New England https://newengland.com New England from the editors at Yankee Tue, 06 May 2025 17:19:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://newengland.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/ne-favicon-86x86.png New England https://newengland.com 32 32 Accessible Travel in New England: 10 Inclusive Adventures for a Barrier-Free Summer https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/accessible-travel-in-new-england/ https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/accessible-travel-in-new-england/#respond Tue, 06 May 2025 17:19:53 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2195430 Discover the best accessible travel in New England with these inclusive destinations designed for wheelchair users and travelers with disabilities.

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Accessible travel in New England is more vibrant than ever, with barrier-free boardwalks, adaptive outdoor adventures, and sensory-friendly cultural experiences welcoming all visitors. Whether you’re cruising the waters of Lake Champlain, exploring a scenic forest trail, or enjoying live music under the stars, this curated guide highlights the best summer spots that prioritize inclusion, accessibility, and unforgettable fun for everyone.

Visit the beach. Go for a carriage ride. Listen to music under the stars. Summer fun in New England is accessible, no matter how you get around or interact with new environments. Here, we round up one-of-a-kind experiences that are especially welcoming to wheelchair users and visitors with disabilities. It’s time for everyone to get out and enjoy the best our region has to offer.

Accessible Travel in New England: 10 Inclusive Adventures

On the Water | Accessible lakes, beaches, and adaptive sailing programs.

Lake Williams Trail Boardwalk | Marlborough, MA

It used to be that the only way to experience Lake Williams was from the shore … until the city of Marlborough installed a half-mile-long floating boardwalk across the northern part of the lake. Wide enough to accommodate any mobility device, the ADA-friendly boardwalk allows you to feel as though you’re actually walking (or rolling) on water. Approached from the courthouse side, the boardwalk is a great spot to get wrapped up in the morning mist, catch a glimpse of local wildlife, or see the sky turn pastel at sunset.

Community Sailing Center | Burlington, VT

With 435 square miles of flat, sparkling water, Lake Champlain is a dream destination for sailors new and old—and, thanks to the Burlington-based Community Sailing Center, those with cognitive or physical disabilities, too. The center’s Adaptive Watersports Program offers three-hour group sails aboard a custom 23-foot Sonar keelboat designed with accessibility in mind, while private lessons emphasizing adaptive teaching methods are available on smaller Martin 16s. And with both boat types available as rentals, experienced skippers are invited to take the helm.

Treks & Trails | Barrier-free nature paths, adaptive outdoor centers, and inclusive biking.

Wallace Barnes Accessible Nature Trail | Bristol, CT

A new addition to the Harry C. Barnes Memorial Nature Center, this trail might just be the most accessible mile in all of Connecticut. Those using mobility devices will relish the smooth surfaces of its boardwalks and soft gravel paths. Meanwhile, a series of offset, high-handled benches—protected under timber-framed shelters—creates spaces for rest and reflection. Watch songbirds flit through the trees, listen to Freeman Hill Brook babble under one of the trail’s bridges, or wait patiently for a heron to appear out of the reeds.

Adaptive Outdoor Education Center | Carrabassett Valley & Brunswick, ME

With the founding of AOEC in 2015, Bruce and Annemarie Albiston brought their vision of a more accessible Maine wilderness to life. The all-inclusive programming across the state is truly Maine’s all-access pass to the great outdoors. Watersports your thing? Try a weekend waterskiing trip, or sail around the islands of Casco Bay. With rentals (bikes especially) available from their adaptive-equipment library, outdoor adventure options feel limitless.

Accessible Travel in New England: Top Inclusive Adventures for a Barrier-Free Summer: Three people ride adaptive and standard mountain bikes on a dirt trail through a forest; one is airborne while another navigates a turn in an off-road wheelchair bike.
Riders of adaptive as well as two-wheeled mountain bikes share the thrills at the Driving Range, a fully inclusive bike network in Bolton, Vermont.
Photo Credit : Photo by Mark Clement

The Driving Range | Bolton, VT

Built by scores of volunteers over the span of two years, this latest addition to Vermont’s renowned collection of mountain biking trails opened in 2024 as the first course of its kind in the state. Berms, descents, flows, jumps—they’re all here, on a trail network specifically designed for adaptive riders. Part of a mission to make mountain biking more welcoming and accessible, the Driving Range encourages everyone, regardless of ability or equipment, to immerse themselves in the beauty of the Green Mountains.

Sights & Sounds | Sensory-friendly arts, accessible cultural sites, and scenic viewpoints.

Boston Symphony Orchestra | Boston & Lenox, MA

Creative programming and thoughtful amenities help draw everyone into the wonder of one of New England’s most cherished musical institutions. The paved pathways of Tanglewood, the BSO’s summer home in Lenox, allow scooters and wheelchairs to navigate the rural campus with ease. Concert programs are available in large print and Braille, and hearing aids are provided upon request. Exploring Boston? Check the Symphony Hall schedule for special performances featuring lower lighting and sound levels, noise-reduction headphones, and other aids for autistic or sensory-sensitive concertgoers.

Acadia by Carriage | Acadia National Park, ME

Acadia’s 45 winding miles of historic carriage roads have long brought visitors into the heart of this showstopping national park, filled with pristine forests and ocean views. Now, thanks to a partnership between the Friends of Acadia and tour operator Acadia by Carriage, free horse-drawn carriage rides are available for wheelchair travelers who want to explore these famous pathways. The special carriage uses a heavy-duty ramp to accommodate many types of mobility devices, with room for two or three friends or family members to come along. Note: Be sure to book well in advance.

Top 10 Rhode Island Summer Events of 2017
WaterFire lights up the summer night in Providence.
Photo Credit : WaterFire Providence

WaterFire | Providence, RI

This beloved public art experience draws people from far and wide to see the three rivers in downtown Providence transformed by the ethereal glow of more than 80 bonfires. Though the city’s Riverwalk—which includes ramps and an elevator—is generally navigable for those in wheelchairs or scooters, there’s also a WaterFire viewing area on Memorial Boulevard specifically reserved for visitors with disabilities that provides unimpeded views of the blazing displays. Alternatively, the festival’s Access Boat (by reservation) gets those with physical disabilities onto the water for an up-close look at the magic of WaterFire.

