Tag: Airstreaming

  • Somewhere In Ashuelot

    Somewhere In Ashuelot

    Posted September 26, 2019 – Narrated by Carmen
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    State and National Parks are our favorite locations, but the occasional well-managed private campground with full-hookups is a real treat.

    Here in New England good private campgrounds are a rare find.

    Our usual vetting system couldn’t turn up a desirable place on the New Hampshire coastline. So, turning inland on the map, Jim hunted for a place with rail trails, hiking, kayaking, breweries, seafood, and bam! the Ashuelot River area near Swanzey, New Hampshire gained Google ascension.

    New Hampshire

    These travel snafus – when we’re thrown off our preferred direction – usually result in delight and surprise.

    Our seven day stay at the Ashuelot River Campground was one of those memorable LIB experiences.

    Ashuelot River Campground
    Our campsite with full hook-ups and our quick set-up Clam shelter.

    Had things gone our way we’d have missed out.

    Ashuelot River Campground
    a bend in the river
    Ashuelot River Trail
    Rail Trails
    Ashuelot River Campground
    camping on the river

    The cancellation policy was fair, so we reserved by phone five weeks in advance for this independently owned, family-run campground.

    The Bridges

    The proprietor kindly warned us to turn off our GPS and follow their detailed map so we’d miss the covered bridges with low clearance which span the winding Ashuelot River.

    We paid careful attention because a few weeks earlier in Catawissa, Pennsylvania we had a GPS directed surprise encounter.

    Hollingshead Covered Bridge
    Hollingshead Covered Bridge – Catawissa⁩, ⁨Pennsylvania⁩
    Hollingshead Covered Bridge

    The neighbors immediately came to our rescue and directed us to a place where we could turn around that was no less than five miles up the road.

    Learning to navigate around the old covered bridges is part of living with history. Residents are the naturally appointed curators.

    Thomson Bridge
    Thomson Bridge
    Thomson Bridge
    Thomson Bridge
    Thomson Bridge
    Thomson Bridge

    Replacing these colonial structures with modern technology is unthinkable.

    Coombs Bridge
    Coombs Bridge
    Slate Bridge
    Slate Bridge

    Bridges are my favorite form of architecture because even the name is functional, describing utility in action. Everything can be bridged.

    Thomson Bridge
    Thomson Bridge

    Bridges facilitate travelers, but a bridge can also be a method to transport currency, or a unique way to communicate an idea from here to there. But to fulfill the contract, one must surrender. There is always risk.

    Thompson Bridge

    And old covered bridges have a peculiar dynamic. As they move you forward to a different place, they also take you back in time.

    Whether it’s an accident of art, physics, or nostalgic reverie brought on by those vintage Americana horse and wagon images, old covered bridges are a romantic portal for the imagination.

    Ghosts from the past seem to make the journey across the river with you.

    Thompson Bridge
    Thompson Bridge

    The dreamy, meandering Ashuelot River contributes to the surreal effect as Nancy Priest wrote in her poem, Over The River, published in 1883.

    When we arrived, our camp host gave us a map with all the tourist information necessary to view the covered bridges and other places to visit, such as historic buildings and shops.

    The map also includes hiking and cycling trails and boat launches.

    The Trails

    We say bike or cycling trails, but they’re called Rec Trails or Rail Trails in New England, because snowfall facilitates snowmobiles, cross country skiing and even dog sleds.

    Ashuelot River Trail
    Many trails are breathtakingly beautiful

    Most Rec Trails built along abandoned railways are a work in progress. North of Keene, the Cheshire Trail got a bit rough, but our folding bikes with specialty off-roading tires plowed over the rocks, roots and loose sand.

    Cheshire Trail
    Well marked trails
    Cheshire Trail

    These are easy forest trails with natural hedges of black berries, blueberries and wild flowers. The six mile ride into Keene for coffee and shopping was a delight.

    Ashuelot River Trail
    Peaceful …
    Ashuelot River Trail
    meadows …
    Ashuelot River Trail
    Ashuelot River Trail
    lovely city
    Ashuelot River Trail
    lush forest floor
    Ashuelot River Trail
    granite
    Ashuelot River Trail
    Ashuelot River Trail
    keen new hampshire
    Great college town!
    keen new hampshire
    Shopping!

    The Breweries

    The local craft brewery scene in Cheshire County is experiencing a boom. Pico loved the dog-friendly beer garden at Granite Roots.

    Granite Roots Brewing
    Granite Roots Brewing
    Granite Roots Brewing
    Granite Roots Brewing
    Granite Roots Brewing
    Granite Roots Brewing
    Granite Roots Brewing

    For us, breweries aren’t just about beer and a few rounds of corn hole. We get the best info about festivals and music events while sharing pints with the locals.

    On our first night we stopped at Elm City Brewing Company for dinner.

    Elm City Brewing Company

    … and our wonderful server gave us the scoop about a seafood and pig roast at Branch & Blade Brewing.

    Immediately, we bought tickets online and, Score!

    The Hog and Seafood Roast

    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Preparing the roast – first the wet seaweed
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Then the boxes
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    In they go …
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    more, more more!
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Time for a beer …
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Finally, seafood dinner for everybody!
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    This one’s mine, get your own
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Need some appetizers …
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Jalapeño ice and raw oysters
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    The hog chef!
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    And, for those who don’t like seafood …
    Branch and Blade Brewing
    Great local band!

    The Community

    Keene is a small university town steeped in New England charm and flourishing with natural beauty that retirees find attractive.

    Some say Keene is the town that trees built and in nearby Swanzey, local lore has it that the poet Joyce Kilmer was inspired by a tree while on vacation.

    Ashuelot River Campground
    This amazing tree was only steps from our campsite.

    The River

    The late summer Ashuelot River was low with a gossamer glimmer as the sunlight played on the gold flakes in the sand.

    Ashuelot River Campground

    With nothing else to do on a warm and sassy New Hampshire day, we put-in at our campsite and paddled the couple of miles or so to Sawyer’s Crossing Covered Bridge – built in 1859 to replace the 1771 bridge.

    Ashuelot River
    Sawyer Crossing Bridge
    Ashuelot River
    Ashuelot River
    Sawyer Crossing Bridge
    Sawyer Crossing Bridge
    Sawyer Crossing Bridge

    Standing beneath that marvelous structure, we paid homage to its beautiful old bones and the craftsmen who built it.

    Then, momentarily, we surrendered our thoughts to the ghosts of people, animals and vehicles that have crossed those boards throughout the decades … The doctor or midwife races on horseback to deliver a baby … A fugitive slave waits in the darkness of night for his ride to approach … A weary WW1 soldier returns home … And, yes a family in a carriage totes home a freshly harvested tree just like on the vintage Christmas cards.

    The current was mild, the water warm, the breeze, gentle. We pulled the boats across the dry places and swam them across the deep places, but one way and another the golden-sanded Ashuelot carried us home.

    Ashuelot River Campground

    You can see our exact route on this map.

    *photos in this post (unless otherwise noted) were taken and copyrighted by Living In Beauty.


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