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  The Hampshire 100 Benefiting Programs of Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center
 8/25/2010
  Crotched Mountain and EMS offer adaptive kayaking program, July 9 No experience necessary
 6/30/2010
  New Hampshire's Center for Medical Home Improvement Awarded $2 Million to Improve Children's Health Care Nationwide
 6/18/2010
  Restoration Project Returns Blueberries To Crotched Mountain: Berry picking will now be accessible to those of all abilities
 6/4/2010
  Crotched Mountain School Celebrates Students' Achievements
 6/4/2010
  Fierce Competition on the Field Between the Eagles and Cougars
 5/28/2010
  Crotched Mountain Eagles Played the Contoocook Cougars on the Baseball Diamond
 5/17/2010
  Crotched Mountain Has Talent
 4/23/2010
  Hearing Voices (Speaking in Tongues)
 4/22/2010
  Jazz On The Mountain
 4/9/2010
  March Madness 2010: Let The Madness Begin
 3/26/2010
  Crotched Mountain Eagles vs. The Countoocook Cougars - On The Court
 2/14/2010
  Life Long Care Recognized for Excellence
 1/18/2010
  Crotched Mountain School's Performing Arts Class and Active Ingredients Present Rats! The Story of the Pied Piper
 12/17/2009
  Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center reduces its carbon footprint with help from NH Sustainable Energy Program: 25,000 gallons of oil saved each year
 11/20/2009
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes Carol Drescher, ARNP, To Medical Team
 10/7/2009
  Crotched Mountain receives trails grants, honors Dana Reeve
 10/7/2009
  Harvest Tasting a Successful First-time Event Raises $36,000 for Crotched Mountain Foundation
 9/12/2009
  Crotched Mountain receives 2009 environmental award
 9/3/2009
  Crotched Mountain Golf Classic A Success
 7/30/2009
  Three-year NH-based study finds pediatric medical homes significantly increase level of children's health care
 7/17/2009
  New Hampshire Health Care Organization Selected to Develop Plan for Inovative Medical Homes
 6/29/2009
  New pediatric health care report creates framework for vital care coordination: New Hampshire co-author examines inefficiencies in current system
 6/29/2009
  Crotched Mountain announces Home Depot grant for Portland apartment complex
 6/4/2009
  Crotched Mountain offers scuba diving lessons
 6/2/2009
  Crotched Mountain takes top honors for health care communications
 5/12/2009
  Crotched Mountain's Recycling Program Reports Surprising Results
 3/18/2009
  Crotched Mountain School's Performing Arts Class and Active Ingredients Present The Wizard of OZ
 1/8/2009
  Crotched Mountain Assistive Technology Program Honored
 11/25/2008
  Crotched Mountain Hosts No Wind Classic 2
 11/15/2008
  BAE Systems Supports Center of Excellence at Crotched Mountain for Care of Veterans: $25,000 grant given in honor of Veterans Day
 11/11/2008
 

New trail will be accessible to those with special needs at Crotched Mountain
 11/9/2008