Castle in the Clouds | Moultonborough, NH

When shoe tycoon Thomas Plant built the Lucknow mansion in the early 20th century, he likely wasn’t expecting his estate to become one of the most popular destinations in New Hampshire. Sitting atop 5,000-plus acres of preserved Ossipee Mountains woodlands, the Arts and Crafts–style stone mansion is reached via an accessible trolley that runs every 15 minutes. The fully accessible first floor and gardens are open for rambling, and a video tour of the second floor is available upon request. Afterward, enjoy a delicious lunch or dinner at the wheelchair-accessible Carriage House Restaurant, all while drinking in a wide-angle view of Lake Winnipesaukee.

Old Man of the Mountain
These seven pillars help guests visualize the Old Man.
Photo Credit : Bethany Bourgault

Old Man of the Mountain Historic Site | Franconia, NH

Visitors in wheelchairs or scooters can “view” the Old Man of the Mountain, thanks to an interactive art installation that allows folks at differing heights (from 3 to 7 feet) to once again—or for the first time—see where the iconic “Great Stone Face” originally stood. From here, wend your way south on the eight-mile recreation trail through Franconia Notch. Or, head north to the wheelchair-accessible Cannon Mountain Aerial Tramway (cannonmt.com) to take in the sweeping views. So bring your adventurous spirit, and get ready to explore this storied White Mountains destination.

Let us know your favorite spots for inclusive outdoor adventures and accessible travel in New England below.

This feature was originally published as “All-Access Pass” in the May/June 2025 issue of Yankee Magazine.

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Stuffed Quahogs https://newengland.com/food/fish-seafood/stuffed-quahogs/ https://newengland.com/food/fish-seafood/stuffed-quahogs/#respond Thu, 01 May 2025 20:25:51 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2196184 Brimming with rich, briny flavor, these stuffed quahogs from The Net Result on Martha's Vineyard make the perfect appetizer.

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Butternut Squash Quick Bread https://newengland.com/food/breads/butternut-squash-quick-bread/ https://newengland.com/food/breads/butternut-squash-quick-bread/#respond Thu, 01 May 2025 20:25:19 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2196188 This moist and fragrant butternut squash quick bread recipe from North Tisbury Farm on Martha's Vineyard is a cozy reminder of the comforts of home baking.

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Stunning Scenery: 12 Beautiful Places to Visit in New England https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/12-beautiful-places-to-visit-in-new-england/ https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/12-beautiful-places-to-visit-in-new-england/#respond Thu, 01 May 2025 19:49:24 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2195338 From mountaintop views to windswept coastlines and hidden gardens, here are a dozen of the most beautiful places to visit in New England.

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A few miles north of Kingfield, Maine, there is a curve in Route 27 where the trees edging the narrow roadway suddenly part. People call this the “Oh my gosh!” corner—because when faced with the spectacular visage of Sugarloaf Mountain rising out of the North Woods, what else can you say?

That kind of exclamation, that catching of the breath, is one way we know we are experiencing beauty. We have all felt it, and indeed it’s one of the reasons we travel to new places. We grow more alert, we look more closely, we await being astonished. We are open to all that we find.

These pages will take you to the grand sweep of the ocean, to skies burnished by sunset or speckled with stars so bright they seem to burn a hole from another world. You will soar above craggy bluffs rising from the sea, and over a tiny island in a shimmering lake. There’s a covered bridge, too, inviting you to see beauty in an enduringly simple, perfectly engineered way for villagers to get where they needed to go.

More than anything, look through these photos and then find their equal wherever you may travel in New England: villages, cities, woods, waterways, orchards, farms. Be alert for even the smallest moments of beauty, as when you stroll through a green and lovely cemetery and then there you are, by the tomb of the poet Longfellow, and you are in two worlds—his and yours. Such encounters are waiting for you throughout this region, where travelers have come for generations to find themselves seeing with wide-eyed wonder and the inevitable “Oh my gosh!” —Mel Allen

