Connecting people and place through science, education, and action.

Connecting people and place through science, education and action.

Latest News

NorthWoods Forest Comes Alive at an Educators Workshop

How long has it been since you’ve dug your hands into the dirt or looked deep into the cavity of a rotten tree? At the Project Learning Tree Educators Workshop, hosted by NorthWoods and the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation this October, adults explored these childhood pastimes [Read More...]

Nulhegan Basin North Trail Opens to Public

The Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge – Nulhegan Basin Division announced this week that the North Branch Trail has been completed and is now available for public use.  The four mile loop trail is accessed from a parking area along Route 105 in Ferdinand, Vermont, approximately [Read More...]

Upcoming Events

Thank you to our Event Sponsors:

NorthWoods & Mountain Bike Camps

Woods & Waters Day Camp

Mon June 29 @ 9:00 am - Fri July 3 @ 4:00 pm

WILD Sciences Camp

Mon July 20 @ 8:00 am - Fri July 24 @ 4:00 pm

Kingdom Backpack Expedition

Tue July 28 @ 9:00 am - Thu July 30 @ 4:00 pm

Backcountry Olympics Camp

Mon August 3 @ 9:00 am - Fri August 7 @ 4:00 pm

Get Involved

Work For Us

Corps, Science, Forestry & Education Jobs

Check out our Camps

Summer & Mtn Bike Camps

Donate

Support our programs!

Sign up for our Enewsletter

Monthly Updates & Early Bird Announcements

Northeast Kingdom Mountain Trail Guide: Second Edition

Explore The Trails

NorthWoods Campus Trails

Interpretive Hiking & Seasonal Nordic Trails

Westmore Mtn Challenge

1 day. 5 Mountains. 26 miles.

Kingdom Heritage Trail

20 Miles of Interconnected Remote Hiking Trails

Summit the Northeast Kingdom

Explore the Remote Peaks of the Kingdom

Land Acknowledgement

NorthWoods Stewardship Center respectfully acknowledges that we are on the ancestral territory of the Abenaki people – the first people of this land. The Clyde River Valley where NorthWoods is located was and remains an important link between the Memphremagog and Upper Connecticut River watersheds. Indigenous people from many nations live and work here today.

We recognize that acknowledgment is just the beginning of recognizing the history and future of indigenous people on this land.

Please join us in honoring their communities, their elders past and present, and future generations.