  Crotched Mountain School Conducts Mock Presidential Election
 11/1/2008
  NH Citizens Health Initiative and the Center for Medical Home Improvement announce the NH Multi-Stakeholder Medical Home Pilot
 10/23/2008
  Writer Michael Paul Mason to Present at Crotched Mountain
 10/14/2008
  Dr. Margaret L. Bauman M.D. To Present As Keynote Speaker For Staff Development Day
 10/13/2008
  WMUR's NH Chronicle to Highlight Crotched Mountain's New Accessible Mountain Trail
 10/10/2008
  Graduate Thanks Crotched Mountain School and Inspires All
 6/18/2008
  Students of Crotched Mountain School Celebrate Achievements
 6/12/2008
  Students Enjoy Watching Staff Perform
 6/9/2008
  Community Pulls Together To Help Client Through His Journey
 5/13/2008
  Great Brook School Wins Award for Partnership Program
 4/28/2008
  Crotched Mountain Expands Audiology Services To Monadnock Community Hospital
 4/2/2008
  End-Of-Life Care Author Ira Byock, MD To Present
 3/31/2008
  The Monadnock Quilters' Guild Donates Custom Made Quilts to Crotched Mountain Clients
 3/25/2008
  The Friends Program Welcomes Crotched Mountain Foster Grandparents
 3/19/2008
  Filmmaker Dan Habib To Present 'Including Samuel' at Crotched Mountain
 2/29/2008
  Spinal Cord Injury Lecture on Adaptive Sports Equipment to be Telecast by Crotched Mountain in Greenfield and Manchester, NH
 2/13/2008
  Ocean Bank Donation Assists NH Residents With Disabilities
 1/24/2008
  Harry Gregg Foundation Announces Funds For North Country
 1/22/2008
  Crotched Mountain School Remembers Martin Luther King Jr.
 1/21/2008
  ATECH Services Affiliates With Crotched Mountain
 12/20/2007
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New VP/Chief Financial Officer
 12/13/2007
  Crotched Mountain School Presents Oliver!
 11/30/2007
  Crotched Mountain Celebrates 'America Recycles Day'
 11/13/2007
  Sensory Integration: Your Child In The Classroom
 11/1/2007
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New Manager of Volunteer Services
 10/30/2007
  Ira Lexus of Manchester Donates $5,000 to Crotched Mountain
 10/23/2007
  Darfur Benefit to be held at Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center
 10/15/2007
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New Development Professionals
 10/10/2007
  Author And Brain Injury Survivor Beverly Bryant To Share Her Story At Crotched Mountain
 10/9/2007
  Performing Artist And Brain Injury Survivor Jennifer Field To Present Her One-Woman Show at Crotched Mountain
 10/8/2007
  Crotched Mountain Responds to Community Needs
 10/1/2007
  Crotched Mountain Speaker Will Share the 'Up' Side To Life With Down Syndrome
 9/11/2007
  Crotched Mountain's Wonderworks Learning Center Achieves Licensed Plus Status: High Quality Rating Through New Hampshire's Department of Health and Human Services Recognizes the Center's Exceptional Care and Programs
 8/20/2007
  Crotched Mountain Employee Named Chair of Statewide Independent Living Council
 7/9/2007
  Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center Leaders Honored at Disability Awareness Night at NH Fisher Cats Game
 7/9/2007
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New VP of Development
 7/3/2007
  Crotched Mountain CEO Honored By New Hampshire Partners In Service: The BRUCE E. FRIEDMAN AWARD honors an individual who has consistently demonstrated a commitment to service on behalf of the children and families of New Hampshire.
 6/15/2007
  Forest Avenue Apartments Welcomed Day of Caring Volunteers
 6/5/2007
  Crotched Mountain Physician Addressed Brain Injury Survivors and their Families
 5/14/2007
  Jan Nisbet, Ph.D. Spoke At Crotched Mountain on Disability Rights
 5/4/2007
  NH Archives Group To Hold Workshops On Caring For Historical Records
 4/20/2007
  Chipping Away At Costs & Promoting Environmental Sustainability: Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center Now Heats With Wood Chips
 4/16/2007
  Crotched Mountain To Hold Educational Series and Support Group for Brain Injury Survivors and their Families
 4/12/2007
  Dr. Carl Cooley Testifies at New Hampshire Legislature in Favor of Bill That Will Form Autism Study Commission
 2/7/2007
  Foster Grandparent Program Hosts Annual Recognition Event
 1/12/2007
  Crotched Mountain Therapist Retires After More Than 30 Years of Service
 1/4/2007
  The Healing Arts: New Pathways to Health
 1/3/2007
  The Ashley Effect
 1/3/2007
  Crotched Mountain Foundation Welcomes New Trustee
 1/3/2007
  Crotched Mountain Receives Award For Land Stewardship
 11/27/2006
  Crotched Mountain Residential Services Names New Executive Director
 11/15/2006
  NHCTC-Nashua offering college courses at Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center
 11/14/2006
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New HUD Program Specialist
 11/13/2006
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New Residential Services Program Director
 11/13/2006
  Crotched Mountain Student Visits Governor Lynch During Disability Mentoring Day
 11/3/2006
  Cooley Receives National Award From American Academy of Pediatrics
 10/23/2006
  Crotched Mountain Foundation Welcomes New Director
 10/22/2006
  Crotched Mountain Remembers Stoney Morrell
 10/22/2006
  Crotched Mountain Honored by Newcomen Society
 10/19/2006
  Crotched Mountain Responds to Community Needs
