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Discover Vermont: Authentic Experiences Off the Beaten Path

autumn in vermont
autumn in vermont

Vermont has a way of sneaking up on you. You come for a long weekend, maybe just to catch the fall foliage or ski a few runs, and then you find yourself standing at the edge of a covered bridge or eating the best bowl of cheddar soup you have ever tasted and thinking: I need more time here. There is always more time needed in Vermont.

Whether you are visiting for the first time, spending a season here, or you have lived in the Northeast Kingdom your whole life and somehow still have not done everything on this list, consider this your guide. These are twenty things worth doing in Vermont before you go. Not tourist traps. Not the same recycled list you find everywhere. Just the real stuff.

The Classics That Deserve Their Reputation

1. Watch the Foliage From a Back Road

Everyone talks about fall foliage in Vermont, and yes, the hype is real. But the difference between a foliage experience and a foliage memory is the road you take. Skip Route 100 on a Saturday in October and instead wind through Craftsbury, Greensboro, or the hills above Johnson. Pull over when the urge hits. There is no rush here.

2. Eat a Maple Creemee

Soft serve made with real Vermont maple syrup is not something you can replicate at home. It is creamy in a way that feels almost unfair. Find one at a local farm stand or sugarhouse rather than a chain. The ones sold roadside near a working sugarbush taste noticeably better, and half of that is probably just the setting.

3. Visit a Working Sugarhouse in March

Mud season gets a bad reputation, but early spring is when Vermont’s most iconic tradition comes alive. Sugarhouses across the state open their doors during sugaring season, and you can watch the whole process up close, smell the steam rolling off the evaporators, and taste fresh maple syrup poured over snow. The Vermont Maple Sugar Makers Association keeps an updated list of open farms each year.

4. Cross a Covered Bridge on Foot

Vermont has more than a hundred covered bridges still standing, and the experience of walking through one quietly, no car rushing past, is something completely different from driving through. The bridges near Stowe, Montgomery, and Northfield are particularly beautiful in any season. Stop in the middle and just listen to the water below.

covered bridge in autumn in vermont

Get Into the Vermont Outdoors

5. Hike to a Fire Tower

Vermont has several old fire lookout towers that are still climbable, and the views from the top are worth every step. Spruce Mountain in Plainfield, Elmore Mountain in Lake Elmore, and Belvidere Mountain up in Eden each offer a different experience. Clear days reward you with views that stretch into New Hampshire, New York, and Canada.

6. Swim in a Swimming Hole

Vermonters guard their swimming holes with a certain quiet loyalty, and you understand why the moment you arrive at one. Cold, clear water fed by mountain streams, rocks to jump from, and an informal social code that basically amounts to: be cool and leave no trace. Bingham Falls near Stowe is a well-known one. The falls at Texas Falls in Hancock are also worth the short walk in.

7. Ski or Snowboard a Classic Vermont Mountain

Stowe and Killington get most of the attention, and rightfully so. But there is something to be said for a smaller mountain on a quiet Tuesday in January when the lift lines are nonexistent. Mad River Glen is co-op owned, single-chair, and proudly old school. Bolton Valley stays uncrowded and has terrain that surprises you. Pick the one that fits your style and go more than once.

8. Paddle a Lake at Sunrise

Lake Champlain is the obvious choice, and it is magnificent. But smaller lakes like Caspian Lake in Greensboro, Shadow Lake in Glover, or Elmore Lake offer a stillness that is hard to find anywhere else. Get out early, before the wind picks up, and you will understand what people mean when they say Vermont has a quietness that feels alive.

9. Walk a Stretch of the Long Trail

The Long Trail is the oldest long-distance hiking trail in the country, running 273 miles from the Massachusetts border to the Canadian line. You do not need to thru-hike it to appreciate it. Pick a section, pack lunch, and spend a half day in the Green Mountains. The stretch around Mount Mansfield or the Camel’s Hump ridge line gives you classic Vermont alpine scenery without requiring a week off work.

summer hiking trail in vermont

Dig Into Vermont Food and Drink

10. Do a Vermont Cheese Tour

Vermont is home to more than 50 artisan cheesemakers, and many of them welcome visitors. Cabot is the most famous name, but places like Jasper Hill Farm in Greensboro Bend, Neighborly Farms in Randolph Center, and Consider Bardwell Farm near Manchester are equally worth visiting. Buy something wrapped in paper, take it home, and eat it with crackers and local honey.

