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Letterboxing
Northeast
Local
Letterboxes IV
Milo Light II, Too
Two Boxes plus One!
(Not missing after all...here's a note from our wonderful letterboxing
friend, Butterfly:
"The Story: As October 2002 approached, I realized that I had been
letter boxing for one year. An eventful year and one filled with many enjoyable hunts into places I would never dreamed existed had I
not been introduced to letterboxing.
Looking at my log books and the 500 plus stamps impressed
forever on the pages, I thought of putting an anniversary box at Milo Light, my
very first find. How sad to learn the box was reported missing. I wrote to the Drew Clan expressing my sorrow
for the missing Milo Light box, and telling what I wished to do.
That very night, Jay Drew carved a new Milo Light stamp and left
it on my door step, complete with box and new log book. Bluebird and I went off to Milo to put the new box in the old place, and
OOPS, we found the old box still in its hiding place! Not lost, never missing -just waiting.
Humm now we have a new box!! This is what we did: we named it
Milo Light II too. Here are the clues to my anniversary box and Milo Light II
too").
Three letterboxes in a sweet little Nature
Conservancy property. About 3 miles/2 hours (out-and-back). Milo Light Preserve is located in Montville,
CT, between Salem and Norwich. From either Rte. 85 in the east or Rte.
395 in the west, take Rte. 82 to Rte. 163 North. Soon turn right onto Hershler Rd. Park in the Kingdom Hall lot or
just beyond at the preserve entrance on your right.
Begin hiking eastwards on trail #1 past the entrance sign. In about one
mile of quiet woods walking, pass the stone foundations of an old farm site on your
left. Continuing through the third steel gate, take the next left at a fork to
head northeast alongside Trading Cove Brook. Follow downhill, with the
brook to your left a short way from the trail. You'll soon see the end of
a stone wall about 12 steps off-trail to your right. There is a
poorly-maintained sign
indicating that you're leaving Nature Conservancy land. Find the original
Milo
Light Letterbox living in the south side of the stone wall, just a step
or two past the butt-end.
Opposite the letterbox at the brook is an interesting glacial dam
that is worth exploring. You'll know if you've missed this stone wall
(one among many) and gone too far as a short way further
downhill the path will bring you out
onto a dirt road and power line right of way.
Now return west crossing again over the seasonal
brook by the third gate. Stop at the old foundations on the northern side of the trail.
In the 1870’s Daniel Appley homesteaded in this scenic spot. Imagine folks
living here as you carefully walk to the north east corner inside the foundation.
Facing southwest, now take three giant steps and you will be standing on your
Milo Light II treasure. Please tuck it back under out of sight.
Continue on in a westerly direction and notice when you pass through an
opening in a stone wall which lays in a diagonally east west direction. On the
northern side of the trail the Happy Butterfly Anniversary Letterbox is tucked
under a fallen log. Smile as you stamp in and think of all the letterbox treasures you have found during this past year.
Milo's Delight is an add on to the Happy Butterfly Anniversary
letterbox at Milo Light.
History: In October of 2001, Nancy (Butterfly) & I (Lobsta Lady)
discovered our Very First letterbox at Milo Light. In Honor of that
Wonderful discovery, Milo's Delight was carved to celebrate this
Joyous occasion.
Follow the direction's to Happy Butterfly, then walk 3 steps at a
heading of 120 degrees, and look for the cubby hole on the North side
of the stonewall, with a vertical, almost a triangle, rock above it.
Enjoy!
Lobsta Lady
Keep traveling westerly on the trail back to your car. Hope you enjoyed Milo Light
I and II, and Happy Butterfly, too.
Turtle Creek
Currently missing...
Resolution
Our 100th letterbox, Resolution was first placed January 1, 2000
and represented our hopes for the new millennium. It has been ripped off, recarved, and revised three times since
then.
We're proud that it was a centerpiece of the first Connecticut Gathering
and was found then by several giants of the early days, including Rae,
The Orient Express, Lonewolf, SarahF, and LoneMassWolf. After many visitors, it finally fell victim to
particularly mean-spirited vandals in the fall of 2003. They win.
Meadow Woods
(Note: this box is missing...you might try Fab
Four or Zoom Zoom Zoom instead)
Meadow Woods is a quietly satisfying park that is ½ Nature
Conservancy and ½ Town of Essex. So far, there is one letterbox
on an extensive, well marked trail system. Figure a long hour and
2½ miles for this hike. Sorry, no mountain bikes.
Directions: On Connecticut Rte. 9, take exit 3 and follow the Essex
signs along West Ave. Turn left on Grove St at the library, then left
again onto North Main St. After about ½ mile, turn left on Book
Hill and after another ½ mile, left on Book Hill Woods Rd. Park
at the end in the cul de sac next to the sign for the Meadow Woods Park.
Pick up an excellent map in the mailbox at the trail head, and then
hike in on the green blazed Long Trail for a counterclockwise
south-to-north loop. Walk up a steep slope and over a small bridge to
fork left with the green trail. Follow the Long Trail past a silver
crossover on the right and the orange Hill Trail on your left. Turn
right (west) on a white blazed crossover trail towards Castle Rock,
then shortly right again onto the orange blazed Castle Rock Trail.