 10/18/2006
  Crotched Mountain Vocational Trainer Honored
 9/19/2006
  5K Race Raises $12,000 For Crotched Mountain Brain Injury Center
 9/19/2006
  Kites Over Crotched Mountain
 9/12/2006
  Psychologist To Speak At Crotched Mountain About Grieving The Loss Of Health
 9/12/2006
  Just A Little Love: Foster Grandparents Help Young Parents and Children
 9/1/2006
  Crotched Mountain To Hold 4th Annual Brain Injury Awareness Day
 9/1/2006
  Harry Gregg Foundation Thanks Robert Grassi, MD
 8/29/2006
  Drums, Healing and Kites at Crotched Mountain
 8/4/2006
  Crotched Mountain School Hosts Visitors from Grenada
 8/1/2006
  Drumming Workshops with Percussionist Michael Wingfield
 7/28/2006
  Crotched Mountain Golf Classic 2006 Successful Tournament Raises $30,000 For Crotched Mountain School
 7/24/2006
  Bringing different abilities to the workplace
 7/22/2006
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New Residential Services Program Director
 7/21/2006
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New Community Care Director
 7/18/2006
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New Coordinator for Brain Injury Community Services
 7/18/2006
  Motor Activities Training helps include everyone
 7/6/2006
  Crotched Mountain Employee Re-elected Chair of Statewide Independent Living Council
 7/5/2006
  Crotched Mountain Students Participate in First-Ever Special Olympics USA National Games
 7/3/2006
  Crotched Mountain and Monadnock Community Hospital Raise $50K for Accessible Recreation and Dental Programs
 6/26/2006
  New Prototype House Being Built at Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center
 6/19/2006
  Shumway Interviewed By New Hampshire Public Radio
 6/15/2006
  Dr. Susan Lynch Addressed Crotched Mountain School Graduates
 6/15/2006
  Governor and Council at Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center
 6/13/2006
  Crotched Mountain Team to Walk 60 Miles During Breast Cancer 3-Day in Boston
 6/10/2006
  Crotched Mountain Audiologist Earns Doctorate
 6/8/2006
  Crotched Mountain Seeks Volunteers for "National Trails Day" Event
 5/25/2006
  Crotched Mountain Congratulates Employees
 5/19/2006
  Crotched Mountain Student Supports Sudan Relief Effort
 5/16/2006
  Crotched Mountain Congratulates Longtime Employees
 4/5/2006
  Spinal Cord Injury Survivor To Speak At Crotched Mountain
 4/3/2006
  Crotched Mountain Direct Support Professionals are First in NH to Complete National Apprenticeship Program
 3/23/2006
  Crotched Mountain Remembers Dana Reeve (1961-2006)
 3/7/2006
  Author To Speak At Crotched Mountain About Bipolar Disorder
 3/5/2006
  Thompson Endowment Awards $17,000 to Crotched Mountain In Support of Seacoast Residents With Disabilities
 2/14/2006
  Indoor Kite Flying Exhibit a Big Success
 1/29/2006
  Crotched Mountain Welcomes New VP of Development
 1/6/2006
  Jan Holland Receives 2005 Serena Merck Leadership Memorial Award
 12/12/2005
  Crotched Mountain Elects Officers and Board Members
 12/11/2005
  Crotched Mountain Now Offers CEU's
 12/7/2005
  Crotched Mountain Teachers Honored
 12/5/2005
  W. Carl Cooley, MD Receives 2005 "Director's Award"
 11/16/2005
  Crotched Mountain Employees Receives Medical Services Award
 11/15/2005
  Crotched Mountain Responds to Community Needs
 10/27/2005
  Musical Genius Tony Deblois To Perform At Crotched Mountain
 10/24/2005
  5k Race Raises Over $20,000 For Crotched Mountain Brain Injury Center
 10/5/2005
  Harry Gregg Foundation Receives Partnership Award
 9/28/2005
  Crotched Mountain Employee Retires After 41 Years of Continuous Service
 9/26/2005
  Blood Drive At Crotched Mountain
 9/21/2005
  Boot Scootin' Boomers to perform at Crotched Mountain
 9/20/2005
  Travis Roy Guest Speaker At Crotched Mountain
 9/19/2005
  Crotched Mountain Names Fellowship Award Recipients
 9/18/2005
  Check out Crotched Mountain School student Jenny Ventre's Excellent Adventure in Seattle where she's attending the Axis Dance Company summer workshop.
 8/26/2005
  Crotched Mountain Nurse Retires After 40 Years of Continuous Service
 8/17/2005
  Crotched Mountain Employee Named Chair of Statewide Independent Living Council
 7/26/2005
  Crotched Mountain School for the Deaf Holds 50th Anniversary Reunion
 7/23/2005
  Wheelchair Dance Performance To Be Held at Crotched Mountain
 7/1/2005
  Giving Back: Crotched Mountain Student Reaches Out To The Orphans of Rwanda
 6/29/2005
  Rita Roy Memorial Scholarships Awarded
 6/10/2005
  Employee Receives
 5/24/2005
  Eagles versus Cougars
 5/13/2005
  Remembering Elizabeth Orton Jones (1910-2005)
 5/10/2005
  School for the Deaf to Hold 50th Anniversary Reunion
 4/21/2005
  PATH Planning Process Workshop
 4/15/2005
  Employees Recognized for Their Years of Service
 4/12/2005
  Athletes Compete in Winter Special Olympics
 3/1/2005
  John Richards to Speak on Brain Injury
 2/28/2005
  New Chief Operating Officer Welcomed
 2/25/2005
  Nationally Known Professor Speaks on Personal Experience with Autism
 11/1/2004
  TV's 'Smart Traveler' Guest Speaker at Hilliard Memorial Lecture Series
 10/12/2004
  Speech-Language Pathologist to be Guest Speaker at Crotched Mountain's Hilliard Memorial Lecture Series
 9/10/2004
  Crotched Mountain Opens New Hampshire's First-Ever Wheelchair Accessible Tree House
 7/30/2004

