St. George

9/29/2024

St George’s claim to fame is as Vermont’s smallest town, with less than 4 square miles of area. But located 10 miles south of Burlington, it doesn’t feel small, nor isolated. This ride consisted of two gorgeous gravel roads and two rather busy paved roads that connected them. While the traffic was heavy at times on the paved sections, if you chose a week day (or different time of day), you might fare better than we did.

Park behind the Town Hall- photo Marcia Gauvin

We parked in the parking lot of the park behind the St. George Town Hall, next to the Valero gas station. We had to ride a little bit on Route 2A to get to the start, but then turned onto Ayer Road which is a “non-maintained in the winter” for a short stint, and involves some serious climbing. After it levels out, it changes its name to Willow Brook Road, which is a very pretty, quiet and scenic high-elevation gravel road. This is a mile and a half of low trafic, with trees or fields on either side.

Willow Brook Road – photo Marcia Gauvin
Willow Brook Road – photo Chris Leister

At the end of Willow Brook, you turn left onto Oak Hill Road, which is paved and sees a lot of traffic. The shoulder was also quite narrow, so it was

Corner to Oak Hill Road – Camel’s Hump in the distance – photo Marcia Gauvin
Oak Hill Road – photo Marcia Gauvin

This involves just pushing forward and hoping for the best, for a mile and a half or so, before you have the pleasure of turning left onto Butternut Road – a lovely, wide gravel road.

Butternut Road – quickly turns to gravel –photo Marcia Gauvin

Butternut is a gentle glide downhill for over a mile.

View from Butternut Road –photo Marcia Gauvin

At the end of Butternut Road, you turn right onto 2A, and ride back to the village center to the start. Lovely short ride on a warm September day!

Route 2A – photo Marcia Gauvin
Town Line on 2A- photo Marcia Gauvin
Famous one room school house –photo Marcia Gauvin
Chris – photo Marcia Gauvin