11. Have Breakfast at a Diner That Has Not Changed in Decades

There are still diners in Vermont where the coffee comes in a ceramic mug before you even ask, where the pie is made by someone in the back, and where the booths are vinyl and the floor is linoleum. The Miss Lyndonville Diner, the Blue Benn in Bennington, and Miss Bellows Falls Diner all carry that energy. Arrive hungry.

12. Drink a Vermont Craft Beer at the Source

The Heady Topper pilgrimage to The Alchemist in Stowe is practically a Vermont rite of passage at this point. But beyond that, breweries like Hill Farmstead in Greensboro, Foam Brewers in Burlington, and Lost Nation in Morrisville are worth a visit on their own terms. Drink something draft that does not travel outside the state. That is the whole point.

13. Eat a Full Meal at a Farm-to-Table Restaurant

Vermont’s food scene punches well above its weight given the state’s size. Restaurants here have long-standing relationships with local farms, and it shows on the plate. Places like Hen of the Wood in Waterbury and Burlington, The Inn at Weathersfield, or even smaller spots tucked into places you would never expect offer meals that genuinely reflect the season and the region.

Small Towns Worth Your Full Attention

14. Spend a Saturday Morning in Stowe Village

Most people come to Stowe for the mountain, but the village itself is worth slowing down for. Walk Main Street, pop into the independent shops, get coffee somewhere that is not a chain, and watch the locals do their weekend errands. The farmers market runs seasonally and is genuinely good. It is the kind of town that makes you understand why people move here and then never leave.

15. Wander Woodstock and Actually Go Inside Something

Woodstock is beautiful, and yes, it can feel a little polished. But it has real substance too. The Billings Farm and Museum is one of the best living history farms in New England. The covered bridge right in the center of town is the most photographed in Vermont for a reason. Give it more than a drive-through.

16. Explore Burlington’s Church Street and the Waterfront on the Same Day

Burlington is a small city that earns its reputation as one of the most livable places in the country. Church Street is the pedestrian shopping and dining corridor, and the waterfront sits along Lake Champlain with a bike path, views of the Adirondacks, and enough going on in summer to keep you there all day. The combination of the two in a single afternoon is a very good Vermont day.

The Unexpected and the Underrated

17. Find a Roadside Farm Stand and Buy Something You Did Not Plan On

One of Vermont’s most underrated pleasures is the honor-system farm stand. A wooden box, a price list, and fresh produce or eggs sitting in the open air. They are everywhere once you start looking. Stop at one even if you do not need anything. It is the kind of small transaction that reminds you where food actually comes from.

18. Visit During an Off-Season Weekend

Mud season has a bad reputation, but a rainy April weekend in Vermont when the crowds are gone and the rivers are running full and the sugarhouses are still going is quietly one of the best times to be here. Same goes for that window between ski season and summer. Vermont off-peak is for people who really want to see it.

19. Go to a Town Meeting or a Local Event

Vermont still holds traditional town meetings, one of the oldest forms of direct democracy in the country. If you can attend one, do. Even if you are just passing through, local events like community suppers, contra dances, library fundraisers, and harvest festivals give you a version of Vermont that no amount of scenic driving will show you.

20. Just Sit Somewhere and Do Nothing for a While

Vermont has a pace that rewards stillness. Find a bench, a porch, a rock by the river, a field that overlooks hills you cannot name. Sit there without a destination and without your phone and let Vermont do its thing. That might sound like nothing, but it is actually the whole point of being here.

One More Thing Before You Go

This list could be twice as long and still leave things out. Vermont is the kind of place where the best moment you have might be the one you stumble into by accident, a conversation at a general store, a sunset you caught from a dirt road you took by mistake, a farm dog who joined you for part of your hike.

Keep the list in your back pocket, but leave room for the stuff that is not on it.

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