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Newsroom

New trail will be accessible to those with special needs at Crotched Mountain

11/9/2008 - Greenfield, NH

Nashua Telegraph
Article published Nov 9, 2008
By MICHAEL CLEVELAND Correspondent

Sam Roberts, left, of Salt Lake City, Utah, and Willie Bittner, of Trempealeau, Wis., work on a handicap-accessible trail at the Crotched Mountain rehabilitation center in Greenfield on Wednesday.

GREENFIELD, NH —About a half mile down a trail in the woods from the Crotched Mountain rehabilitation center is a porcupine den.

Mike Cole hasn't seen it yet, but one day – possibly next spring – he'll drive his wheelchair down the trail that's being built, stop, look up to his right and see the small cave left in some granite by a glacier. He'll see the mound of porcupine scat outside the little cave.

And if it's the kind of day he envisions, his wife and sons will see it with him.

If the people at Crotched Mountain have their way, Cole will be only one of hundreds – probably thousands – of people who, over the next several years, will have a chance to do something that few people in wheelchairs get to d go out into the woods.

Really. Into the woods.

Crotched Mountain is building a 4-mile trail along the side of the mountain on which its facility rests. The first stage – a bit more than a mile – is scheduled to be finished next year, perhaps in May, maybe in June, and wheelchair-bound nature lovers will be welcome to check out the trail, the porcupine den, the Dutton Brook wetlands and the hills, and to meet people they've never met before.

And that, to Mike Redmond, is a dream.

"What is it like to experience nature up close?" he asked during a recent walk along the trail, about a quarter of a mile of which had been completed by late October. "I think that everyone should have that ability, and that should speak as a model for what trails can be."

This won't be the only handicap-accessible trail in the country, but Redmond, Crotched Mountain's vice president for advancement, believes it might be the only such trail built along the side of a mountain.

"It's easy to build an accessible trail on the salt flats of Utah," he said as he approached a large round boulder. "As far as we know, this is going to be the longest accessible trail system in a mountain environment in the world. We do not know of any others that are in a mountain-based environment."

In the fall, that environment is evident. In the spring and summer, it will be less so, because the trail is surrounded by trees that mask much of what's beyond them. That, too, is something Redmond finds important, because it's part of the natural environment that so many people with physical handicaps can't reach.

"A kid in a wheelchair has never been able to get next to a stone wall" in the middle of the woods, Redmond said. "He wonders, 'Why is this stone wall here?' Part of the story of the outdoors is that rock wall, so the trail comes up right next to it and tells a story."

And that brings Redmond to the round rock of which he is clearly so fond.

"We deliberately built this trail to this point right here to get past that round rock," he said, "because that is the coolest glacial erratic that we've seen – it's a round rock sitting on top of another rock, and we want people to get right next to it."

All of this began in 2003, when Crotched Mountain did a natural resources inventory managed by the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests with help from the Audubon Society and the federal Natural Resources Council, and created a master plan for its wooded land. "We didn't just want to build a trail in the woods," Redmond said. "We wanted to think about this overall land we own. . . . We found that there are wonderful forest communities, many diverse communities and land around a wetland formed by beaver activity. We identified that this would be a great place for an accessible trail."

