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Letterboxing
Northeast
Coastal
Boxes
Ninigret Pond
(December, 2002: The first letterbox is likely missing due to brush
clearing at the site...)
(October 6, 2002: The first letterbox has finally been replaced...)
(September 24, 2002: the second box was replaced by a gracious friend...)
(October 2002: reports of fire and a missing box at the airfield
observation tower...)
Rhode Island's salt ponds are crucial estuarian hatcheries for a
variety of wildlife. While the osprey has made a substantial recovery
in this area, a small shore bird called the Piping Plover continues
endangered. They require something we're not quite ready to provide:
open space on undeveloped beaches. The 1999 Piping Plover Restoration
Project at Ninigret Pond resulted in 8 nesting pairs raising 25
chicks to fledge. Peak nesting season on the beach is from early
spring to late summer: Ninigret Conservation Area is open during this
period. It is also quite beautiful during the fall and winter.
Directions: This is really two separate hikes separated by a short
drive: for the first section take the Ninigret Park exit on RI Rt. 1.
At the park, follow the signs all the way around to the nature trails
beyond the observatory and senior center. Park in the rocked-in area
of the old Naval Airfield runway. This area can be exceptionally buggy!
Walk to the information board in the southeast corner and take the
trail to your right heading southwest. Bear left (south) at the fork
and walk ½ mile to an observation tower. Enjoy the view of the
pond before stamping in to the first letterbox, hidden 18 steps southeast
of the little info board there. Hug the left side of the trail and look
under a flat stone in the bushes to the northeast.
Returning to your car, head south on Rt. 1 (you'll need to first
drive north before flipping a U-turn). Drive several miles to East
Beach Rd. (again making a U-turn), and follow it to the end. Turning
left you'll find beach parking in a block or two.
Beach comb your way east along the barrier strand separating Ninigret
Pond from the sea for about 3 miles, until you reach the Charlestown
breach way, Ninigret's opening to the ocean. Turning left, follow the
breakwater north until it loops west into a sandy cul de sac with
fenceposts surrounded by beach bayberry, rose, and poison ivy. Now
follow the 4-wheel drive road that parallels the beach back towards
the west a short way, until you see a boardwalk heading north to
Ninigret Pond. This is the Arnoldia Nature Preserve area: a short way
down the boardwalk, with a defunct privy nearby, your reward is
tucked under the large square deck, in the northeast corner, between
the deck and it's supporting cinderblock foundation. You can return
to your car via either the beach or the 4-wheel drive road that
parallels it. Enjoy!
Trustom Pond
A delightful and gentle two-mile walk on the Rhode Island shore with
views of salt ponds and barrier islands, and splendid birding, for a
pair of letterboxes. You could also easily include the "Trustom
Pond Quest" letterbox along the way for a triple.
Directions: In Charlestown RI on Rte. 1 between Moonstone and
Ninigret Beaches, turn south to Green Hill Beach. This is Post Rd:
after a couple hundred yards, turn left onto Green Hill Beach Rd and
follow it for 0.7 miles to the end. Turn left at the stop sign, then
quickly left again onto Matunuck School House Rd. After 0.8 miles,
find the Trustom Pond National Wildlife Refuge entrance on your right.
The Trustom Pond NWR occupies old farmland bordering salt pond
estuary. There are two connected loop trails, each with a
southward-pointing extension that leads to observation towers over
the wetlands. From the parking lot, if the small headquarters is
open, grab a map. Then follow the well maintained path past a map
board to skirt a field and pass a farm pond. The trail turns to
grass. Turn to the path bearing 144 degrees, and then at another map,
go left to 134 degrees. Follow this straight old farm road past a
lovely bench and out to the observation tower: the East Point
Letterbox is behind the stairs, under a flat rock.
Now return to the map by the farm pond and turn onto 244 to cross a
short boardwalk. At a wide intersection, go 270 degrees and then 282
degrees at the next intersection, towards the second observation
tower. This path will lead you up to another crossing with a bench
and map: turn to 146 degrees. This larger, more isolated observation
tower is the place for a rest! Again, peak behind the stairs and
under a flat rock for the West Point Letterbox.
When you've had your fill of this expansive place, return to the last
map to plot your next adventure!
Wequetequock Salt Marshes
(We're pretty sure both these boxes are
missing)
Note: "Wildlife Management Area" is a euphemism for Hunting
Zone. These areas are not safe for letterboxing during hunting season
from Monday through Saturday. We do not recommend letterboxing here even
on Sundays during the hunting season. This is not a multi-use area and
hunters are not welcoming of hikers, bikers, birders, or boxers during
their season.
CT
Hunting Regulations
CT Hunting Season Specifics
Generally, Sept 15th through Jan 31st.
