Instagramable Woodstock and Quechee

If it wasn’t for the fact that this part of Vermont is so
authentic, you’d swear you were on a movie set. Most of the Green Mountain
state outranks many of the other states of the union in terms of overall beauty
but in this part of Vermont, the bar is raised even higher.

Make sure you have purchased that extra storage space for your
iCloud account or whatever you might need for your device to be able to
accommodate lots of images and perhaps videos of your visit to this endearing
part of America. No matter the season, there’s much to capture and you’ll find
an instagramable scene at every corner. If by any chance you’re using an old
Leica, you’re really going to have some fun.

The Marsh-Billings-Rockfeller National Historical Park and
Mansion are good places to start. Whether inside this historic home among
period furnishings or outside on the rolling green lawn, you can find any
number of shots worth saving. The panoramic view of the countryside and the Green
Mountains from the property is one of the best in the area. It’s only
appropriate to begin here because this is Vermont’s only national park and also
the cradle of America’s environmentalism. (George Perkins Marsh, one of the
country’s first environmental thinkers and for whom the park is partly named,
grew up here.) The work of conservationism was continued by the Billings and
later the Rockefeller families.

Just down the road, you can photograph perhaps some of the most
beautiful (and most likely happiest) cows in Vermont at the Billings Farm &
Museum, an historic dairy farm still in operation today. (A certain Mr.
Billings was so impressed by Mr. Marsh’s conservation thinking that he
established a progressive dairy farm on his property.) The cows are such gentle
and beautiful creatures that you may want to make them the stars of your video.
Just say mooooooo. Or is that cheese?

Within the heart of Woodstock, lies a photo opp at every turn.
Chartered in 1761, fifteen years before the signing of the Declaration of
Independence, this sweet little town stands out as one of the best preserved
and most historic in the United States. It’s hard to find anything obtrusive or
unattractive here, so just fire away. You have your choice between Colonial era
homes, quaint storefronts and a beautiful village green.

If you like horses or have friends and family members that do,
line up all kinds of shots at The Vermont Horse Country Store & Equine
Gallery. Tact has never looked so tantalizing. Take a pic to send to your
horse-y friends back home.

Over in Quechee, you can find many instagramable moments that pay
homage to the history of artisanship and mill working in the region. Renowned
glassmaker Simon Pearce is the granddaddy of them all. Set up in an old mill
along the Quechee River, there’s much to take in (and capture) here. It’s worth
reserving a table at The Mill at Simon Pearce, the restaurant that hangs
(seemingly precipitously) over where the water from this tranquil river crashes
over the dam. What’s served up on your plate is worth posting, too. Visit the
glassblowing studio here to see (and immortalize) how these magnificent
creations are formed.

At Taftsville Historic District, you truly gain a sense of what a
nineteenth-century industrial village looked like. Pretty darn quaint actually.
Not surprisingly, this old mill town is also located alongside a river, this
time it’s the Ottauquechee River. Don’t you love those Native American names?
Take a picture of the signage while you’re at it.

The Taftsville covered bridge is quintessentially Vermont. Not
only is it the second longest in the state but it’s also rust red, a real
beauty. If you’re lucky you can snag a shot during peak fall foliage season
with the palette of reds, russets, oranges and golds in the background.

So many memories are wrapped up in pictures, films and videos. So
many memories are wrapped up in toys, trains and dolls. When you combine the
two, you have a whole lot of “I remember when” moments, a whole of of
instagramable joy. To relive Christmas morning, go to The Vermont Toy &
Train Museum inside Quechee Gorge Village shopping complex. A visit here will
bring back so many memories and at the same time, create new ones from this
visit.

Author

Maribeth Clemente

Travel Writer,

Bonjour Colorado

Leave a Comment