So, in 2005, they hired Tom Kokx, of Gilford, a former U.S. Forest Service worker who had gone into business for himself as a consultant.

"His specialty was accessibility in viewscapes," Redmond said, and he had designed a camping and hiking program in the Adirondack Mountains specifically for people with disabilities.

"So, he understood creating accessibility in the outdoors," said Redmond, and Crotched Mountain worked with him for two years on a master plan.

Kokx found eight distinct areas, each with its own character, for different activities, including camping, fishing, even hunting. Most important, Kokx said that because of the grade and the possible length of the trail, accessibility could be created.

That determined, Crotched Mountain brought in Peter Jensen, of Great Barrington, Mass., to design the trails.

"The whole idea is to have variability in the grades so the trail users have an opportunity to get a workout," Jensen said one day last month as he constructed a bridge over one of the two streams along the trail.

He explained that much of the trail was being constructed by hand – in other spots, machines could be used – so they would use small, motorized wheelbarrows to bring in dirt, and go into the woods to find rocks to use as bridge abutments.

And Redmond said the material for the bridge walkways has been donated by the Trex Corp., of Winchester, Va. – material that is designed to last forever.

One of the themes of the trail construction is respect for the environment, Redmond said. For instance, while they're using some pressure-treated wood, it never actually touches the ground. Bridges across streams rest on rocks or on wood called white locust, which Redmond calls "the closest thing to a rock that's a tree."

"We think about our impact on the environment as we build," he said.

With that, of course, they think about the long-term impact on the students at Crotched Mountain and the others who will come once the trail is built. But it will begin with the students, because the trail will become part of the science curriculum.

"It includes lots of practical science," Redmond said as he stopped to look at the wetlands formed many years ago by a colony of beavers. The trail will bring them right up to pine trees, where they'll collect data to study the impact of pollution.

The students at the school can't always get to where Redmond would like them to go – not now, anyway. Some of the students need residential support or therapy that they can't find at their local school. They come to Crotched Mountain and, often, stay until they're 21. Some do, however, return to their own schools after a bit.

But for those who stay, the trail could provide more than just a trip into nature, as important as that is.

"It can also create employment," Redmond said. "Someone's going to have to come out here every day, several times a day, and check on the trails to make sure there are no branches falling over that made them inaccessible.

"So, we have some students who, as they get older, are thinking about some things that they like to do, and they might like to be out in the woods, and we'll say, 'We have a job for you here: Go out and check the trails every day.' "

Naturally, with an endeavor of this magnitude, money is an issue. Redmond, in an e-mailed explanation of how the funding works, said the project is being funded entirely through gifts and grants.

So far, Crotched Mountain has received nearly $400,000 for this project. The most recent gift was from the Trex Corp. to support the purchase of the Trex decking material used for the boardwalks.

Other grants have been received from the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation and the New Hampshire Bureau of Trails.

In addition, Crotched Mountain will receive a grant of $250,000 from the New Hampshire Land and Community Heritage Investment Program in connection with the placement of a permanent conservation easement on more than 1,100 acres. These funds, which will help secure the federal grant for this easement, will be dedicated to the accessible trails project.

Crotched Mountain has established a budget of $2 million for trail building, camping areas and other amenities, Redmond said. Next year, the Dutton Brook Trail will be completed, as will a parking area and visitor information center at the trailhead. Future trail building is dependent on continued success in fundraising.

"We are tremendously grateful for the donations we have received for this project," Redmond said in his e-mail. "Our hope is that the completion of the Dutton Brook Trail will inspire others to support this project so that we can continue to make the outdoors accessible to everyone."

Financial issues are always present in such an endeavor, but this trail is more about hopes and dreams. Redmond talks about "children with a nature deficit disorder" and sees this as an opportunity to fix that.

"There are children who don't get outside enough; obesity is a problem," he said.

"People with disabilities have the same challenges – they don't get outside enough, either. And they have the additional challenge of accessibility.

"This can create more ways for everybody to get outside, to have fun, to learn more about the outdoors. And rather than have a nature deficit disorder, they will get more exercise and make new friends."

In its literature, Crotched Mountain states a basic mission, to wit:

"Transforming lives through education, rehabilitation, recreation and residential opportunities."

Once the new trail is open – even just the first mile – the "recreation" segment of that mission will be a lot more fascinating.

© 2007, Telegraph Publishing Company, Nashua, New Hampshire

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