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Recent Posts
- A Beautiful Easter Saturday!
- New Hampshire Residents, Please Take Action on New Anti-Biking Bill in NH House!
- Eager Beaver Activity!
- Recycle the Railroad – “From Rails to Trails”
- Giant Puffballs!
- Dan’s Animal Sightings on the MRG
- Public Service Announcement
- Outstanding in its Field!
- West Lebanon and Hanover Greenway Open House
- Creating Habitat for Pollinators
- Wonder-ful Moments
- MRG Monarch Butterfly
- Busy Bees on MRG Overpass Garden Black Cohosh
- Annual Search for the MRG Apple Tree and Blueberry
- Pocket Park Refreshed, Thanks to UV Rugby Friends!
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Change in MRG Paving Schedule
The City of Lebanon Mascoma River Greenway (MRG) will be paved during normal working hours on Friday, June 29th, Thursday July 5, and Friday July 6. Please stay off the trail during these days, and plan on attending the GRAND OPENING Celebration on Saturday, July 21 from 9am to noon, beginning at Alice Peck Day Memorial Hospital. Please contact the Recreation and Parks Department at 603-448-5121 if you have questions.
Posted in Uncategorized
Section of MRG Closed 6/11-6/13/18
Section of Mascoma River Greeenway Closed
Due to the City’s Construction Project (CSO 11) a section across the street from Freihofer’s Bakery and Lumber Liquidators on Mechanic Street will be closed starting on Monday, June 11th through Wednesday, June 13th so that construction equipment can work in the area. Please contact the Engineering Department with any questions, 603-448-0674
Posted in Uncategorized
Two Bicycles-Built-for-Two

On this bright, sunny Saturday, it was a delight to meet this family at the eastern-most end of the MRG. They were making a round-trip from West Lebanon using two bicycles- built-for-two plus a solo, hoping someday soon the trail would connect to the Northern Rail Trail..
Posted in Uncategorized
Sculpture for the MRG
“Wheels” “Steel Umbrella”
Lebanon Recreation and AVA Gallery are pleased to announce the results of our Call to Artists public art sculpture competition. The winners: “Wheels” by artists Susan K. Johnson, Alicia Zbehlik and Kathy Petuck and “Steel Umbrella” by artists Justin O’Rourke and Margaret Jacobs
Winning sculptures will be fabricated by June 30th and installed by mid July in time for the Grand Opening of the Mascoma River Greenway in late July.
Special recognition is also extended to submitting artists for their thoughtful and creative designs:
- Historical Collage Poles: Artists Cindy Heath, Margaret Sheehan and Carla Kimball
- Lebanon Labyrinth: Artist Allison Zito
- Railroad Spike Tree: Artist Greg Stott
- Spikes and Spokes: Artist Debra Jayne
- Stories to Tell: Artists Margit Berman and Jeremy McDonald
- Walking on Nails: Artists Scott Wunderle, Patrick Jarvis, Courtney Venable, Lauren Ingersoll
- Water Stop: Artist Clive Maloney
These entries are currently on view at AVA Gallery
Posted in Events, Uncategorized
New, and Better, Way to Travel

We enjoy hearing stories of how the MRG is being used, for getting to work, to the grocery store, to CCBA when a road is closed, or, in this case, getting home from the eye doctor. Thanks to Alan Schnur for sharing his story!
My regular eye exam on the Miracle Mile in January required drops to be put in my eyes. I, therefore, could not drive, and needed an alternative way to reach my appointment and return home. I considered several options: 1) asking a friend to drive me, wait, and drive me home, 2) take a taxi, or 3) take the Advance Transit Red Line bus from Colburn Park to the Miracle Mile. I decided to take the AT bus to be sure I arrived on time.
After leaving the doctor’s office, wearing my sunglasses, I remembered an exciting previous experience trying to cross to the bus stop on Route 4 without a crosswalk. Not wishing to repeat that experience, I thought of the Mascoma River Greenway. It took a few tries to find the unmarked path near the Price Chopper parking lot that descends to the Greenway, but when I found the path, getting down to the trail was easy as the snow was already packed. Once on the Greenway, I could easily walk to the recently completed bridge over the Mascoma River, behind The Timken Company — the one with the fantastic view over the Mascoma River. It seemed quite a few people had been walking the trail as the path through the snow was nicely packed. After crossing the bridge, I reached the paved section of the Greenway and found it groomed for walkers (with half the trail left with the original snow cover for cross country skiers).

