Lillinonah Trail
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lillinonah_Trail an entity of type: Place
The Lillinonah Trail is a 5.9-mile (9.5 km) Blue-Blazed hiking trail "system" in the lower Housatonic River valley in Fairfield County and, today, is entirely in Newtown. Most of the trail is in the upper block of Paugussett State Forest. The mainline (official "Blue-Blazed") trail circles the Paugussett State Forest "upper block". The west, north and east portions of the trail are shared with the northern section of Al's Trail—a ten-mile trail in Newtown. The Lillinonah Trail today is composed of four sides in a square "loop".
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Lillinonah Trail
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Lillinonah Trail
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41.45999908447266
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-73.30999755859375
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26933028
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1105576221
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Hanover Road
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Echo Valley Road parking lot for Paugussett State Forest Upper Block
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Lake Lillinonah from the Lillinonah Trail, Newtown, Connecticut.
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CFPA Blue-Blazed Trail
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Newtown, Connecticut
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LillinonahTrail_NorthernLakeFacingNorthWithBoat.JPG
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--04-16
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Pond Brook inlet, Lake Lillinonah, Great Oak, Shepaug Dam, Maple Sugaring, Eagles
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hiking, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, fishing, other
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41.46 -73.31
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The Lillinonah Trail is a 5.9-mile (9.5 km) Blue-Blazed hiking trail "system" in the lower Housatonic River valley in Fairfield County and, today, is entirely in Newtown. Most of the trail is in the upper block of Paugussett State Forest. The mainline (official "Blue-Blazed") trail circles the Paugussett State Forest "upper block". The west, north and east portions of the trail are shared with the northern section of Al's Trail—a ten-mile trail in Newtown. The Lillinonah Trail today is composed of four sides in a square "loop". Notable features include the Hanover Road parking lot and boat launch, semi-obscured (by trees) scenic views of Pond Brook inlet and Lake Lillinonah (Housatonic River), a climb to a high point of 480-foot (150 m), a very large oak tree, several stone fences and foundations and a demonstration of a maple sugaring technique known as "sugarbush" near the Echo Valley Road parking lot. The Lillinonah Trail is maintained largely through the efforts of the Connecticut Forest and Park Association and the . The Lillinonah Trail appears to have been a larger trail in the 1940s based on the map in the 1940 CFPA Connecticut Walk Book.
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easy, with very few difficult sections
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hunters, deer ticks, poison ivy, Eagles
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480
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194
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Lake Lillinonah at Shepaug Dam
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20768
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