12 Beautiful Places to Visit in New England This Year

12 Beautiful Places to Visit in New England
SOUTHEAST LIGHTHOUSE (RI): To find the most commanding views of the New England coast and ocean, look to a lighthouse. From their windswept homes on cliffs and headlands, they invite visitors to come see what they see—which on Block Island, sitting just a short ferry ride from the Rhode Island mainland, means sharing the Southeast Lighthouse’s lofty vantage atop Mohegan Bluffs.
Photo Credit : Block Island Tourism/Ross Draper
A modern glass-walled building adjoins a historic Gothic-style structure, surrounded by lush gardens and flowering shrubs under a partly cloudy sky.
MOUNT AUBURN CEMETERY (MA): Inspired in part by English landscaping tradition and Paris’s parklike Père Lachaise, the nation’s first “garden cemetery” (opened in 1831) welcomes the public into its tranquil heart every day of the year. Mount Auburn‘s 175 acres in Cambridge and Watertown pay tribute not only to those laid to rest here—including Julia Ward Howe, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Isabella Stewart Gardner—but also to nature, eternally restorative in all its forms.
Photo Credit : Robert Benson
A small house sits on a tree-covered island in the middle of a calm lake, surrounded by dense forest and mountain ranges under a colorful sky.
SQUAM LAKE (NH): In contrast to the busy summer playground that is nearby Lake Winnipesaukee, Squam Lake has an unhurried, almost romantic air—a loch amid the New Hampshire highlands. Take a boat tour to be charmed by its scattering of islands and stretches of undeveloped shoreline, and keep an eye out for the loons, bald eagles, and great blue herons that nest here.
Photo Credit : Will Zimmermann
A child stands at the edge of a shallow creek near a red covered bridge surrounded by green trees and foliage.
BURT HENRY COVERED BRIDGE (VT): “Covered bridges weren’t built to star on calendars,” writes New Hampshire author Howard Mansfield in his 2016 book, Sheds. “They weren’t built to be pretty.” Yet the same structures that once were practical solutions to 19th-century problems—including this classic Town lattice truss bridge in North Bennington—are now scenic lures for 21st-century visitors.
Photo Credit : Briana Lyons
Modern, curved glass building with a green roof set in a grassy landscape with trees, outdoor seating, and a blue sky with scattered clouds.
GRACE FARMS (CT): A mere 10 minutes from Philip Johnson’s Glass House in New Canaan, you’ll find another gorgeously unconventional building: the River, whose metal-clad roof floats like a silver ribbon above the contours of the land. But where Johnson’s iconic window-walled structure brings the outside indoors, the River helps immerse humans in the natural landscape of Grace Farms, where all but three of the 80 lush acres at this culture and humanitarian center are protected habitat.
Photo Credit : Sahar Coston-Hardy
Rocky coastline at night with the Milky Way galaxy visible in a star-filled sky above, cliffs and forest in the background.
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK (ME): As a largely rural state, Maine offers some of the most pristine night skies imaginable. This celestial bounty is celebrated each September at the Acadia Night Sky Festival, one of the East Coast’s biggest and best-known night sky events. You don’t have to wait till fall, though, to get a front-row seat to Acadia’s cavalcade of stars: The curtain goes up every night.
Photo Credit : Nate Levesque
A woman and two children walk through an orchard, with a wooden crate containing peaches on the grass in the foreground.
ALYSON’S ORCHARD (NH): A steep, west-facing hillside at this 350-acre property in Walpole gives its trees abundant exposure, which in turn produces exceptional fruit. That same hillside gives Alyson’s visitors abundant views—of the Connecticut River Valley and onward to Vermont—which in turn produce exceptional memories.
Photo Credit : Michael Piazza
A sunset over a sandy beach with rippled wet sand reflecting clouds in the sky; a person stands in the distance near grassy dunes.
BREWSTER TIDAL FLATS (MA): It’s the little things that make North America’s largest tidal flats so perfect for sunsets—namely, the ripples and runnels in the sand that create the illusion of molten stained glass right at your feet. The flats extend nearly 10 miles along the coast of Cape Cod, which means viewing spots are ample, but Paine’s Creek Beach is hard to beat.
Photo Credit : Betty Wiley
Elegant sunroom with ornate ceiling, large windows, classical statues, potted plants, wrought iron furniture, and a mosaic-topped table. Natural light fills the space.
NEWPORT MANSIONS (RI): The sheer amount of money that went into Newport’s Gilded Age estates (The Elms, shown, cost $1.4 million in 1901, or more than $50 million today) is impressive. What inspires real awe, though, is the exquisite artistry and craftsmanship on display here—a tribute not to the wealth made by some, but to the beauty created by many.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of the Preservation Society of Newport County/Gavin Ashworth
A long wooden boardwalk with white railings stretches through green marshland under a blue sky with scattered clouds.
SILVER SANDS STATE PARK (CT): Habitat for wildlife, buffer against ocean storms, and just plain lovely to look at, tidal marshes lend a quiet appeal to New England’s famous coast. At Silver Sands State Park in Milford, a three-quarter-mile boardwalk ensures this delicate ecosystem leaves a lasting impact on the viewer, not the other way around.
Photo Credit : Joe Parskey
A large, red brick and timber house stands behind a colorful flower garden and green shrubs at sunset, with tall trees in the background.
SHELBURNE FARMS (VT): In a region of rocky soil and notoriously changeable weather, few things say resilience like gardens whose roots go back decades. Among New England’s horticultural gems are the gardens at Shelburne Farms, sited between Lake Champlain and the property’s 19th-century mansion turned inn. Created by the former lady of the manor, Lila O. Webb, they’ve been extensively restored—much to the delight of visitors to these verdant grounds more than a century onward.
Photo Credit : Adam Silverman
A long wooden table with chairs sits inside a glass greenhouse with hanging lights, overlooking a scenic view of water, trees, and a house. Pink flowers hang from above.
ARAGOSTA (ME): The reservations-only Hillside Greenhouse at Aragosta, chef-owner Devin Finigan’s destination restaurant and inn on Deer Isle might be the prettiest dining room you’ll ever see. (The nearby Forest Greenhouse, added in 2023, could be a close contender, though.)
Photo Credit : Alissa Hessler
A person stands on rocks near a small waterfall flowing into a clear pool, surrounded by dense green forest and large boulders.
BASH BISH FALLS (MA): Immortalized in paintings by Hudson River School artist John F. Kensett, this 60-foot cascade draws wonder-seekers literally right and left, from Massachusetts’s Bash Bish Falls State Park and the adjoining Taconic State Park in New York.
Photo Credit : Kat Carney/Cavan Images

What would you add to our list of beautiful places to visit in New England? Let us know below.

This feature was originally published as “The Beauty of It All” in the May/June 2025 issue of Yankee Magazine.

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Cherry Blossoms in New England: Where to See Spring in Full Bloom https://newengland.com/travel/massachusetts/cherry-blossoms-in-new-england/ https://newengland.com/travel/massachusetts/cherry-blossoms-in-new-england/#respond Tue, 29 Apr 2025 19:41:58 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2196200 Discover the best places to see cherry blossoms in New England, including Boston, and New Haven. 

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Blossoms Beyond D.C.: New England’s Springtime Secret

Most people think they need to travel to Washington, D.C., to see cherry blossoms—but springtime in New England tells a different story. From the coastal towns of Connecticut to Boston’s historic green spaces, cherry blossom season is a local tradition. Whether you’re a botanist or just looking for a springtime stroll, you can experience the delicate pink blooms without traveling far beyond your own backyard. The blossoms typically peak between late March and mid-April, and are as fleeting as spring rain, so plan your visit while they last!