It was a delightful walk through the quiet, peaceful, beautiful white wonderland. (And healthy too, since I was out in the open air and didn’t have to look around for anyone coughing or sneezing during the January high flu transmission season.) At my slow pace, it took about 40 minutes to reach the High Street end of the Greenway, with the time passing by very quickly. Almost too quickly.
The Mascoma River Greenway is now a fourth, and I think better option for going to my eye doctor. Once the snow melts, the trip will become even more convenient when traveling by bicycle. As promised, the Greenway is a great resource for the Lebanon community!
Alan Schnur
Lebanon
Posted in Uncategorized
Call for Artists
Artists are invited and encouraged to apply to participate in a program to design, fabricate, and install public sculptural artworks for long-term display along Lebanon’s Rail Trail. Installations will be located on sites between the bridge over the Mascoma River at the downtown Lebanon tunnel (eastern end) and Glen Road in West Lebanon (western end). Artists are encouraged to select themes related to Lebanon’s history, geography, natural environment, recreational activities, or railroad activities. Winning artists will be granted temporary access to the studios in the AVA Gallery and Art Center’s new Bente Torjusen West Sculptural Studies Building at 9 Bank Street, Lebanon.
Interested artists can submit this Intent to Submit:Intent to submit fillable
See attached document for more details.Call to Artists_LebRailTrail
Check out a few examples of Spike Art!
Visit our Co-Organizer, AVA Gallery
Posted in Uncategorized
First Snow!
A report from Rainie Kelly –

By the time my husband and I reached the Mascoma River Greenway for an early-morning walk in yesterday’s snow, it was evident that many outdoor enthusiasts had preceded us. We headed west from the Slayton Hill Bridge following the tracks of walkers, cross-country skiers, a fat-tired bike, and four-legged critters who had come out of the woods to take advantage of the ease of travel on the MRG. We also enjoyed conversation with a couple who recently relocated to Lebanon where they have easy access to the trail, as well as all the arts organizations around Colburn Park. Like us, they are looking forward to the day when the Mascoma River Greenway will connect with the Northern Rail Trail, providing safe passage through downtown Lebanon. (Round trip mileage from Slayton Hill Overpass westward to bridge over Mascoma River near Timken: 1.5 miles)

Meeting new folks on the trail

Larry and Rainie Kelly
Posted in Uncategorized
Rail Trail Angst

r
Many of you may know Frank Gould, Co-Chair (with Paul Coats) of the MRG project, friendly MRG promoter at the Leb Farmers Market, and someone working hard to solve the problem of access at both ends of our Mascoma River Greenway . . . trying to make connections
Connections Count
The river twists itself,
coiled like an upset snake
beneath the railtrail bridge.
I watch it slither away,
beyond the oaks and maples
which shadow grasslands,
after slipping east through
neighborhoods and woods.
I walk beyond the bridge
along the rail corridor
where trains at one time
carried freight, passengers
and American life into
the valleys of our village.
Today, the trains are gone.
Its corridor is transformed,
derailed, cleared and paved;
a greenway to give locals
access to their community,
to their health, to their self,
to their American life.
Today they find this path
for comfort and calm,
for daily, scenic exercise.
They stroll their new-born;
bicycle with their kids;
walk to a grocery store
and home with filled bags.
They’ve found their walk
or ski to movies, to eat out,
or to their jobs and back.
Rush-hour traffic absent.
They visit friends they meet,
talk about the friendly walk,
and wonder why the trail
closes at dysfunction junction?
Why shopping malls exist
only well beyond trail’s end?
How might we reach out, they
ask, to unfold our community?
Frank Gould 2017
Posted in Uncategorized
