Doggin'
The Berkshires: 10 Cool Things To See When You Hike With Your
Dog In Western Massachusetts
"If your dog is fat," the old
saying goes, "you aren't getting enough exercise."
But walking the dog need not be just about a little exercise.
Here are 10 cool things you can see in the Berkshire Hills while
out walking the dog.
CCC BUILDINGS
During the Great Depression of the 1930s President FranklinRoosevelt
put thousands of unemployed men to work in the Civilian Conservation
Corps (CCC). Work camps were set up across the country with the
mandate to build roads, reforest denuded lands, and construct
recreational facilities for public use. Some of the greatest
legacies of this "Tree Army" are in the Berkshires,
including Bascom Lodge on the summit of Mount Greylock. Designed
by Pittsfield architect Joseph McArthur Vance, the rustic shelter
was designed to blend in with the landscape using native materials
of stone (Greystone schist) and lumber (red spruce and oak).
GLACAL ERRATICS
The great ice rivers of the last Ice Age melted from Massachusetts
about 15,000 years ago, scraping and shaping the landscape and
leaving behind a fair share of debris. Strange rock formations
from retreating glaciers are known as erratics. The greatest
oddity in Pittsfield State Forest is a glacial erratic known
as Balance Rock. The massive 165-ton limestone boulder teeters
precariously upon a small, 3-foot piece of bedrock.
GRAZING CATTLE
Does your dog have any herding instincts? At Tyringham Cobble
the canine hike begins in an open field where you may find yourself
hiking with your dog through a free-ranging herd of Hereford
cattle - as they have done for 200 years.
MASSQUATCH
A canine hike in October Mountain State Forest may be your
best chance to spot Massquatch, New England's version of Bigfoot.
There have been occasional sightings of a hairy, oversized, human-like
creature in Massachusetts across the years from the Atlantic
beaches to the Berkshire Mountains. The Berkshire Eagle twice
reported encounters at October Mountain in the 1980s, including
an up-close and-personal at a former Boy Scout camp near Felton
Lake.
MODERN ART
After World War II interrupted his career as a Williams College
librarian, Lawrence Bloedel purchased the former Nathan Field
farm with his wife Eleanore. In 1948 the couple retained Edwin
Goodell to build a house to accommodate their expanding collection
of contemporary American art. He responded with a modern, window-dominated
design adorned with simple lines. In 1966, Ulrich Franzen delivered
a Victorian Shingle-style house for the Bloedels' grandchildren,
known as The Folly. The Bloedels donated their blend of architecture
and nature to the Trustees of
Reservations in 1984 and when you hike with your dog at Field
Farm today you can walk among 13 modern sculptures, including
works by Richard M. Miller, Jack Zajac, Bernard Reder and Herbert
Ferber.
MYSTERIOUS GLENS
Nathaniel Hawthorne called the Ice Glen, a cleft in the rocks
between Bear and Little mountains behind the town of Stockbridge,
"the most curious fissure in all Berkshire." It is
a ravine without a stream - all the water around Ice Glen flows
on a south-north axis while the gorge is aligned east to west.
In fact, the glen, stuffed with stacked boulders and draped with
hemlocks, was once a glacial lake. Tucked away from the sun's
rays, the season's last snow melts here, hence its name. Further
west, beyond West Stockbridge, Stevens Glen was once one of the
busiest tourist destinations in the the county. In the late 1800s
Romanza Stevens built bridges and staircases to the Glen
and its waterfall and charged 25 cents for tourists to view the
magic of Lenox Mountain Brook.
RARE DAMS
In Natural Bridge State Park, the site of a marble quarry until
1947, is a dam built totally of marble blocks, etched in black
on the edges. As Ed Elder, who operated the property as a roadside
tourist attraction, would describe it, "This is the only
marble dam outside Athens, Greece."
SACRED RELIGIOUS SITES
Shaker communities were required to clear the summit of a nearby
hill for worship. Near Hancock around 1842, this site was atop
Mt. Sinai, now known as Shaker Mountain. The trail today leads
to two Shaker sacred sites that have been leveled out on the
top of Mt. Sinai and Holy Mount. When the Shakers worshipped
here non-believers were not allowed on these grounds.
SLUICES, SPOUTS AND CASCADES
All over the Berkshires your dog can view and swim under hydrospectaculars.
Some are reached with hardly a hike (Campbell Falls, Windsor
Jambs, Wahconah Falls), others with a little effort (The Notch
Brook Cascades, Bash Bish Falls, Tannery Falls) and other waterfalls
are rewards for a spirited canine hike such as Sages Ravine in
Mount Everett State Reservation.
STONE WALLS BUILT FOR THE AGES
The stone walls found throughout Massachusetts are some of the
most beautiful walls ever built. The fact that so many can be
found in Berkshire woods attests to the skill used in construction.
You could not just pile up rocks found around your property and
call it a wall. When a stone wall was finished it needed to be
inspected by a fence viewer. If a wall was deemed sound the owner
could not be liable for damage done to his crops by other farmer's
animals.
<<Back To The Doggin' The Berkshires Page
<<Back
To Article Index
|