Naugatuck Trail

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Naugatuck_Trail an entity of type: Place

The Naugatuck Trail is a 6.8-mile (10.9 km) Blue-Blazed hiking trail "system" in the eastern central-lower Naugatuck River Valley in New Haven County, Connecticut, USA. It is almost entirely contained in the . The mainline (officially the "Blue" or "non-dot") trail is primarily east to west with three short side or spur trails. Composed of four trails (including the primarily East-to-West mainline trail (5.5 miles) plus three shorter side trails), at its western end the trail ends with a section alongside Route 8 and the Naugatuck River. During the 1930s and 1940s, it was much larger. But post–World War II housing developments of the Connecticut Blue-Blazed Trails, led to its drastic reduction. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Naugatuck Trail
rdf:langString Naugatuck Trail
xsd:float 41.45777893066406
xsd:float -73.03416442871094
xsd:integer 26821287
xsd:integer 1105674466
rdf:langString Naugatuck Trail parallel to Connecticut State Route 8 and the Naugatuck River
rdf:langString CFPA Blue-Blazed Naugatuck Trail
xsd:double 5.5
rdf:langString NaugatuckTrailNaugatuckStateForestBeaconFallsCT-CTRoute8Border.jpg
rdf:langString easiest spring to fall
rdf:langString hiking, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, other
xsd:string 41.45777777777778 -73.03416666666666
rdf:langString The Naugatuck Trail is a 6.8-mile (10.9 km) Blue-Blazed hiking trail "system" in the eastern central-lower Naugatuck River Valley in New Haven County, Connecticut, USA. It is almost entirely contained in the . The mainline (officially the "Blue" or "non-dot") trail is primarily east to west with three short side or spur trails. Composed of four trails (including the primarily East-to-West mainline trail (5.5 miles) plus three shorter side trails), at its western end the trail ends with a section alongside Route 8 and the Naugatuck River. During the 1930s and 1940s, it was much larger. But post–World War II housing developments of the Connecticut Blue-Blazed Trails, led to its drastic reduction. Notable features include: the summits of Beacon Cap and Spruce Knoll. The trail goes near, but does not summit Beacon Hill (670 feet). The Connecticut Forest and Park Association is mostly responsible for its maintenance.
rdf:langString easy, with very few difficult sections
rdf:langString hunters, deer ticks, poison ivy
rdf:langString Beacon Cap 770 ft
xsd:integer 220
rdf:langString Connecticut Route 8
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 14100
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