
Nick Sprague of Pomfret and Josh Bentley of Plymouth are working on the Faulkner Trail this summer as part of the Vermont Youth Conservation Corps
Two separate crews of kids with the Vermont Youth Conservation Corps are giving Woodstock’s Faulkner Trail some much-needed tender loving care — sweeping, digging, sawing and sweating to bring the easy-going switchback trail to the top of Mt. Tom back to some of its original historically relevant glory. The trail was modelled on the Baden-Baden trails in Germany used to help restore health through easy walking.
I found the VYCC kids today pulling leaves out of drainages, clearing out roots, digging up rocks, securing stone steps and generally figuring out how to make the trail more pleasant, easier-going and safer.

This Woodstock-area VYCC crew member helps open up the view at the top of Mt. Tom. These high school students get paid for their work.
This summer’s work is a follow-up to a major re-do of hand rail cables along steep parts of the trail . The Billings Park Commission paid some $23,000 last year to get that work done.
I can report that already the trail has vastly improved. Thank VYCC kids for doing such good work. It’s been a long-time coming!
Another partner on this project is the Rivers and Trails Program, affiliated with the National Park here in Woodstockt, which provides assistance to organizations wanting to work together for common conservation goals. One of the Vermont/New Hampshire leaders of the Rivers and Trails Program, Jennifer Waite, was on the trail today helping the kids on the Faulkner Trail project.