Large cherry blossom trees in full bloom stand along a pathway in a park, with several people walking and taking photos under the pink flowers.
Crowds enjoy the row of cherry blossom trees at Boston’s Arnold Arboretum.
Photo Credit : Christabel Barry

A Celebration in Bloom: Boston’s Arnold Arboretum Cherry Blossom Festival

One of the most beloved celebrations of cherry blossoms in New England happens every spring at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University in Boston. This year, on an unseasonably warm 80-degree Saturday, it was the perfect time to welcome spring. Young families, children, seniors, and visitors of all kinds came out to enjoy the blossoms and enjoy the arboretum’s activities and performances. The festival featured traditional Japanese games and calligraphy, and family-friendly programming with Arboretum Youth Education. 

The festival came alive with Japanese dance performances by the Showa Boston Institute, and the strong rhythms of taiko drumming by Odaiko New England—their powerful beats echoing through the blooming pathways.

But the cherry trees are more than just beautiful—they’re part of a deeper story. Many of the trees were grown from seeds hand-delivered from Japan, part of a longstanding friendship between the two cultures. (Fun fact: these trees thrive here thanks to the similarly humid climates of Massachusetts and Japan!) More than just a lovely spring stroll, the event highlighted the deep connections between culture, environmental care, and community. Spring in New England feels like a new year, with everyone and everything coming alive again after the long, cold winter. 

Children in pink outfits sit on grass watching a group in blue jackets perform with drums outdoors; large audience and bare trees in the background.
Two girls in pink watching Showa Boston Institute perform traditional Japanese dance at Boston’s Arnold Arboretum Cherry Blossom Festival, April 19, 2025.
Photo Credit : Christabel Barry

More Places to See Cherry Blossoms in New England

Looking to explore beyond Boston? Here are some other top spots for cherry blossoms in New England (and just beyond):

Mill River Park, Stamford, Connecticut

Located just over the New York border, this urban park features the lovely Cherry Tree Grove, perfect spring day trip. It’s less than a 90-minute drive from central Connecticut and is quickly becoming a regional favorite.

Wooster Square Park, New Haven, Connecticut

Each April, more than 70 Yoshino cherry trees bloom in unison in this historic neighborhood park. Wooster Square Park is also home to one of New England’s most beloved cherry blossom festivals, with live music, local food, and family-friendly fun, making it one of the top cherry blossom destinations in the U.S.

Charles River Esplanade, Boston, Massachusetts

For cherry blossoms with a city skyline view, this riverside park delivers. Walk or bike along the Charles River under elegant rows of pink and white petals, with views of the Back Bay and easy access to the Boston Public Garden and Beacon Hill.

Branch Brook Park, Newark, New Jersey (Honorable Mention)

Though technically outside New England, Branch Brook Park is a cherry blossom powerhouse that deserves a mention for its proximity and scale. Just a couple hours’ drive from southern Connecticut, this park boasts over 5,000 cherry trees in more than a dozen varieties, making it the largest collection in the United States. Visitors can also enjoy guided talks and cultural programming during peak bloom.

Cherry Blossoms in New England: Where to See Spring in Full Bloom. Taiko drummers perform outdoors on a lawn before a seated audience, with trees, blooming cherry blossoms, and a skyline in the background.
Odiako New England performs taiko drumming at the Arnold Arboretum’s Cherry Blossom Festival, April 19, 2025.
Photo Credit : Christabel Barry

Cherry Blossom Visitor Tips

To make the most of cherry blossom season, keep these tips in mind:

  • Plan ahead: Check local bloom forecasts.
  • Visit early or late in the day to avoid crowds and catch the best lighting for photos.
  • Know your trees: Yoshino trees bloom first, followed by Kwanzan, which have fuller, deeper pink petals.
  • Weather matters: Rain or strong wind can shorten the bloom period dramatically.
  • Pack a picnic: Many of these parks have scenic spots to enjoy lunch under the trees.

A Shared Moment Beneath the Petals

As Japanese poet Masaoka Shiki once wrote:

“Under the cherry blossoms / strangers are not / really strangers” There’s something deeply human about gathering under blooming cherry trees. Whether you’re wandering through the Arnold Arboretum or finding peace under the blossoms in New Haven, appreciating spring flowers in New England offers a rare and beautiful pause—a reminder to slow down, breathe deep, and welcome a new season in bloom.

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Things to Do in New England in May 2025 https://newengland.com/travel/things-to-do-in-new-england-may/ https://newengland.com/travel/things-to-do-in-new-england-may/#respond Tue, 29 Apr 2025 16:58:00 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=1529232 Plan your May weekends... with Yankee! Don't miss these May 2025 events and happenings in New England, plus this month's best travel deals.

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Of all the months, May has the heaviest lift when it comes to transforming the New England landscape. More color emerges each day on the path from barren to blossoming, and it’s a treat to anticipate buds bursting into leaves, seemingly overnight. 

Nothing excites me more in May, though, than the release of Yankee‘s annual Travel Guide to New England. This year’s May/June issue is a keeper, filled with more travel ideas than you could possibly pack into one summer, even if you start this month. If you haven’t already made plans for Mother’s Day Weekend, Memorial Day Weekend, and the rest of May, I’ve got plenty of ideas.

Weekend of May 3-4, 2025

Kentucky Derby Doings in New England

We may be far from Churchill Downs, but on Saturday, May 3, there are plenty of places to celebrate the 151st Kentucky Derby here in New England including:

~ The Vanderbilt in Newport Rhode Island, which is hosting “Day at the Races” activations including a live bluegrass band, lawn games, a Kentucky Derby headpiece contest, a race lottery, cash bar, and food stations (book online).
~ Mohegan Sun FanDuel Sportsbook in Connecticut, where the race will be shown on a 140-foot video wall, the largest in the Northeast, and there’ll be prizes for best dressed and best Derby hat (reservations required: book online).
~ Revere Hotel in Boston, where a Derby on the Rooftop Watch Party in the Lantern Lounge features Woodford Reserve mint juleps, live Derby coverage on the big screen, and a hat contest with a fabulous grand prize: an overnight stay (purchase party tickets online).

