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Letterboxing
Northeast
Local
Letterboxes II
Generations Letterboxes
Colchester, Connecticut

The world didn't come to an end on 9/9/99: we know because we were
there. The sites for these two letterboxes were chosen for the
longevity they display in contrast to current short-lived millennium madnesses.
Difficulty: easy 4 miles, in 2-3 hours at Day Pond State Park. There are
a couple of steep parts and a rather long uphill climb near the end. Well
marked trails in the Connecticut Blue Trail system, where blazes are
a light sea blue, exactly the color of the shutters on Long Island
shore summer homes.
Directions: from Connecticut Rt. 2 in Colchester, take exit 16 and go
right on Rt. 149. Travel 2.7 miles uphill past strangely weathered
old farm homes to turn right at a church at a Day Pond State Park sign. Turn again with the signs, but pass the main entrance to the
pond and park at the end of the road near a picnic area.
Hike north downhill through the picnic area to the dam at Day Pond.
Turn left into the woods on the blue blazed trail and head downhill
with the stream, watching for a left fork at double blazes. Zig zag
left and right across a rocky road and follow the blazes through the
woods and under power lines. Travel 1.5 miles up over a small hill,
across the top, and then down the north side to head generally west
on a sometimes wet carriage road. Coming to the site of an old farm
with stone foundations and walls, you'll find a T-intersection. Turn
left, south, wondering what 1970s drunkenness left that piece of litter.
Turn right at the double blazes (straight up the hill will bring you
home). When the trail jogs left, go right (northwest) and down hill
on a well traveled but unmarked trail through a truly marvelous stand
of hemlock to find a campsite by the stream. Enjoy! Then, from this
camp, turn back, but take the left (north) fork. Stop just before
passing through a stone wall and follow a faint trail to the right to
find a true champion oak. Letterbox 9/9/99 lives in the north face of
this wall in the shadow of the ancient oak. We predict the tree will
outlive the box.
From the oak, bushwack south, leaving another wall to your left to
regain the camp trail. Turn left to the east and return to the white
pines and our sea-blue trail. Head south to cross over a bridge and
under power lines and begin a gradual climb of a mile through the
Ewok Forest. Go straight at a small summit when a trail branches
right and straight again a few steps later through a cross trail.
Travel through the woods to a truly gigantic glacial erratic on your
right. Give it a little push, and if it doesn't budge, lean into it
with your back and push harder. Looking up into the sky, imagine this
monster a mile overhead, higher than the small planes, surfing the
crest of the glacial ice sheet. A most boxious location.
With your back to the south, flat face of this boulder, sight 3
ground hugging outcrops along 200 degrees. The 5 Eds Letterbox is
behind the third rock, named in memory of the Drew men carrying the
name Edwin Porter, especially my father EPD IV and my son EPD V.
Search carefully, however: I have evidence to show that there must be
some knee high poison ivy along that 200 degree bearing....and
traveling just a half mile further on your blue trail, cross a stone
wall onto a dirt road and turn right to your car. May memories of our
own personal forests and families bring us a timeless joy.
Gnomelett the Mini-Elf
Lyme, Connecticut
A classic Fairie tale in Hartman Park.
Bring a painted stone or another gift to the fairies to leave in
the circles, if you'd like. These boxes, with elegant fairies draped in
the classic style, are for the adults in your family. For a children's
series featuring Gnomelett, please check out MPf's Gnomelett's
Series.
From the parking area, please head briefly towards the sunrise on the footpath to an information kiosk. A booklet may sometimes be picked up there, if you're
under 12 or over 65, which will lead you to the enchanting Fairie circles. At the kiosk, look to the right for a large tree.
Just behind it you'll find Gnomelett's Cottage. With your back to the tree, walk
uphill towards Long Island Sound with the stone wall on your right. Since
others will follow and an unwanted trail could be made, pick a roundabout way to the
top of the little hill. Look in the wall just beyond a many-trunked tree.
Now on to the Fairie circles! If the booklets are all gone, simply
follow the path down the slope and branch right onto the green
trail. Cross a brook over a footbridge and when the green trail forks left after the
small hill, continue a few paces straight to a T intersection. Turn left
on the yellow trail and climb steadily uphill towards Polaris. Along the way,
find a big, split
rock on the left that is taller than most letterboxers and all Fairies. Gnomelett's second
letterbox is here, around back.
Now continue up the yellow trail . Travel to the top of the hill where a stone wall crosses
your path. Turn to the sunrise and follow along with the wall at your left
hand. You'll find a major wall junction near some beautiful beech trees, and in
the butt end of the wall that points away is my third treasure.
