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Specialties
With more than 3,000 acres of rolling terrain, Notchview, a part of the Hoosac Range in the Berkshire Hills, offers an idyllic escape year-round, but especially in winter for cross-country skiers looking for a brisk outing. Seventeen kilometers of trails are groomed and track-set for classical cross-country skiing. A separate trail system is groomed for «skijoring», or skiing with dogs. You can also go off track and explore the backcountry, or snowshoe alongside the ski trails.
History
Established in 1891.
Much of Notchview sits above 2,000 feet, with Judge’s hill the highest point at 2,297 feet. Although some fields are kept open by agriculture, most of the reservation is covered with a red spruce and northern hardwood forest. The second-growth forest mix has been influenced through the years by harvesting for timber, fuelwood, and charcoal production.
Stone walls & cellar holes tell a story of hope and disappointment as European settlers cleared this windy upland for farming during the early 19th century. Rocky Soils and a short growing season soon forced them to farm elsewhere. By 1900, as the land grew back into forest, the farms within Notchview were consolidated into larger and larger estates. Lieutenant Colonel Arthur D. Budd merged these holdings into the 3,000 acre Notch View Farm, which he bequeathed to The Trustees of Reservations in 1965.