Weekend of May 10-11, 2025

Mother’s Day Weekend in New England

Celebrate your mom or her finest creation… you! I can’t think of a more fitting place than The Beatrice in Providence, Rhode Island: The whole hotel’s a tribute to developer Joseph R. Paolino Jr.’s late mom, Beatrice Temkin, a lifelong Rhode Island resident, community leader, and philanthropist. Book a Mother’s Day weekend stay (call 401-443-2960), and all moms receive complimentary welcome gifts including Seacoast Sweets chocolates, BeeKind bath amenities, and a signature bellini cocktail. Make reservations, too, at Bellini Providence, the hotel’s Italian restaurant.

If Mom taught you frugality is a virtue, take her to one of these New England attractions where moms are admitted free on Mother’s Day:

~ Charmingfare Farm, Candia, NH
~ Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens, Boothbay, ME
~ Connecticut Science Center, Hartford, CT
~ Franklin Park Zoo / Stone Zoo, Boston / Stoneham, MA

At Stone Zoo, a mom and newborn sloth are resting together inside a hollow log structure.
Visitors to Stone Zoo in Stoneham, Massachusetts, will see a new addition to the Linne’s two-toed sloth family following the recent birth of a new baby on April 16, 2025.
Photo Credit : Stone Zoo

Weekend of May 17-18, 2025

ArtWeek Berkshires | various western Massachusetts locations

The 11-day ArtWeek Berkshires celebration is in full swing starting this weekend: There are more than 100 events planned between May 16 and 26. Visit galleries and artists’ studios, attend a demo or performance, and even try your hand at something new.

Trade Secrets | Lakeville, CT

It’s the garden event to beat all New England garden events! Trade Secrets famously attracts celebrities like Martha Stewart, and you’ll understand why as you shop for rare plants and garden antiques on Sunday, May 18, at Lime Rock Park. Tours of private and public gardens in western Connecticut and eastern New York on Saturday, May 17, are also a highlight. Purchase tickets online in advance for this popular weekend’s events.

Brimfield Outdoor Antiques Show | Brimfield, MA

Join the treasure hunters at the first Brimfield Outdoor Antiques Show of 2025, which runs May 13-18. This enormous gathering of sellers and seekers has been a tradition since 1959.

Weekend of May 24-26, 2025

It’s Memorial Day weekend, and in addition to remembering those who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our nation, New England greets the unofficial arrival of summer with too many events to count.

Spring Open Studio Weekend | Vermont statewide

It’s Spring Open Studio Weekend in Vermont: a fun excuse for a road trip. There are 15 local tour loops to choose from on May 24 and 25, each showcasing members of the Vermont Crafts Council and their handcrafted works.

Wildquack Duck Race & Music Festival | Jackson, NH

On Sunday, May 25, the annual Wildquack Duck Race & Music Festival in Jackson, New Hampshire, is a solid day of free fun. Plus, if you buy a duck, you might waddle away with a fabulous prize.

Robin Hood’s Medieval Faire | Harwinton, CT

Make merry at Robin Hood’s Medieval Faire in Harwinton, Connecticut, where the fun is “joust” getting started during this opening weekend. Festivities continue Saturdays and Sundays through June 22, and cosplay is, of course, encouraged.

May’s Best Travel Deals

Great Wolf Lodge promotion May 2025 with *NSYNC’s Joey Fatone and Lance Bass.
*NSYNC’s Joey Fatone and Lance Bass are helping kick off Great Wolf Lodge’s annual Summer Camp-In celebration with a special promotion.
Photo Credit : Great Wolf Lodge

~ It’s Gonna Be MAY! Great Wolf Lodge has teamed up with *NSYNC’s Joey Fatone and Lance Bass for a special promotion in honor of the 25th anniversary of the band’s iconic song, It’s Gonna Be Me. On May 1 only, families can save up to 51% off stays at Great Wolf Lodge properties (there are two here in New England) by using promo code BEMAY when they book online for stays during the annual Summer Camp-In celebration, May 24 through August 25.

Yankee Out & About in May

Join me at Canyon Ranch in the Berkshires May 1-4 for Besties Weekend. As I learned during last year’s Besties Weekend, Wellness is Better Together. I’m looking forward to meeting new friends and teaching a workshop, The Lost Art of Letter Writing, on Friday afternoon.

What are you excited to do this May in New England? Let us know in the comments below!

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Dive Into Florida’s Foodie Paradise https://newengland.com/travel/new-smyrna-beach-florida-dining-foodie-paradise/ https://newengland.com/travel/new-smyrna-beach-florida-dining-foodie-paradise/#respond Tue, 29 Apr 2025 15:53:51 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2196253 [Sponsored] In New Smyrna Beach, it’s the restaurants making waves. Discover this Florida beach destination's restaurant scene.

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Sponsored by New Smyrna Beach Area Visitors Bureau

There’s a moment at the start of every vacation when you truly arrive. Maybe it’s when you catch your first shimmering glimpse of the ocean, or cross the bridge that connects you to an island paradise. Or maybe it’s sipping a tropical cocktail as you watch the sunset from a treetop restaurant.

In New Smyrna Beach, on Florida’s east coast, you feel a similar thrill every time you clink a glass or pick up a fork. The area beckons visitors with 17 miles of pristine beaches, bustling village-like hubs, and a vibrant arts scene of galleries, performances, and festivals. It’s all so accessible now that Avelo and Breeze Airways fly low-cost direct routes into visitor-friendly Daytona Beach International Airport from Hartford, New Haven, Providence, and White Plains.

New Smyrna Beach, Florida. A sandy beach with gentle ocean waves under a bright blue sky with scattered clouds. Sunlight reflects off the water, and the shore is mostly empty.
New Smyrna Beach’s 17 miles of sun-soaked sand are a short flight away thanks to new direct routes connecting New England with this slice of paradise.
Photo Credit : New Smyrna Beach Area Visitors Bureau

Here’s the delicious surprise: New Smyrna Beach’s treasure trove of eateries rivals that of many larger destinations. There is more culinary variety, sophistication, and innovation than you’d ever expect from a nostalgic beach town.

