New England Rocks lots of pics

idbrian

Crotch Rot
So i went to an interview Friday, North of Boston in Andover, so my girl and i decided to make a weekend trip out of it. We got to ride Harrold Parker State Forest near Andover on Friday, Fort Rock in Exter NH Saturday, and briefly ride Westwood in Guilford CT on Sunday. This is what we found:

Harrold Parker SF: This place is a very underrated destination for MTBing. We stayed in the campground and i would highly recommend this place to anyone looking for a camping weekend where you can ride in and out of your site. I wouldn't think it is a great place for kids as there is nor decent swimming to be found; no lakes. The sites are a mix of very secluded and not so secluded; but all rather large. There are warm showers but for some reason the shower head is 4' high. As far as riding goes, there must be close to 80 miles of trails here. Linking together all singletrack was all too easy, with most of the trails looking to be very freshly cut. The terrain was this very odd mix of flowy and techy terrain. Most of the place resembled the pine covered trails and flow of Kingdom Trails only less ridden, and then out of nowhere are these massive rock gardens and features. We would have taken pictures here except the place was teaming with bird size mosquittos. The second biggest plus aside from the sweet trails was that the mosquittos were big, slow, dumb, and easy to kill. You can't really plot out a course here as the place is a maze of singletrack. You best bet is to use the map to know the boundaries and roads that you cross as a reference and just go exploring. As far as a MTB camping destination goes i think Harrold Parker blows away Jim Thorpe PA.

Fort Rock:The highlight of our weekend. This place is a pretty notorious NH system and rightfully so. This place has amazing maintained and interesting technical trails. This is the coolest technical riding i have seen and ties Blue Mountain as the best place i have ridden. All of the pictures below were taken at Fort Rock. The mosquittos there actually took 5 seconds to find you so we got some shots in. I left this place with some pretty sweet bruises. Similar to Harold Parker, the map is good for knowing and staying within the boundaries. Gas lines, the tunnel, and power lines keep you on track. The place is split in two by a tunnel that goes under a highway.

Westwood: We only rode this place for about an hour and half and we hated what we found. We picked up a map at the local shop which is very accurate but we unfortunately picked the wrong trails to take. What we took were rocky trails with no flow whatsoever; not built for mtbing. We missed the good stuff which we read about later. Should have looked up the good stuff before heading out there. On our way back to the lot i decided to go check out one more trail from the map that looked more promising as i needed to see some reason this place was labeled the best in CT. I found a real trail that was well out of my league. This place has big features. Drops and jumps, some over ten feet. I can see why advanced riders would love it. No pictures here. The mosquittos swarmed here also only they were tiny and terrifying. My girl fell off a bridge and went knee high into stinky swamp mud and was not happy about it. We made our way back to the car beaten down. We need to go back here and ride the good stuff one day.

Now for pics:
 
Fort Rock:
Train that runs through Exeter from Boston to Portland i believe:
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Typical terrain
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Long bridge one:
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Long bridge 2, these were well built:
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New blingy additions to my ride:
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Thanks for the report Brian

how far drive to Fort Rock?

6 hours.

But worth making a trip out there and hitting some other places in MA or CT on the way back. It is also only 25 minutes from Portsmouth if the wife/kids wanted something to do.
 
6 hours.

But worth making a trip out there and hitting some other places in MA or CT on the way back. It is also only 25 minutes from Portsmouth if the wife/kids wanted something to do.

was looking to see if it was kinda "on the way" to Kingdom.

I am already checking out the other place in VT (that you mentioned) on our way up to KT in 2 wks!!:getsome:
 
Ft Rock was better than Millstone, but not nearly as on the way. Millstone is cool too and i can only imagine that it grew a lot more trails in the last year.

I feel like CT, MA, and South NH have a lot of awesome riding going on that isn't talked about much on the national level. I always wanted to to find places that had a lot of tech but with less climbing, and that is exactly what i am finding in New England.
 
I feel like CT, MA, and South NH have a lot of awesome riding going on that isn't talked about much on the national level. I always wanted to to find places that had a lot of tech but with less climbing, and that is exactly what i am finding in New England.

that sounds cool. if i were to ever move, the one trail i would want to bring with me is the sourlands.

it seems the east coast in general gets ignored when it comes to the nontraditional sports (i.e. not baseball - you can find a yankee fan anywhere, but mtn biking/climbing/surfing/skiing no one ever gives us cred). i don't mind being on the ignored coast - i couldn't imagine living near moab and being a local - you'd have some crazy crowded (but awesomely great) trails.

btw - great pics - those trails are right up my alley.
 
The usual western comments i see on the mtbr passion thread when someone from the east coast puts up pics is that "you call that mountain biking, where are the mountains?" And most of the riding i see from that thread of out West are all about the views. I think that is cool also but i really like technical riding and going over really cool rock features. I think the NE may be ideal for my riding preference. Too bad the riding season is so short (for me).

I am looking out West a lot for a potential move, but i've also put Portsmouth NH and Raleigh NC on the list. Raleigh is just so affordable. The Portsmouth opportunity seems to be coming to reality too fast.
 
i really like technical riding and going over really cool rock features. I think the NE may be ideal for my riding preference. Too bad the riding season is so short (for me).

i can appreciate that. i love the techy riding, and the snow up there is kind of a pain (i can imagine) but that's why we have skis... and believe it or not, up there, surfboards.

I am looking out West a lot for a potential move, but i've also put Portsmouth NH and Raleigh NC on the list. Raleigh is just so affordable. The Portsmouth opportunity seems to be coming to reality too fast.

my bro-in-law (avid rider) lived up in VT and NH for some time... and moved to NC for a stint as well. send me a PM if you want to hit him up with any questions. he dug the riding in both areas. he loved the north for the techy nature of it, but the snow would get in the way, and loved the longer riding season down south, but thought the heat was too much.
 
my bro-in-law (avid rider) lived up in VT and NH for some time... and moved to NC for a stint as well. send me a PM if you want to hit him up with any questions. he dug the riding in both areas. he loved the north for the techy nature of it, but the snow would get in the way, and loved the longer riding season down south, but thought the heat was too much.

Where did your bro-in-law end up? Was worried about the heat.
 
Where did your bro-in-law end up? Was worried about the heat.

the heat was a big issue he said. he said riding after ten in the morning would just be out of the question at times. he tried riding through the middle of the day, but he said the heat coupled with the humidity was too much. he's back up here in north east-ish PA.
 
Was worried about the heat.

clarkenstein said:
the heat was a big issue he said. he said riding after ten in the morning would just be out of the question at times. he tried riding through the middle of the day, but he said the heat coupled with the humidity was too much. he's back up here in north east-ish PA.

Being raised in the south you get used to the heat. It is something that takes time and concerted effort to be able to function in though. Much like my own adaptation to functioning in the NE winter months. It can be done and hydration is a major factor down there when the humidity gets rough but you eventually would get used to it.
 
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