Sunday, February 10, 2019

Doe Farm, Durham

Directions: From Route 108 between Durham and Newmarket, turn onto Bennett Road (turn right if coming from Durham, turn left if coming from Newmarket).  Follow Bennett Road about a mile to a bridge over the railroad; just before the bridge, there is a small driveway to the left leading down to a parking area.

The trail begins at the bottom of the parking lot, just before the railroad tracks.

https://www.ci.durham.nh.us/boc_conservation/doe-farm

From Durham website above - "Tucked between Bennett Road to the north and the Lamprey River to the south, Doe Farm offers beautiful woodland trails that lead down to the river and its backwaters. Walking with and without dogs and x- country skiing are popular trail uses. Scouts help maintain some of the trails and bridges. Moat Island, separated from the mainland during high water, is left as a natural area, with no formal trails. The forests of Doe Farm have been harvested in the past, providing income back into a fund for maintaining the property. The property’s extensive river frontage helps maintain the water quality of the Wild & Scenic Lamprey River.

The property is named after Olinthus N. Doe who bequeathed the property to the Town of Durham upon his death in 1909. The Doe family cemetery and old cellar hole of the family homestead are located in the center of the property and are maintained by the town.

A gravel access road leads from the parking lot, past a metal gate, to a clearing that also serves as a log landing during forest management operations.  The clearing is just north of the old cellar hole and cemetery. Several loop trails branch off from this main woods road.

The property consists of mostly upland forest with a mix of red oak, white pine, and red pine and Norway spruce plantations.  The main section of the property is approximately 68 acres with extensive frontage (about 3,700+ feet) on the Lamprey River or its backwaters. Moat Island, accessible during low water periods, is approximately 15 acres and is completely surrounded by the Lamprey River, with over one mile of river frontage."



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