to press, too, before
the hiking season begins. That's a simple pocket-size guide that features
mileage between points and directions (turn right at x and left at y) as one
moves along. To think this is going on now, so quickly after having decided to close the
trail for 2007 just a few months ago, is mind boggling. What a distinct
pleasure it is to see people highly motivated so suddenly and getting their
hands dirty and their computers overworked for the sake of a trail in the
middle of nowhere (the very best place to be, mind you). Humbling, it is. Get to work on the trail, too -- you! Call 538-6777 in Pittsburg, NH (or
email prospmw@localnet.com) and tell Peter or Lainie you have been a slacker
and you need to get your act together by volunteering to work on the Cohos
Trail. Then you can breath easy, because you will go to heaven...eventually.
Hopefully. THE PART ABOUT MONEY If you have an interest in supporting the Cohos Trail but forgot to send a
donation from $5.00 to $5 million, why not send a gift to The Cohos Trail
Association, 266 Danforth Road, Pittsburg, NH 03592 or to 252 Westmoreland
Road, Spofford, NH 03462. Either way, the dollars find their way onto the
trail. Send your gift today, so we won't show up at your door in the middle of the
night. BORDER RUNNING Several people have written over the last year about the potential for
trail along the Canadian border, something the Sentiers Frontaliers hiking
club at Lac Megantic, Quebec has been working on for a decade. To see what the Canadians have done largely in the boundary peaks above
westernmost Maine but also out to New Hampshire's Mt. D'Urban , go to
www.viewfromthetop.com/forums/showthread.php?t=14033 and have a look at
Papabear's logs and photo albums there. Of particular interest to Cohos
Trail trekkers is the journal and photos that show the way from Crown
Monument, the three-foot-tall cast metal marker at the Maine, New Hampshire
and Quebec boundary intersection, westward over Mt. D'Urban (2,999 feet) and
down to the Canadian side of Boundary Pond, a little finger of water that
comes within inches of touching the border along its northern marshy
shoreline. From the U.S. side, this terrain is about as far removed from New
England civilization as seems possible in the Northeast. However, from the
Quebec side, the trails and bushwhack described runs high above working farm
fields and the quaint village of Chartierville, Quebec. And to see what the Sentiers Frontaliers do, go to their website at the
following address: sentiersfrontaliers.qc.ca. The site is in French, but it
is a joy to work through if you can decipher a little of that fair romance
language. If you can't read a bit of French, at least have a look at the
photo album and carte (map). They have built some interesting structures on
their system, by the way, including lean-tos with skylights. There is real potential to link the CT and the SF together, either by a
Quebec-side border trail (their board of directors voted in the affirmative
a year or two ago to attempt it) or via a six-mile road walk (with expansive
views) from the border down Magnetic Hill and out to where the club's
long-distance trail to Mont Megantic crosses a farm lane in eastern
Chartierville. As many who have read this newsletter over the years know, the SF trail
to Mont Megantic ends at that big ring-dike mountain¹s trail complex which,
in turn, leads to a fitting ending point -- the very entranceway into
Canada's largest astronomical observatory. What could be better than
culminating an international trek at the foot of the stairway to the stars,
eh? NEW OLD PEAK DISCOVERED The fellow who wrote the journal for the forum on the View From The Top
website (listed above) discovered in his research of the boundary terrain
that the 3,277 elevation not far to the west of Boundary Pond (what appears
to be the easternmost shoulder of Mt. Salmon) actually was once labeled with
the name Trumbull Mountain.
Sounds good, good enough to include on the Cohos Trail maps. So we plugged
the moniker in before we shipped the electronic files off to the printer. THE LAST WORD At the very end of January of this year, I opened the garden cold frame and
picked baby beet greens, spinach, Swiss chard and kale for a fresh dinner
salad. That's fresh, succulent. Green. Good. And free, perfectly free. The
cold frame was free, too -- free old storm window hinged to a few odd boards
nailed together. I fluffed up some hay for insulation around the contraption
and that was that. Next winter I'm going to have twenty feet of coldframes housed inside a
small homemade greenhouse (2x4s, strapping and plastic. Cheap!). I'll eat
everything from fresh carrots and parsnips to endive and Dutch mache all
winter long. That's the plan. Potatoes will be stored in a box in the ground
(covered with hay) in the greenhouse so I can pick them out whenever we want
a roasted spud for dinner. I have acorn squash on the pantry shelving that has turned orange but is as
hard as a rock even now. Cut it open, scoop out the seeds and roast them,
pour maple syrup and butter inside the squash and bake it in the oven.
Sweet. Delicious. All this food came to me from a distance of about fifteen yards, not the
1,300 miles that the average calorie of American food travels to the dinner
plates of our population. At no time in my fifty-eight years, have I worried
about my family's food supply. I'm worried now. It is totally dependent on
one commodity. It's called oil. You know the stuff. Price goes up, down a
little, then trends upward, upward, uuuupward. What does this have to do with hiking? Hiking is done with the feet. Freely.
The benefits to a body and mind are beyond dispute. Food use to be free, or
nearly so. Your forebears and mine just a very few generations removed from
right now use to know how to bring forth a cornucopia of food from the
ground each and every year using the energy of human and animal muscle, not
the muscle of fossil fuel. Food was local, generated by small business men
and women. We called them farmers. Remember them? They were once the back
and shoulders of rural New England's economy. There were tens of thousands
of them. Ghosts, they are now, most all of them. Ghosts don't till much
earth, I hear. Get to the point, man! In the verbiage above there is a brief passage about harnessing wind energy
in Coos County, New Hampshire. Energy from a local resource. It's called
wind. Price doesn't go anywhere. Not up, not down. I can have all I want of
it, for free. If I can get my dinner salad for free with almost no work and
no transportation or retail cost, why didn't I do that most of my life? If I
could drive a hybrid car plugged into an electrical outlet energized by the
turning of local wind turbines in the free wind, why wouldn't I drive juiced
instead of gassed up? If I can hike on two feet for fourteen miles a day and
overtop three or four mountains without burning so much as a thimble full of
Middle East oil, why would I want to do anything else in these grand 200
million-year-old mountains? So this summer, I'll try something greenhouse-gasless. I'll eat all home
grown food for a day, drive an electric hybrid up to Dixville Notch, and
hike from the notch to Coleman State Park and summit on Sanguinary, Mud Pond
Ridge peak and Sugar Hill (in Stewartstown, not Sugar Hill, NH). I will be
eco-happy on this small blue ball orbiting the sun. And ten years from now,
when my granddaughter is a young woman, we'll do the exact same thing. Then,
when oil is $220 a barrel, she and I can make the same trip across beautiful
Coos County. For free. Maybe I'll treat my granddaughter to a big dinner in Colebrook for a few
bucks and spend the night (always spend money for a hot shower, I say) for a
few dollars more up in the Indian Stream Territory. See you on the trail, where wondering about in the wilderness is a blessing,
not a curse. Kim Kim Robert Nilsen The Cohos Trail Association Your hosts Roger & Linda Glew

Breakfast and Dinner For Our Guests
Function Room/Facilities
Shuttle Service
Telephone
Secure Parking
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Hiking Books
Message Service
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e-mail access
Hot showers
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Satellite TV
Limited Wireless Access For Our Guests
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1355 Diamond Pond Rd.
Stewartstown, NH
03576
phone: (603) 237-5211
© 2000 The Sportsman’s
Lodge