Consider Norwood’s Restaurant & Treehouse Bar, an area landmark since 1946, famous for its succulent seafood, house-aged steaks, and leafy deck perched high in an oak tree overlooking the intracoastal waterway. Meet friends here at sunset for live music, bacon-wrapped scallops, and a cocktail crafted with house-made syrups and freshly pressed juices. Or if you’re in a wine mood, discover a new favorite among their impressive collection of very affordably priced bottles gathered from around the world.

Just blocks from the beach, Third Wave Café occupies a Craftsman-style cottage, operating as a laid-back bistro during the day and an elegant dinner spot at night, complete with a lush garden in back. Not only are the daily seafood selections enticing, but they’re also environmentally friendly thanks to Chef David Moscoso’s dedication to cooking with local and sustainable ingredients, a commitment recognized by the prestigious James Beard Foundation. You can also feel good about the wood-fired Neapolitan-style pizzas, Wagyu short ribs, and candied salmon—all must-tries.

At Paco Submarine in New Smyrna Beach, Florida, a sandwich cut in half with lettuce, tomato, bacon, and mayo sits next to a pile of French fries on a yellow tray.
The crisp fries and scratch-made sandwiches at Paco Submarine are alone worth a trip to New Smyrna Beach, Florida.
Photo Credit : Kim Knox Beckius

In this city teeming with natural beauty, a picnic by the ocean indulges all of your senses at once. To get started, head to Paco Submarine, which redefines sandwich-making as a serious craft. Everything here is made from scratch: that includes smoking bacon for the BLT and curing pastrami for The Clayton, a layering of meat, Swiss cheese, sauerkraut, and creamy mustard on rye. Each sandwich gets its own style of bread, which is also homemade. If you can’t wait to spread out your blanket, order some fries to eat on your trek over the causeway. They’re as good as you’ll find anywhere, Belgium included. 

If you’re craving a cup of coffee with a side of Bohemian charm, visit Luma, an open-air café with hanging chairs and shady porticos. Revel in the chill atmosphere or grab something to go and warm your toes in the sand while watching surfers ride the waves.

Avanu on Flagler Restaurant, New Smyrna Beach. Three pieces of bacon-wrapped shrimp garnished with parsley are arranged on a black plate with a small cup of dipping sauce.
At Avanu on Flagler in New Smyrna Beach, the Polynesian-inspired menu features shareable bites like these bacon-wrapped Volcano Shrimp.
Photo Credit : Kim Knox Beckius

Tiki culture is alive and well at Avanu on Flagler, where gastropub classics are accented with Asian and Polynesian flavors. Check out the rooftop to bask in ocean breezes and behold incredible views of the palmy surroundings. The crispy Korean fried chicken, lemongrass seafood noodles, and playful bar menu are irresistibly inviting after a sunbaked day on the shore.

At Café Verde, it’s immediately clear you’re about to eat well on vacation. Their menu features plenty of vegetarian and gluten-free options. This bright, airy space is the perfect spot for imaginative salads, grain bowls, globally flavored entrées, and craft cocktails. Their BLT scallop tacos topped with house-made salsas are an edible getaway all on their own.

At Spanish River Grill in New Smyrna Beach, a plate of whipped feta cheese topped with fermented honey and black pepper.
Tapas like whipped feta topped with a pool of fermented honey make dining at Spanish River Grill a transportive experience.
Photo Credit : Kim Knox Beckius

Across the Indian River from the beach, Spanish River Grill brings an authentic taste of Spain to Florida. The whipped feta, garlicky mushrooms with house-made bread, and crispy chicken a la plancha pair perfectly with a glass of sangria or Spanish wines from a well-curated list. For dessert, the Basque cheesecake is a light, fluffy, caramelized wonder. Just heavenly.

Speaking of otherworldly baked goods, the Dutch Oven Bread Co. opens soon on Canal Street in the midst of shops and galleries (there’s a sister bakery a short drive away in Edgewater). Pick up a crusty, chewy baguette, and recharge with a mouthwatering fruit danish or an enormous cinnamon roll. Just down the street, there’s Shebeen, where you can indulge in treats like truffles with a matcha latte or a fruit-topped waffle with an icy-cold chai. Their inventive ice creams include “booze-jee” flavors for adults only.

In a town replete with bright colors, warm hospitality, and Old Florida charm, New Smyrna Beach’s restaurants stir richness into the mix, creating a destination where every meal is a reminder to embrace the good life and “Relax Already.”

Start planning a delectable escape at visitnsbfl.com.

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Hidden Gems in New England Museums: 24 Crowd Favorites and Surprises You Need to See https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/hidden-gems-in-new-england-museums/ https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/hidden-gems-in-new-england-museums/#respond Mon, 28 Apr 2025 13:13:30 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2195499 Find your new favorite in our list of famous pieces and hidden gems in New England museums—from ancient Buddha statues and moon rocks to bee-wing jewelry and Norman Rockwell originals.

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New England’s museum collections span history, time, and even space. Within these cultural treasure chests you’ll find famous art and artifacts, but also under-the-radar gems you didn’t know you needed to see … until now.   

24 Crowd Favorites and Hidden Gems in New England Museums

Vermont Museums

Aerial view of a large historic ship on display in a grassy park, next to an illustration of a man drawing at a desk with a statue in the background.
The 220-foot steamship Ticonderoga and Norman Rockwell’s The Craftsman sketch.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of The Shelburne Museum

Shelburne Museum | Shelburne, VT

The Crowd-Pleaser: Board the 220-foot steamship Ticonderoga in its landlocked berth, and explore the four decks, pilothouse, and crew’s quarters. This year marks the 70th anniversary of the ship’s arrival at the Shelburne Museum—a feat of maritime preservation.

The Cool Surprise: Created as part of a 1960s national ad campaign to promote Vermont’s granite industry, Norman Rockwell’s The Craftsman sketch is one of three works by the legendary illustrator newly acquired by the Shelburne Museum from the Rock of Ages quarry. (The name “Norwell” engraved on the headstone is a playful self-reference.)