A few skips farther along the yellow trail brings an intersection. Turn to the
sunset and follow the orange marks to the School Room. From this wonderful
spot, turn again towards Polaris and follow the pink trail as it loops around
the beaver pond. Branch left at the red trail and pass by some amazing rock
formations. Soon the trail bends towards Long Island Sound and passes through a
stone wall. Look to the junction at sunset and step over to the far side. Find
me in the corner.
Now to the sea! Branch right at the trail's end and cross
straight over the wide trail onto the orange/green footpath. What do we
have here? Another stone wall! The path crosses through and then follows
alongside briefly. Where the trail veers left, turn off and cross through
the wall to the other side. A few steps towards the sunset, complete my
series by looking under the black stone.
The parking lot is just a bit farther down the trail.
Narragansett Ledges
North Stonington, Connecticut
Spring 2005: These very old boxes are overdue for maintenance, and
have store bought stamps.
Three boxes on an out and back hike over the blue blazed Narragansett
Trail. 4 miles in a generally north-south line, about 2.5 hours. There
are two steep climbs with poor footing leading to the ledges. Several other letterboxes are close by, both on the
Narragansett Trail and connected closely by the Pachaug and Tippecansett Trails.
Directions: in North Stonington, CT, from Rte. 2 or 49, travel along
Wyassup Lake Rd to park at the state boat launch. The trail begins
just north along the road: pass through a gate and follow an old dirt
road before turning left onto single track with the blue blazes.
After 0.7 miles of hiking, climb steeply and pass through a stone
wall to reach High Ledge on your right. From the main promontory, the
High Ledge Letterbox is at 350 degrees, in the western edge of a
waist high flat faced rock, just across the trail.
Continuing north with the Narragansett Trail, pass down the cliff
line and across a picturesque valley. Cover 0.75 miles of woods
walking, passing along a ridge with easterly views, to turn right on
a woods road. Follow this way for about 0.5 miles before turning left
with the blazes. Hike downhill through a switch back and along a
short piece before turning sharply right and scrambling up a ridge.
At the top, the trail goes left: turn right, south, to the overlook. The
Bullet Ledge Letterbox is hidden in the western face of a small
hanging rock to the right.
(Note, winter of 2003-2004: last box missing???)
Returning back with the blue blazes, find the Wyassup Lake Letterbox
in the parking area's south end, behind a rock just beyond the launch
area information board.
Green Falls Pond
Stonington, Connecticut
Revised 6/15/01 due to trail closures...
This one is a treat! 3½ miles over a captivating section of the
Narragansett Trail. Allow 1½ hours for hiking and 2 hours for
lingering, for a series of 5 letterboxes. The first stretch involves a
spectacular trail that is narrow along cliff edges, loosely rocky, and
requires leaping over a stream.
Directions: On scenic CT Rte. 49 in Voluntown, CT, midway between
Routes 138 and 216 (just north of the striking and historic First Baptist
Church at the intersection of Rte. 49 and Wyassup Lake Rd),
turn east on Sand Hill Rd. Follow as it winds through a farm and
turns to dirt (we've often walked the 0.3 mile-long dirt portion in
winter)1.6 miles. You'll see the blue blazed Narragansett Trail enter
from the right and will follow a few blazes to the bottom of the hill
where the trail cuts left (north) back into the woods. Park just
beyond, over the rise, in the excellent pull out. Cross the road and
follow the blue blazed Narragansett Trail heading north along the Green
Falls River.
Follow the forest path to a giant cairn. The Giant Cairn Letterbox is
wedged in the cliff at 300° behind it. Now continue up the trail
, the beginning of one of the sweetest stretches in Connecticut. Cut
through the ledges and cross to the eastern shore of the small river
to follow the path up the cool, green ravine to the Green Falls Pond
dam. This upland pond is a quiet, unspoiled gem.
From the dam, continue briefly with the blue trail to turn right and
step uphill. At a rooty trail section, double back south briefly on
an unmarked trail above the pond until you are exactly lined up with
the wooden footbridge over the dam. There is a rock on the left
(east) with veins of quartz, and a little farther up the slope, on a
bearing of 070 degrees, is the Green Falls Dam Letterbox, tucked into
the southwest side of a balanced rock facing the bridge.
Continue with the blue-blazed trail for a two mile, counterclockwise
loop around the pond. The loop trail is inconsistently blazed in blue
with an orange dot. You'll cross along another distinctive dam to a
three-way intersection. Take the footpath at 300° and soon pass
a fisherman's campfire site. A short way further, after a waist high
boulder on the right, find another, smaller lookout. Check in a crack
down on the south-southeast side a few steps off-trail, behind a
heavyish rock, for the Fisherman's Point Letterbox. Rehide well!