Hike along southwards with a ridge line to your left (east), which is
Castle Rock. Just before the trail drops down to a yellow
intersection, scramble up the end of the ridge. Bushwack 20 steps
east to a chest-high roundish boulder: the Castle Rock Letterbox is
against the rock on the ground.
Continue south on the orange, and then turn right at the yellow
blazed Eagle Rock Trail. Follow it around behind houses and down into
a steep valley before regaining the orange Castle Rock Trail. Turn
right and cross a small bridge to the blue blazed Canfield Trail.
Turn left for a straight shot north, back to the trailhead.
Zoom Zoom Zoom
A single letterbox: it's only a one hundred yard walk,
but it's breathtaking!
Directions: On Connecticut Rte. 9, take exit 3 and follow the
Essex signs along West Ave. Passing the Library and Town Hall on your
left, come to a stop sign. Bear right and follow Main Street as it
curves left downhill to the complicated intersection with North Main
Street. There is a lamp in the center of the intersection. Go
"straight" through the intersection (you'll have to bear
right around the center post) and pass between antique shops and an
art gallery. (For a brief and wonderful detour, turn right and drive
down-and-back-up the North Main Street historic district). A few
blocks after the antiques/gallery and past the Riverside Cemetery,
turn right on New City Street. Next, turn left on Riverview Street,
and finally right through the gates onto Foxboro (there is nothing
"dead" about this end). Park after #2 on the left at the
Osage Trails entrance.
Walk into the Elizabeth Barnes Callender Preserve (truly falls into
the "Oh My God" category!) and walk down toward Falls Brook
Pond. There are a pair of evergreen junipers down on the northwest
shore: look in the base of the one to the east.
Barb & Larry's Ledge
The first one may missing...these old boxes are way overdue for
maintenance and contained store-bought stamps.
A pair of letterboxes high on a traprock ridge with breathtaking
views to the west on the classic and popular Mattabasset Trail over
Mt Higby in Middletown, CT. Difficulty: quite strenuous climbing and
ridgeline scrambling: avoid in icy winter weather. This hike covers
about 2 miles in 2 hours.
Directions: At the western end of CT Rte. 66, just before it
blends into I-691 (and just west of Guida's Diner at Rte. 147), watch
for a roadside pullout and blue blazes on the northern side of the
highway. There is a Mattabasset Trail sign. Alternatively, there is
parking at Guida's and a purple-blazed connector trail heading west
from the diner.
Hike north from the roadway on any of the paths you see to the blue
blazed Mattabasset Trail and turn left to climb a short but intense
burst to the top of the ridge. Continuing with the trail, dip down
northwest and cross a level area before dipping again into a small
valley and then up to the beginning of the great views. The trail
turns north along the ridgeline. A short way farther will bring you
into a small cedar grove: watch for the Mount Higby Letterbox in a
small cairn off the trail on the right (east).
Continue north, enjoying the truly fabulous views, and cross the
sometimes crowded summit. Hike along the ridge about ½ mile to
an open flat area that really opens the views northward to Mt Higby.
Again, off the trail to the east, find the Northern View Letterbox in
a small cairn. Stamp in and then simply retrace your steps home.
Sherlock's Home
Difficulty: two letterboxes on an easy 2-3 miles along very scenic
Connecticut River cliffs.
Location: Gillette Castle State Park, East Haddam Connecticut, on
Rte. 148. Accessible from Routes 9, 2, 156, and I-95. William
Gillette, famous for his Broadway portrayal of Sherlock Holmes, built
this 24 room fieldstone house in 1919, and surrounded it with a
miniature railroad. Some of the old railways are now hiking trails.
At the time these letterboxes were placed, the trails and castle
itself were undergoing renovation. The trails are open to hikers
without a fee, but when renovations to the castle are complete there
will be a fee to visit. Sorry, no dogs or bikes, but we highly
recommend it!
"Mrs Houston? Oh Mrs Houston," called Mr Gillette. It was a
quiet evening in our study at the big fieldstone house on the
Connecticut River. William had spent the day in New York, getting
ready to portray Sherlock Holmes on stage for the first time, and he
was tired. He had disagreed with his director over acting styles, and
now he wanted a pipe by the fire and a glass of wine from our housekeeper.
"Mrs Houston!"
221B Baker Street seemed a million miles away. Gillette kicked off
his Persian slippers and pulled on his deerstalker cap, and headed
out for a walk. He needed some new elements to bring his Sherlock to
life. He went out behind the Castle to walk his railroad tracks,
where he did his best thinking. Facing the house, he found that the
setting sun was in his eyes, so he turned left and walked downhill on
the road "to the river." As the road bent right, William
turned left onto one of his favorite trails, and followed it down
until it wrapped to the left. A short way before the trail regained
the road, William stepped to the left and sat down on a flat waist
high boulder, one of his favorite places to think. He lit a pipe, his
favorite Calabash, and it came to him! He would give Sherlock Holmes
a pipe onstage! Unnoticed, his box of tobacco dropped behind him and
wedged under the boulder, for future fans to discover.