A collage shows a large landscape painting, a museum gallery with artworks and benches, and a wooden spiral staircase viewed from above.
The Domes of the Yosemite oil painting and one of the library’s two spiral staircases.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of St. Johnsbury Athenaeum

Bonus Pick: St. Johnsbury Athenaeum | St. Johnsbury, VT

The Crowd-Pleaser: Benefactor Horace Fairbanks added a room specifically for The Domes of the Yosemite oil painting, featuring it prominently in what today is the oldest unaltered gallery in the country. The giant 10×15-foot landscape depicts the grandeur of the Yosemite Valley and is based on artist Albert Bierstadt’s visits to the West Coast in the mid-1860s.

The Cool Surprise: Within the masterpiece of this building (a National Historic Landmark), look for the library’s two spiral staircases (no longer in use). The risers feature delicate scrollwork, and walnut balusters support a sheening banister curving to a second-floor balcony. It’s a good reminder that architecture is as much an art as the framed pieces that hang on the walls.

Massachusetts Museums

A large silver punch bowl with engraved text beside a brown glazed stoneware jar with handles and incised writing near the rim.
Paul Revere’s Sons of Liberty Bowl and the large stoneware storage jar crafted in 1857 by an enslaved South Carolina man named David Drake.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston | Boston, MA

The Crowd-Pleaser: Paul Revere himself made the celebrated Sons of Liberty Bowl in 1768 at his Boston workshop, likely by melting down old silver coins. The secret society of Revolutionaries who commissioned the bowl used it for serving rum punch at their meetings.

The Cool Surprise: For another perspective on U.S. history, look for the large stoneware storage jar crafted in 1857 by an enslaved South Carolina man named David Drake. Adding a line of verse and his name, “Dave,” to his work was a daring move for someone who had to learn to read and write outside the law.

A woman leads a group discussion in an art gallery; beside this is a close-up of a worn metal bucket on a wooden floor.
Admiring Norman Rockwell’s Four Freedoms oil paintings and the brass bucket in the artist’s studio.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of the Norman Rockwell Museum

Bonus Pick: Norman Rockwell Museum | Stockbridge, MA

The Crowd-Pleaser: Freedom From Want, Freedom From Fear, Freedom of Speech, and Freedom of Worship: These iconic images were inspired by a 1941 address to Congress by President Roosevelt. Today, the Four Freedoms oil paintings by Norman Rockwell are a cornerstone in the museum’s permanent collection, and just as relevant as when they were first conceived.

The Cool Surprise: On the floor next to the painting easel in Rockwell’s studio, a brass bucket held paint rags and dumped pipe ashes. But sometimes that combination created small fires; the bucket would quickly get thrown outside and took some dings and dents to show for it.

New Hampshire Museums

A person views an abstract mixed-media wall sculpture in a gallery; next to it is a painting of a street scene with trees and people under a cloudy sky.
Monet’s The Bridge at Bougival oil painting and Judy Pfaff’s Glazed and Confused: Rockin’ Lobster Majolica wall sculpture.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of the Currier Museum of Art

Currier Museum of Art | Manchester, NH

The Crowd-Pleaser: Think the Currier is a small-town museum? Think again. One of many well-known pieces in its collection is Monet’s The Bridge at Bougival, an 1869 oil painting of a tranquil scene outside Paris. You’ll also find works by Calder, di Suvero, Matisse, Picasso, Sargent, Andrew Wyeth, and more.

The Cool Surprise: Installed just this year, Judy Pfaff’s Glazed and Confused: Rockin’ Lobster Majolica wall sculpture gives a modern nod to Victorian-era pottery with its jumble of cardboard, wire, and fake flowers in an organic shape and its mix of bold colors.

A wooden chair with a spindle back is shown on the left; on the right, a simple wooden table and round box are set in a room with yellow floors and white cabinets.
Elder Micajah Tucker’s Shaker dining chair and the Deaconess Retiring Room’s built-in cabinetry.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Canterbury Shaker Village

Bonus Pick: Canterbury Shaker Village | Canterbury, NH

The Crowd-Pleaser: In 1834, Elder Micajah Tucker used pine and birch from the village to create a low-back Windsor-style Shaker dining chair. It fits neatly beneath the table, and allowed the Sisters to more easily clean up after their meals for 150 people. You can view two on display: one in the furniture exhibit in the Carriage House (visitor’s center) and another in the Dwelling House.

The Cool Surprise: The Canterbury Shakers did not invent built-in cabinetry, but they excelled in designing and constructing such convenient storage solutions. Built-ins opened floor space in the community’s many shared rooms and required less dusting. The impressive example of built-in cabinetry in the Deaconess Retiring Room forms one wall in the 1793 Dwelling House.

Maine Museums

Two stones: on the left, an unpolished, rough rock; on the right, a polished cross-section of a pink and green mineral, possibly watermelon tourmaline.
The NWA 12760 lunar meteorite and watermelon tourmaline.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Maine Mineral & Gem Museum

Maine Mineral & Gem Museum | Bethel, ME

The Crowd-Pleaser: Known as NWA 12760, the largest piece of the moon on display anywhere in the world is the highlight here. The meteorite weighs 128 pounds! (Although this specimen is strictly no-touch for visitors, you can hold a sizable piece of moon rock elsewhere at the museum.)

The Cool Surprise: Named for its unusual pink or red core and green exterior, watermelon tourmaline was first identified in 1910 at a quarry in Maine. This example of Maine’s state mineral—and its most popular gemstone—has been cut to show off that stunning color.

Top: A large Fresnel lens displayed in a museum exhibit. Bottom: An adult and a child observe the wooden remains of a shipwreck.
The original Fresnel lens from the east tower at Two Lights in Cape Elizabeth and a bow section from the Snow Squall shipwreck.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Maine Maritime Museum

Bonus Pick: Maine Maritime Museum | Bath, ME

The Crowd-Pleaser: This original Fresnel lens, from the east tower at Two Lights in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, once shone its light 20 miles out to sea. Now see up close how the light reflects and refracts thanks to the hundreds of pieces of glass artfully constructed in a beehive shape.