Fork left after the point onto a faint path to hug the shore, then
left again when the blue trail rejoins. Swing a bit east past a
couple of faint coves: the first cove ends in a nice mound of rock
for a look out. At the second cove, cross a small stream and bend
northwest, passing by some open rock, before coming to yet another
lookout. This one is a jumble of rocks cascading down to the pond
just opposite a small island. The first dam at the bottom of the pond
bears 210° and you can see a swimming beach through the trees at
320°. There is a large, flaky-barked chestnut with roots
entwined in rock a few steps in on your left. To the right and behind
it, crawl a half-body length into laurel to find the Northern Pond
Letterbox. This one too needs most careful rehiding from prying eyes. It
has been hard for lots of people to find: if you pass a standing
concrete pipe on the trail, you've gone to far and missed the spot for the
cascading jumble.
Continue up the trail, passing the concrete pipe on-end, to the dirt
road. Turn left (west), and pass the campground before curving
southwards past beach and boat launch. Follow the orange-dot trail
along the road, passing a wood-gated parking area on the left as road
sweeps right, and finally turn left, west again, onto trail. Walk
steeply downhill to smooth swimming rocks and turn right at the water
to come to the northern tip of a long pretty cove. Make a small
stream crossing and scramble a few feet up a steep-to slab of upended
stone over the cove. A larger, cascading stream crossing is just
ahead. From the rooty path at the upended stone, bushwack about 12
steps northwest along the little ridge to a cleft on the right: the Last
Green Falls Pond Letterbox is in rocks to the north-northwest.
Now cross that second stream and walk down to the first dam: head
south again, back through the gorge to your car. Hope you enjoyed the
new letterboxes at Green Falls Pond!
Tribal Nation
Ledyard, Connecticut
(Missing)
Little Dam
Ledyard, Connecticut
(Vandalized in July '00 and then expanded into a
four-box series in November '00)
A quietly pretty hike on the Narragansett Trail
in
Ledyard CT, leading to a small scenic dam. Cover 3.5 miles
total, up and along Wintechog Hill, with an elevation of about 400
feet, on an out-and-back route. There are steep but short climbs at each
end of the hike. This batch is just west of the (now defunct) Tribal
Nation letterboxes. The stamps were handcut on-site from images pulled
out of the air up there.
Directions: On CT Rte. 2, just south of the
Mashantucket Pequot's Foxwoods Casino, turn west on Wintechog Hill Rd. Travel 0.8 miles, passing the trail and parking area for
Lantern Hill, to the town dump entrance on
your right. Flip a u-turn and park in a little pull out spot on the
right (south) side of the road. On foot, backtrack 100 feet to the
blue blazed trail.
Follow the trail on the south side of the road
generally southeast. You'll dip and climb gently in hardwood and
mountain laurel until you meet a stone wall on your left that
abruptly ends. Slip around behind on the east side to find the Abrupt
End letterbox hidden in a chink in the wall.
The trail turns eastward along the hill. After about
1/4 mile, cross an open area like an old forest road (it's a natural
gas pipeline, and is worth a short detour up the hill to the south
for a peek if you'd like). After the open area, the trail passes
through a north-south running wall. Turn north to a corner in the
stone to find the Junkyard View letterbox in the wall under a quartz
marker rock. Careful of the barbed wire!
Continuing along Wintechog Hill, cross another wall
with a similar corner to the left, and then pass through a lower,
tumbled wall. The trail suddenly bends right and uphill on a small
rocky scramble. Next climb gently to the south before turning west.
At a wall, bend to the left again and come to a rocky, steep, short
drop-off pointing to 150°, where you might even need to use your
hands a little for balance. Before going down, look to the north
behind a tree for the Sunny Outcrop letterbox.
Now scramble down and continue eastwards on the trail,
passing a classic (and beautiful) glacial kettlehole. In about 1/2
mile, the trail descends Wintechog Hill and exits into a pretty field
crossed by a power line. In the stone wall just before leaving the
woods into the field, take about seven steps to the left to find the
Gallup Pond Letterbox low in the south face of the wall.
Leaving the hill and the forest behind, emerge into an
old field and follow the trail to Gallup Pond, right next to busy
Rte. 2. Explore the small dam and spillway, and enjoy the views of
the pond with its dark, tannin-rich waters. You could turn north on
Rte 2 for two miles to your car, but with the congested casino
traffic, we do not recommend it. Far better to enjoy the walk back on
the trail, returning the way you came. Thanks for sharing this hike
with us!
...updated Saturday, May 28, 2005
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