After
an evening of exploring the cabin we settled down to a good
night's sleep under the pitch black skies we drove about three miles
into the centre of the small town of Woodstock a popular
tourist town with interesting shops and three covered bridges, the
Middle Bridge, built entirely of wood, having been restored after an
arson attack in 1974. We found an informative visitor bureau where we
obtained leaflets and maps of the local attractions Despite being only
the beginning of October the shops and restaurants were already
decorated for Halloween with witches, ghosts and pumpkins.

Halloween in Woodstock
Many of the minor lanes in Vermont are dirt roads with fine gravel
surfaces usually fairly smooth with not too many potholes and
often single track with occasional passing places. We went
for a
couple of
walks from the cabin along these tree lined roads and on the
rare
occasions that a vehicle came by, usually a pickup truck, the drivers
stopped for a chat - we guessed people walking along these
roads
were
a rare sight although there were some waymarked tracks and walks
leaflets available. We also passed extensive plastic piping systems for
modern maple syrup collection (Apparently there is a fifth
"mud"
season in April
and May after the winter thaw around these parts). Not far from
Woodstock we drove east along Route 4 to the Quechee Gorge a
major
attraction where the river passes through a steep
wooded straight
defile about a mile long. There is ample free parking and a modern
visitor centre as well as several gift shops, one selling
Cabot
cheddar cheese of various strengths from mild to seriously and
shockingly strong and many varieties of maple syrup (free
tastings
available), a
huge antiques emporium and a traditional American diner as well as
other restaurants and a motel. Paths lead alongside the gorge to
viewpoints and there are more attractions in the village centre a mile
north of the main road. The covered bridge in the village was severely
damaged as were several others in Vermont during the Hurricane Irene
floods in August 2011 and is being rebuilt.

Traditional American diner
Another
rather damp day trip took us from Woodstock to the historic town of
Windsor passing Jenne Farm near
Reading. This typical old farm is the most photographed in Vermont and
has been
used for several film sets including Forrest Gump. At Windsor we
visited the interesting (for engineers at least) American Precision
Museum where the first mass production methods (for making guns
unfortunately) were set up in 1840's, then after a
stroll up the main street we crossed the Cornish-Windsor covered
bridge, the longest in the USA, to visit the National Historic Site of
the house, gardens and galleries
of the American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907), famous for
his statues of
Abraham Lincoln and more so for his bas-relief works ranging from
miniature cameo brooches and coins up to large public
monuments and memorials.