He ran back uphill with his lanky gait, holding onto his cap. He met
me behind the castle, and when I asked if he had any inspiration, he
happily cried, "It's elementary, my dear Woodson!" This
favorite phrase of his was also to become a part of Sherlockian lore.
Desiring to check on the progress of his railroad bridges, we walked
to the right of the Castle, under his new archway and onto the
tracks. His "Grand Central Station" was still under
construction, but we followed the main tracks on a wide trail that
curved west and north, hugging cliffs high above a covered footbridge
below to the west. Coming to a junction of the tracks, we continued
north a short bit before forking northwest, again along ledge with a
drop off to the west. William and I passed a huge and gnarly white
oak above us to the right, and watched for other champion-sized
trees. Forking sharp right onto a hairpin turn heading uphill to the
southeast, we came to a crossroads in the trail. Just to the right,
William's deerslayer cap got lodged in the rocks behind that huge oak
tree. He was so busily pacing that I forgot to mention it to him, and
it is probably there to this day.
But that calabash pipe and that deerslayer hat were one day to become
synonymous with Sherlock Holmes, as William's incorporation of them
into Sherlock's persona became well known.
Ground Zero
Last found March 6, 2005 by Flutterbye.
Placed for the Letterbox Gathering 2000.
Directions: Three letterboxes on Mamacoke Island at the Connecticut
College Land Trust. This hike covers 2 easy miles with significant
off-trail bushwacking; walking through light brush without a trail, but
little chance of getting lost on this small island. Bring binoculars and
a change of shoes in case of damp feet crossing the marsh trail at high
tide. Sorry, no mountain bikes. On I-95 in New london, Connecticut, tune
your radio to 91.1, WCNI. Take exit 83 if driving northbound on 95, or
exit 84N if southbound, and follow Rte. 32 North past Conn College. Turn
right on Benham Ave/Harrisons Landing. Follow the road downhill, and just
before the railroad tracks park in the small lot on the left.
Backtrack up the road to the west a short way and turn right (north) past
the steel-bar gate and onto the main trail. There is an info board with a
map to help orient you. Walk north on this main path for ¼ mile to the
end, passing through another gate, and then bear right with any of the
narrower paths that cross over the railroad tracks. Find another info
board on the marsh. Head east on the trail across the marsh to Mamacoke
Island, where your feet might get a little splash. On dry ground again,
follow the left (northeasterly) fork for a clockwise trip around the
island.
Walking generally north with the cliffs on the right and the cove on your
left, watch for a large boulder, precariously perched on the edge of the
ridge to the right. At the north end of the island, come to an open area
of slickrock with a smooth rock ramp leading down to the water. There are
great views north upriver. From down at the water's edge, look back south
to find your first reward under a stump above the tide line.
Now, continue east and then south along the water to find a southbound
trail along the eastern shore. This path climbs steadily some 25 yards
inland to finally turn left and drop down steeply. At this turn-dropoff,
back track a bit and cut left (west) over brush to find a good spot to
hop up onto the ridge. Follow a faint deer trail north, bushwacking as
needed, to cross over hte top of the island from southeast to northwest,
and find that large perched boulder you spotted earlier, overhanging the
inbound trail. A few steps south-southeast is a cracked boulder
like a broken egg; the second letterbox is hidden under it behind a trap
door of stone.
Returning south the way you came, hop down off the ledge and regain your
southbound trail. Head down, leaving the ridge behind you. When the trail
turns sharply right, west-northwest, again turn off-trail to the left
(south) and follow the smooth rock outcroppings down to the water near an
old piling and a big steel tiedown ring set into the stone. There are
good views south to the Gold Star Bridge. Follow the shore left, easterly
until you're around the point and on the main river again with views
across to Armageddon. A few steps north along this shore, with protest
messages pointing east, find the third letterbox on the left under an
overhanging rock just inside the treeline.
Finally, follow the shoreline back south and west, and from the
piling-ring, pick up a trail to bring you around west and north, skirting
cliffs on your right, to the marsh trail intersection. Turn left to cross
the marsh and the railroad tracks to evacuate home from Ground Zero.
United We Stand
Last found March 6, 2005 by Flutterbye.
Placed for the Letterbox Gathering 2001.
Past the last of the Letterboxing at Ground Zero overlooks you'll find,
if you continue your quest, a second pair of letterboxes.
Return northwest along the rocky shore, passing the ring bolt and piling,
and then another ring bolt.
Cross southwest over the inlet onto a gravel beach (this section is
oh-so-slippery when wet or icy) and walk down the beach. About 90 steps,
halfway down the beach, where the "island" rises a foot or two
on your right, look in the clearing for hidden treasure under a driftwood
plank.
Finally, return to Mamacoke and walk back to the marsh. Cross over to the
railroad tracks and turn south (this railroad is rarely used and then
only by slow freight trains).
Pass a sweet little pond to the right and at the water's southern end,
find a shrubby tree to the west, just opposite the first big oak on
private property.
Look in the shrubby base to complete the memorial. Now a few steps
further on the tracks returns you to Bentham Rd, where just to the right
you'll return to your treks' beginning.
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