3 Books & 5 Trails for Your Autumn Hiking Pleasure in New Hampshire and Vermont
Oct 16, 2017 11:41AM ● By Victoria PipasGile Mountain Trail
This trail offers perhaps the
perfect way to explore the great outdoors while appreciating the craft of the
stonemasonry that lines the trail in the form of granite steps and walkways. This
is an easy, family-friendly, hour-long hike with the bonus of a great view at
the top if you dare to ascend the fire tower and look out over the Upper
Valley. Gile offers beautifully filtered autumn light for the whole hike; you’ll
enjoy the colors of the season in all their splendor. This trail is highly
popular on weekends, so if you can, consider taking it at a less crowded time.
A
Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson

This hilarious and highly
entertaining treatise on traipsing up the Appalachian Trail as a novice hiker
is part autobiography and part history of the trail. To all AT hikers, Bryson
delivers the common drive to press on: whether you have to keep going because
of a passionate desire to earn your place atop Mt. Katahdin or to shed worries
or weight, or simply because of a “powerful urge not to be [so] far south
anymore.” Hikers reading this book will feel intense empathy for Bryson’s often
absurd yet fulfilling experiences on the trail. Experienced hikers will enjoy
Bryson’s humorous unpreparedness for his endeavor, while newer hikers might be
comforted with the knowledge that, whatever dumb things they have done or might
do on the trail, Bryson and his companion did something dumber. Enjoy the
laughs.
Cardigan Mountain
Cardigan is a small, perfect gem
of a mountain in the Upper Valley. Located In Canaan, New Hampshire, in its own
state park, this mountain boasts a beautiful top of gleaming granite that glistens
brightly with snow in the winter and shines beautifully in summer’s sunlight. In
autumn, you’ll travel through a forest of autumn colors before the trail opens
up into all of New Hampshire’s granite glory. The 360-degree views from the top
sweep over several groups of small lakes and ponds, making for a spectacularly
varied landscape. Bring binoculars to get the full effect.
Wild by Cheryl Strayed

If you’re looking for a gripping, soul-wrenching, insightful
memoir, look no farther than Strayed’s Wild.
This story, told with ferocious honesty, depicts Strayed’s resolution as a destitute,
motherless divorced 22-year-old who resolves to set out and hike the Pacific
Crest Trail as a completely inexperienced hiker (a common theme among those
attempting to reinvent their lives, it seems, is to face nature unprepared). Her
journey, with all its uncomfortable, moving details, ultimately becomes more
transformative than she could have imagined, and the reader gets the sense that
writing this book was also a healing process for the author. This is a book for
anyone who is grateful for the world around them or who is looking to become
more grateful for their place in that world.
Moose Mountain
This lovely day hike offers a
rural wilderness retreat within Hanover’s town limits. Its summer bounty is
fields of blueberries, though this time of year, you’re more likely to see
moose grazing. This hike should take about 3 hours, and at 2,300 feet in
elevation, it never gets too arduous. You can do this trip as an out-and-back
or as a loop. This is a route you might consider taking with snowshoes this
winter.
Into the Wild by John Krakauer

Although not strictly a book about
backpacking or through-hiking, this true tale is about journeying back to
nature. Into the Wild is now an
international bestseller and a moving motion picture directed by Sean Penn. The
story traces a young man from his privileged, suburban lifestyle through his
rejection of materialism, wealth, and society in favor of seclusion in various
remote parts of the US and finally living in an abandoned bus. At once a tragic
biography and a philosophical exploration, this book follows Transcendentalist
writings such as those by Thoreau and Walden and transposes them into the modern
era.
Mount Cube
This mountain, which hosts a section of the AT, has its main trailhead in Orford, New Hampshire. It’s the most substantial hike on this list at 6.6 miles round trip. The summit offers a beautiful, broad rock face with ledges ideal for sitting and gazing at the New England wilderness. The trail is an out-and-back, but if you have arranged pick-ups and drop-offs, you can actually continue along the ridge to Smarts Mountain for a longer hike.
What are your favorite go to fall hikes?