4.4 miles
Distance
414 ft
Climb
-627 ft
Descent
1,062 ft
High Point
A true beginner ride, you'll start at elevation and enjoy a dirt road warm up cruise down to some field views of Mount Ascutney. A fun singletrack loop through the pines, then back up to the top of Mile Long Field to finish with the iconic Hay Ride downhill before heading back to the Ascutney Outdoors Center
Detailed Description
Green Fields and Forest Pines is a 4 mile moderately popular easy route located near Brownsville Vermont. This mountain bike primary route. This route includes 7 trails. This route climbs 414 ft with a max elevation of 1,062 ft then descends -627 ft.
Route Supporters
Local Trail Association
Ascutney Trails Association (www.ascutneytrails.com)Please consider joining or donating to the local riding association to support trail development & maintenance.
donate to earn trail karma!
We hope you've been enjoying Trailforks!
Create a FREE account to view route comments and much more.
Trails in Route
279 ft | |||||
1,460 ft | |||||
180 ft | |||||
581 ft | |||||
4,222 ft | |||||
4,528 ft |
Details
-
Riding area
-
Primary ActivityMountain Bike
-
Other Activities
- E-Bike
- Trail Running
-
Difficulty ratingGreen
-
Route TypePoint to Point
-
eBike Allowed
-
Bike typeAM, XC
More Stats for Green Fields and Forest Pines mountain bike route
-
Altitude change-212 ft
-
Altitude min738 ft
-
Altitude start1,010 ft
-
Altitude end797 ft
-
Grade-0.9%
-
Grade max-16.6%
-
Grade min17.9%
-
Distance climb1 mile
-
Distance down3 miles
-
Distance flat2,280 ft
Directions
- Walk east on Gravel Pit Rd..
- Continue for 30 meters.
- Walk southeast on Bicentennial Trail.
- Continue for 30 meters.
- Walk southeast on Bicentennial Trail.
- Continue for 30 meters.
- Walk southeast on Bicentennial Trail.
- Continue for 30 meters.
- Walk east on Bicentennial Trail.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk south on Bi-Pass.
- Continue for 10 meters.
- Walk north on Upper Mile-Long Field.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk north on Upper Mile-Long Field.
- Continue for 30 meters.
- Walk northeast on Upper Mile-Long Field.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk northeast on Upper Mile-Long Field.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk northeast on Upper Mile-Long Field.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk north on Upper Mile-Long Field.
- Continue for 70 meters.
- Walk north on Upper Mile-Long Field.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk southwest on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 90 meters.
- Walk northwest on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 30 meters.
- Walk north on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 100 meters.
- Walk west on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 80 meters.
- Walk west on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk northeast on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 80 meters.
- Walk northwest on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk west on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk northeast on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 30 meters.
- Walk northwest on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 70 meters.
- Walk north on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk north on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk northeast on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk north on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk northwest on Blue Dipper.
- Continue for 60 meters.
- Walk west on Hay Ride.
- Continue for 60 meters.
- Walk northeast on Hay Ride.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk northwest on Hay Ride.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk northwest on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 50 meters.
- Walk east on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk north on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk northwest on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 90 meters.
- Walk west on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 80 meters.
- Walk northwest on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 70 meters.
- Walk south on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 100 meters.
- Walk southeast on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 70 meters.
- Walk east on Mountain View Loop.
- Continue for 60 meters.
- Walk north on Picnic.
- Continue for 200 meters.
- Walk east on Picnic.
- Continue for 100 meters.
- Walk east on Home Again.
- Continue for 100 meters.
- Walk northeast on Home Again.
- Continue for 200 meters.
- Walk northwest on Home Again.
- Continue for 200 meters.
- Walk northeast on Home Again.
- Continue for 70 meters.
- Walk east on Home Again.
- Continue for 80 meters.
- Walk northeast on Home Again.
- Continue for 100 meters.
- Walk southeast on Home Again.
- Continue for 200 meters.
- Walk southeast on Home Again.
- Continue for 90 meters.
- Walk east on Home Again.
- Continue for 60 meters.
- Walk southeast on Home Again.
- Continue for less than 10 meters.
- Turn right to stay on Home Again.
- Continue for 70 meters.
- Walk northeast on Home Again.
- Continue for 40 meters.
- Walk southeast on Home Again.
- Continue for 60 meters.
close
3D
Trail Conditions
- Unknown
- Snow Groomed
- Snow Packed
- Snow Covered
- Snow Cover Partial
- Freeze/thaw Cycle
- Icy
- Prevalent Mud
- Wet
- Variable
- Ideal
- Dry
- Very Dry
Trail Flow (Ridden Direction)
Trailforks scans users ridelogs to determine the most popular direction each trail is ridden. A good flowing trail network will have most trails flowing in a single direction according to their intension.
The colour categories are based on what percentage of riders are riding a trail in its intended direction.
The colour categories are based on what percentage of riders are riding a trail in its intended direction.
- > 96%
- > 90%
- > 80%
- > 70%
- > 50%
- < 50%
- bi-directional trail
- no data
Trail Last Ridden
Trailforks scans ridelogs to determine the last time a trail was ridden.
- < 2 days
- < 1 week
- < 2 weeks
- < 1 month
- < 6 months
- > 6 months
Trail Ridden Direction
The intended direction a trail should be ridden.
- Downhill Only
- Downhill Primary
- Both Directions
- Uphill Primary
- Uphill Only
- One Direction
Contribute Details
Colors indicate trail is missing specified detail.
- Description
- Photos
- Description & Photos
- Videos
Trail Popularity ?
Trailforks scans ridelogs to determine which trails are ridden the most in the last 9 months.
Trails are compared with nearby trails in the same city region with a possible 25 colour shades.
Think of this as a heatmap, more rides = more kinetic energy = warmer colors.
- most popular
- popular
- less popular
- not popular
ATV/ORV/OHV Filter
Max Vehicle Width
inches
US Cell Coverage
Legend
Radar Time
x
Activity Recordings
Trailforks users anonymized public ridelogs from the past 6 months.
- mountain biking recent
- mountain biking (>6 month)
- hiking (1 year)
- moto (1 year)
Activity Recordings
Trailforks users anonymized public skilogs from the past 12 months.
- Downhill Ski
- Backcountry Ski
- Nordic Ski
- Snowmobile
Winter Trails
Warning
A routing network for winter maps does not exist. Selecting trails using the winter trails layer has been disabled.
x
Missing Trails
Most Popular
Least Popular
Trails are colored based on popularity. The more popular a trail is, the more red. Less popular trails trend towards green.
Jump Magnitude Heatmap
Heatmap of where riders jump on trails. Zoom in to see individual jumps, click circles to view jump details.
Trails Deemphasized
Trails are shown in grey.
Only show trails with NO bikes.
Save the current map location and zoom level as your default home location whenever this page is loaded.
Save
Trail transparency
Photos
Videos

Hayride Mt. Ascutney
trail: Hay Ride
10:46 | 445 | comments: 0 | favs:
Aug 31, 2013
Riding with Bennett down Hay ride Mt. Ascutney Vt.
Recent Trail Reports Along Route
more reports »
- By atainfo
ATA & contributors
- #50995 - 639 views