New Hampshire Official Travelers Handbook 2009-2010 - (Page 58) Remick Country Doctor Museum and Farm Augustus Saint-Gaudens who once lived here. I peer from the refined summer estate called The Fells in Newbury and see the waters of Lake Sunapee and the varied whimsical gardens with rocks, brooks and a rainbow of color. I explore hiking trails in a new light thanks to suggestions from the state’s Natural Heritage Bureau, which oversees various ecosystems. On the side of Mount Washington I see rare plants in bloom in the precious Alpine Garden. I go north to find the hidden Fourth Connecticut 58 | New Hampshire < Lake, and the tarn’s mossy peatlands. Above North Conway’s outlet shopping are its Green Hills where I see endangered plants clinging to rocky slopes. I want to see nature up close. I am connected to the land through maple sugaring, crop harvesting and building stone walls at the Remick Country Doctor Museum and Farm in Tamworth, where yesterday’s agricultural lifestyle still lives. I see families and summer campers on the trails at the Audubon’s McClane Center at Silk Farm in Concord, where owls, hawks and falcons are exhibited. I drive to the Squam Lake Science Center in Holderness, which teems with native species. Walk with the bobcats, deer, otters and more. It is a reminder of what’s outside in New Hampshire. I am connected to the land through building stone walls <
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