Black Mountain Natural Area

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Spend the day on this tough but rewarding hiking traversing a mass of molten rock which formed 400 million years ago!
Trail Activity
Hiking
Length
5.40 miles, Loop
Difficulty
Moderate, Advanced
Town
Dummerston (VT)
Surface
Packed Earth/Dirt, Rock/Ledge
Pets
Not Permitted
Fees
No

Description

HIGH USE TRAIL:

This is a busy trail system, especially on weekends between 9AM-4PM. Consider visiting outside of peak periods. Use Trail Finder to identify other nearby trails. If the parking lot is full when you arrive, please choose another trail. Be considerate of your fellow trail enthusiasts - pass at safe distances, wear masks, and move on from viewpoints if others are waiting.

Learn more about high use trail systems.

From the preserve's trailhead, the path forks offering two options for the ascent. The western trail to the left climbs for 1.5 miles in a steep and very clearly defined stair-like pattern over a set of ancient floodplain terraces. Some of the terraces represent the shore of ancient Lake Hitchcock, the great glacial lake that ran much of the length of the Connecticut and West Rivers at the end of the ice age. The eastern trail to the right follows a smoother ascent taking you past a scenic frog pond, over a bubbling stream and through shady hardwood forests. Near the top, be sure to bear left on the eastern trail for the final .5 miles to the summit. The trails join on exposed granite for the final ascent, which can be slippery in wet weather. Consider linking the two trails for an awesome loop hike!

Other Information

Black Mountain rises abruptly from the West River in Dummerston to a horseshoe ridge with a summit of 1,280 feet. The mountain originated as a mass of molten rock deep beneath the surface of the earth between 345 and 395 million years ago. Erosion has exposed the granite that forms the core of the mountain.

The lower slopes of Black Mountain are covered by hemlock and hardwoods such as sugar maple and beech. The pluton’s steep upper slopes and summit include craggy granite bedrock ledges covered by a thin layer of poor acidic soil. Here where nutrient-needy and water-loving plants can’t grow, the only pitch pine-scrub oak woodland in Vermont flourishes. Smallish pitch pines, red and white pines, oaks and red maples, lift gnarled limbs above a grassy glade cloaked in lowbush blueberry and huckleberry. Lichen-covered glacial erratics – boulders dropped by melting glaciers – are scattered about. From the top of Black Mountain there are views as far as New Hampshire’s Mount Monadnock, and into the West River and Connecticut River valleys.

Trail Manager

Visit The Nature Conservancy in Vermont online for more information or contact Murray McHugh, Critical Lands Manager for Southern VT:

The Nature Conservancy: Southern Vermont Office
Critical Lands Manager, Southern Vermont
348 Bentley Ave
Poultney, VT 05764
mmchugh@tnc.org
View website

Trail Tips

Travel on Durable Surfaces
Stick to established trails. If there's no trail, try to walk on rock, gravel, or snow and spread out so that your group doesn't create a trail.

Trailhead Information

1112 Rice Farm Rd, Dummerston, VT

Take 1-91 to Exit 4, Putney. Make a left at the end of the exit ramp on Rte. 5 and go south for 2.4 miles. Turn right on Schoolhouse Rd. (which becomes East West Rd.) and go 4.5 miles through East Dummerston and Dummerston Center. Drive slowly, watching for a very sharp left turn onto Quarry Rd. (unpaved), just before the West River. Go south on Quarry Rd. (which becomes Rice Farm Rd.) for 1.9 miles to a small parking area on the left. A Nature Conservancy sign marks the preserve and trailhead.

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