CT
Firearms Safety Program
In Memorium, Conservation Officer James Spignesi
Hike and clues: easy. Time: 60 to 90 minutes of level walking (about
3 miles).
We really think you'll enjoy this one! Barn Island Wildlife
Management Area is an especially wonderful place in a driving snow
storm, wild with the promise of the osprey's return come spring. In
summer and fall it is completely relaxing, a quintessential, New
England impressionist-school landscape painter's setting. From I95 in
Stonington CT, take exit 91 and turn west on Rt. 234. After ½
mile, turn left on North Main St and continue 1.5 miles to turn left
again onto Rt. 1 East (for a spectacular side trip, continue straight
across the light and down into Stonington Borough, and a glimpse of
old New England, with a sense of what Mystic has forfeited to
tourism). Several miles down Rt. 1, at a traffic light with a
"boat ramp" sign, turn right on Greenhaven Rd and then
immediately right again onto Palmer Neck Rd. The trail head parking
is on the right after 1.5 miles. In an area of homes famed for
classic understated elegance and excruciatingly boutique quaintness,
spot a gem of whimsical playfulness on your right during the drive
in. Bring insect repellant, binoculars, field guides to trees and
birds, and your blaze orange sweatshirt during hunting season (September-March).
Park in the small lot and head east through the gate by a memorial
stone onto the wide trail. You will cross several raised dikes across
700 acres of salt marshes, separated by "islands" of
woodland.
Land Sailing Newport
Sunk in June 2000 and replaced 6/29/01: this one is very well hidden.
Newport, Rhode Island bills itself as the "yachting capital of
the world," but it also has some terrific walking tours. We've
been sail-walking Newport for years and this is one of our favorites.
Since this box was placed in August, these instructions assume a
summer season southwesterly, the breeze that made the America's Cup
races famous. You'll beat upwind to your goal trading tack upon tack.
On a winter cruise, northeasterlies prevail, making your first legs a
downwind run, and you'll have to jibe. This can be confusing to
Midshipmen, those beginning sailors, but trust your navigators
because the courses you set will remain the same and will
occasionally be marked by buoys on the way. This cruise is about 4
nautical miles. Bon voyage!
From your berth at the Newport Yacht Club on Long Wharf, raise anchor
and set sail on an easterly course. Cross the shipping lanes and move
through the nautical stores before crossing another shipping lane.
Keep your tiller on an easterly heading, choosing the more southerly
side of the current. After the second show-boat, tack to the south at
the "C" buoy. Now you will begin to work upwind, following
a zig zagging course while you tack back and forth.
After one southerly leg, tack east in front of the big luxury liner
named for a fabulously wealthy yachtsman. Two legs will bring you to
the "D" buoy: tack south. After two more legs, tack east
again and go for another single leg. Tack south and hold your course
for two legs. Tack east for a short leg, then south at the
"M" buoy between sailmaker's boats. Continue for one leg.
Tack east and travel up two legs to the main shipping lanes, where
you'll tack to the south again.
Heading south, toot your whistle to signal your crossing, then sail
for two legs to tack southeast at the second "B" buoy. Run
between the brick-red waves: your navigation crew was stationed in
the houseboat to starboard in a previous commission. After two legs,
tack south at the "S" buoy. Sail for two legs and tack
east, then cruise another two legs before tacking south. Beat upwind
for two more legs and then tack east. Travel up to the end, and a
quite distinctive landmark. Heave-to for a rest and enjoy this anchorage.
When you're ready to get underway again, fall off (not literally,
please) onto a new heading, north. Run downwind to pass two short
stone walls to the east, then find a wide, safe (not steep) path
heading south. Sail out onto the promontory and sight your goal at
240 degrees. Complete your voyage log book. If the fishermen or party
boats are anchored here and you can't wait them out, please consider
passing up this one for a second voyage, as they have sunk this
letterbox in the past.
Now to return to home port: continue northerly until your canal
begins to feel fenced in. Jibe west at the ladder and sail one leg,
leaving the ocean in your wake. Jibe north for a leg, then west at
the "M" buoy. After another leg, jibe north, cross the
shipping lanes, and continue northerly between stone bulkheads for a
longish leg. Jibe west at the "O" buoy, and travel for a
leg before jibing north. Sail one leg, jibe west for another leg, and
make a gentle zig zag to port and starboard at the "G"
buoy. Continue west to the next major shipping lane, cross over
carefully as the captains are quite frantic in these waters, and sail
down a smaller rhumb line leaving the reaching hands to your right.
Sail west again for two legs, jibe north t the "S" buoy for
one and a half legs and then jibe west into the white pilings and
sail down to the harbor. It is just one leg north to your anchorage
and all the pleasures and refreshments that await sailors on shore.
Purgatory Point
(revised 6/23/00 but the Chasm box again reported missing)
A lovely 2½ mile beach hike with letterboxes like bookends on either side.
