New York & the Mid-Atlantic Trips 2 - Full PDF eBook

(Elliott) #1
Champlain narrows
between New York and
Vermont. The British,
after several failed
attempts to wrest control
of the commanding
overlook, finally
succeeded in 1759 after
it was abandoned by the
French. Today, the Crown
Point State Historic
Site (%518-597-4666; http://www.
nysparks.com; 21 Grandview
Dr, Crown Point; hgrounds
9am-6pm) ruins look like
they’re in the midst of an
archaeological dig. Still,
views of the mountains
and lake are beautiful
and it’s interesting to
imagine the numerous
forks history could have
taken when the French
first built the stone
citadel in the 1600s.
Check out the exhibits in
the small museum (adult/
child $4/3) to understand
the area’s role in the
quest for empire.

The Drive » On this 50-mile
drive, Rte 22 north passes
through beautiful countryside,
alongside shore line train tracks
and the Boquet River; note
the falls in tiny Wadhams. Just
before the historic village of
Essex (c 1775) and its highly
recommended inn (p83), you
pass by Essex farm, made
famous in Kristin Kimball’s book
The Dirty Life: A Memoir of
Farming, Food & Love.

4 Ausable Chasm
One of the country’s
oldest natural
attractions, the
dramatically beautiful

Ausable Chasm (%518-
834-9990; http://www.ausablechasm.
com; 2144 Rte 9; adult/child
$17/10; h9am-5pm summer,
to 4pm rest of yr; c) is
a 2-mile long fissure
formed by a gushing
river that over thousands
of years carved its way
through deep layers
of sandstone, creating
200ft cliffs, waterfalls
and rapids. The privately
owned sight, in danger
of shutting its gates
for good after the
devastating floods of
Tropical Storm Irene
in 2011, has rebuilt
its walkways and
connecting bridges
and added a rappelling
course for those seeking
an alternative to the
riverside trail. In the
wintertime, strap on
microspikes to see
majestic icicles that
complement the unique
rock formations. When
the weather warms, lazily
slide downriver in a raft,
rented kayak or inner
tube, gazing at the birds
and butterflies that fill
the light-drenched gorge.
Along with a large
cafe there’s a small
museum, primarily about
the life and work of the
naturalist, writer and
photographer Seneca
Ray Stoddard, whose
guidebooks, photos
and maps of the region
were instrumental in
the formation of the
Adirondack Park in
1892 – unregulated
logging was threatening

TRIP HIGHLIGHT

REVOR JOHNSTON/EYE MEETS WORLD PHOTOGRAPHY/GETTY IMAGES ©

NEW.YORK.TRIPS

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(^) ADIRONDACK PEAKS & V
ALLEYS

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