Ravine Lodge (excluding Mount Moosilauke trails), Woodstock

Ravine Lodge (excluding Mount Moosilauke trails), Woodstock

Warren, New Hampshire 03279

Ravine Lodge (Dartmouth Outdoors) webpage
White Mountain National Forest Official Website

Tips for Birding

Use this hotspot for checklists of birds near the Ravine Lodge, not the Mount Moosilauke trails.

About this Location

Moosilauke Ravine Lodge is a place where you can enjoy the beauty of nature and the hospitality of Dartmouth College. It is located at the base of Mount Moosilauke, a 4,802-foot peak in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. The lodge offers rustic accommodations, family-style meals, and access to hiking trails, including the Appalachian Trail. The lodge is open from May to November. 

About White Mountain National Forest

See all hotspots at White Mountain National Forest

In the decades prior to 1911, the unregulated logging practices of private timber companies in the White Mountains had resulted in a damaged landscape susceptible to both fire and flood. Fires had burned thousands of acres, and flash floods affected the water power necessary to the mills of major industrial centers downstream, such as Manchester, New Hampshire, and Lowell, Massachusetts. Concerns over losses to industry, business, and tourism, and the growing conservation movement led to citizen action. The Appalachian Mountain Club (AMC) and Society for Protection of New Hampshire Forests (SPNHF) spearheaded an effort to ensure the permanent protection of the White Mountains from further depredation. After years of lobbying and intense public pressure, Senator John Weeks of Massachusetts, a native of Lancaster, New Hampshire, introduced legislation that became known as the Weeks Act. The Weeks Act was passed by Congress in 1911, appropriating 9 million dollars to purchase 6 million acres of land in the Eastern U.S. In turn, this led to the creation of the White Mountain National Forest (WMNF) in 1918, and twenty-one other national forests throughout the north and southeast. Many of the groups who were instrumental in the passage of the Weeks Act, including the SPNHF and the AMC, are still active today, and the WMNF has grown from 7,000 acres to almost 800,000. Today, the reforested mountains and hillsides supply forest products and provide magnificent recreational opportunities while maintaining healthy watersheds and ecosystems.

Features

  • Restrooms on site

  • Entrance fee

  • Wheelchair accessible trail

Content from Ravine Lodge (Dartmouth Outdoors) webpage and White Mountain National Forest Official Website

Last updated November 12, 2023