The Second Beach area in Newport RI has an amazing amount of open
space for such a crowded Eastern island, with a wealth of wildlife.
Directions: On the Newport Bridge continue with Rt. 138 to the end,
and turn left at the light on Admiral Kalbfus Rd. (Rt. 138). Travel
up the hill and cross straight ahead at Broadway Ave, leaving Rt. 138
to turn left without you. Continue down Miantonami Ave to Valley Rd.
(Rt. 214). Turn right at the light, continue straight through the
next light (Rt. 138A), and go left at First Beach onto Crescent Ave
and then left again onto Purgatory Rd. Go up and over, passing St
George's School, and park at the Second Beach parking lot on your
right if possible. In the summer season you may have to drive farther
down the road to a larger parking lot, and during peak season there
is a parking fee.
For this hike, take a long easterly walk down the beach. At the far
end enter the Sachuest Point NWR, and take the first shoreline trail
to your right, heading south. Walk around the point counterclockwise
and turn northwards, passing a scattering of rock islands and a
lovely rocky cove. Avoiding the well marked shortcuts, keeping to the
shoreline path, you'll come to an observation platform at the
northern tip of the point. Enjoy the views of the Sakonnet River,
Little Compton, and Third Beach. Before you leave, backtrack easterly
down the trail about 50 yards to a short path onto the rocky shore.
Step down and then turn right, and in about 25 steps, look in the
beach rose bushes on your right for the Sakonnet Point Letterbox,
moved here after the original was attacked by vandals.
Continuing westerly along your trail, regain the park entrance and
again tour the beach line, this time heading west. At the beach's
end, continue westerly up the road, passing a memorial park bench and
bearing left on Tuckerman Ave. Turn in at the Purgatory Chasm parking
lot and follow the path at 145 degrees, leaving the bridge to your
right. Out on the point you'll find a concrete block: turn northeast
and go about 30 steps to a small juniper in a puddingstone outcrop.
Turn to 260 degrees and take 10-15 steps to find your second
discovery, the Purgatory Chasm Letterbox, under a rock behind a small
oak tree. Now get out the beach blanket and sun block!
Fort Adams
Vandalized in late-1999 and replaced by The Wiz in Rhode Island. Many
thanks, Bob!
November 2004: most likely missing...
A single letterbox in the harbor defenses beside the bay.
Difficulty: easy level mile with a brief scramble.
Directions: in Newport, RI, follow Thames Street southwards and turn
right on Wellington Ave. Drive along the southern end of Newport
Harbor, and curve left with the road. Turn right at the stop sign,
then curve left again before going right at another stop sign. Turn
in to Fort Adams on your right and go through the gates (seasonal
fee). Drive straight past the sailing center with views to the right
of the mansions on Breton Cove. Park in the large parking lot.
Hike north with the water to your right past the Museum of Yachting,
and visit the classic boats in the small basin on the point. There
are stunning views of the Newport Bridge and Rose Island Lighthouse.
Keeping Narragansset Bay on your right, curve southward with views of
Jamestown, Fort Wetherill, and Beavertail. The imposing walls of Fort
Adams continue on your left, and begin to become overgrown and
tumble-down. Pass through a gate, and then take the steep path up to
the wall on your left.
Then continue south on the path with the water on your right, with
views ahead of Hammersmith Farms. Turn left (east) with the roadway
up to the Eisenhower House, and then down the hill to the park road
by the gates. Turn left to your waiting car.
Fast Passage
Retired in May of 2008. Good long lasting letterbox with one of our
favorite stams, many thanks to all
who visited and helped keep it alive.
(Originally a three box series, Fast Passage was first placed in September
1999, but the third box in the series soon went missing and was never
replaced. The first
letterbox was kindly refreshed by cscm and
Rustypuff in March 2003. We recarved and replaced that one over the Thanksgiving
Weekend of 2003. In the summer of '03, MusicWoman superceded the missing
third box at the lighthouse with one of
her own. Please spend some extra time on the re-hiding part so this
remaining box will continue to wait for us out at Land's End).
Now a single box guarding the entrance to Narragansset Bay, with views of
several other letterbox sites in Newport and Jamestown RI. A short level
walk.
Directions: in Newport, RI, follow Thames St south along the narrow
one-way portion, and turn right on Wellington Ave. Follow the signs
indicating Ocean Drive: pass westerly along the southern border of
Newport Harbor, and then curve left before turning right at a stop
sign. Curve left and turn right again, and pass Fort Adams State
Park, Hammersmith Farms, Oceancliff, the Coast Guard Station, and
finally the Inn at Castle Hill. Turn left into Brenton Point State
Park, and drive south and then east through the parking area to park
at the Portugese Memorial.
Hopefully your search was a fast passage!
...last updated 07/15/2008
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