The Cool Surprise: This clipper ship didn’t return to its home port, Portland. But, lucky for us, a section of its bow was uncovered in the 1980s and brought back to Maine. The Snow Squall shipwreck is the sole remaining example of these mid-nineteenth-century, American-built trade ships known for their speed.

Connecticut Museums

Top: A painting of dinosaurs in a lush prehistoric landscape. Bottom: A detailed mixed-media assemblage resembling a densely packed urban scene with buildings and debris.
Rudolph F. Zallinger’s The Age of Reptiles mural and Mohamad Hafez’s Eternal Cities sculptural art piece.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of the Yale Peabody Museum

Yale Peabody Museum | New Haven, CT

The Crowd-Pleaser: Sprawling 16 feet high and 110 feet long, Rudolph F. Zallinger’s The Age of Reptiles mural dominates the newly renovated Burke Hall of Dinosaurs—and proves that while our understanding of these creatures may have changed, their powerful hold on our imagination has not.

The Cool Surprise: By expanding the range of expertise showcased in its galleries, the Yale Peabody aspires to create a more welcoming, engaging, and relevant museum. Case in point: Eternal Cities, a mesmerizing sculptural art piece created in 2023 by local Syrian American artist Mohamad Hafez.

Top: A painting of an angel supporting a fainting man in brown robes. Bottom: An ornate shell vessel with a small dark figurine holding a spear, mounted on gold.
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio’s St. Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy oil painting and Jeremias Ritter’s Nautilus snail.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art

Bonus Pick: Wadsworth Athenaeum | Hartford, CT

The Crowd-Pleaser: The St. Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy oil painting, on display at the oldest continuously operating public art museum in the United States, is the first-known religious composition by Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio. Note the strong contrasts between the shaft of light at the center and the dark shadows. His technique was groundbreaking for the time, and became a “defining characteristic of Baroque art.”

The Cool Surprise: This gilt shell with a figure riding a top it, patiently making its way, sits in the Cabinet of Art and Curiosity gallery. The Nautilus snail collectible, donated by J. Pierpont Morgan, dates to the 1630s when personal displays of “universal learning,” featuring a mix of art and nature, were popular.

Rhode Island Museums

Hidden Gems in New England Museums. A wooden statue of a seated Buddha next to a delicate, oval-shaped lace doily with bow details on a white background.
Buddha statue and Luci Jockel’s Bee Wing Lace Neckpiece.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of RISD Museum

RISD Museum | Providence, RI

The Crowd-Pleaser: A stellar example of the museum’s wide-ranging collection, this 12th-century Buddha statue—the largest Japanese wooden statue in the United States—stands 10 feet tall and commands its own gallery. Legend has it that the statue was stored for centuries in a farmhouse after its original temple burned.

The Cool Surprise: Made of honeybee wings sourced humanely from RISD’s campus hives, artist Luci Jockel’s Bee Wing Lace Neckpiece honors the natural world and highlights the importance of pollinators. The design was inspired by lace in the museum’s collection.

A classic blue Shelby Cobra is displayed in a showroom on the left, while an orange and black Bugatti Veyron is shown parked indoors on the right.
The 1965 Ford Shelby 427 SC Cobra and 2006 Bugatti Veyron.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Newport Car Museum

Bonus Pick: Newport Car Museum | Portsmouth, RI

The Crowd-Pleaser: In a word: performance. The centerpiece of the museum’s American collection, the 1965 Ford Shelby 427 SC Cobra sports car is only 1 of 31 ever sold through dealerships—at a price of $9,600, which that year was twice the average U.S. household income. Feast your eyes on the side pipes, riveted hood scoop, and flared fenders.

The Cool Surprise: Meanwhile, your eyes might bug out at the 2006 Bugatti Veyron, a French luxury sports car. The Veyron has a top speed of 250 mph and is priced at $1,250,000. As the auto designer Ettore Bugatti once said, “Nothing is too beautiful and nothing is too expensive.” Or is it?

Let us know your favorite hidden gems in New England museums!

Parts of this article were originally published as “Double Feature” in the May/June 2025 issue of Yankee Magazine.

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House For Sale | A Cozy Updated New Hampshire Chalet in the Mountain Lakes District https://newengland.com/living/homes/house-for-sale-new-hampshire-chalet/ https://newengland.com/living/homes/house-for-sale-new-hampshire-chalet/#respond Fri, 25 Apr 2025 19:00:20 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2195653 Centrally located with modern updates, this New Hampshire chalet offers mega escape inspiration.

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When this sweet A-frame chalet popped up on my screen this week, I immediately stopped what I was doing to scroll through the listing and take a few moments to daydream about how nice it would be to curl up in front of the wood stove, cook a meal in the kitchen, or visit with friends around the fire pit. My life is hectic, so when I mentally escape, it’s to the quiet and nature…but comfortable nature, with couches and running water.

Located 90 minutes from both Concord and North Conway, this 1970 New Hampshire chalet has been stylishly updated, making it an ideal vacation home or rental (meaning I will have to keep dreaming for now), but it’s always fun to look! See if it makes you feel equally cozy.

A Cozy Updated New Hampshire Chalet in the Mountain Lakes District

House For Sale | A Cozy Updated New Hampshire Chalet in the Mountain Lakes District. A-frame cabin interior with wood floors, black brick fireplace, wood stove, rustic decor, open kitchen, and loft area above.
Upstairs, the sunny main living space offers an open layout perfect for relaxing or entertaining. The parent in me shudders at the fur on the floor, but it sure looks cozy.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Compass New England
A-frame cabin living area with wood floors, a black brick fireplace, mounted bull skull, leather chair, TV, and open kitchen with loft above.
The living room features a brick hearth with a wood stove as the focal point. I love a windowed wood stove because you get all of the perks of wood heat with the reassurance of containment. I also appreciate a TV that’s not above the fireplace.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Compass New England
A modern A-frame kitchen with white cabinets, open wooden shelves, a dark countertop, and exposed wooden beams, adjacent to a living area with large windows.
The updated open kitchen features updated appliances, quartz countertops, and custom shelving that perfectly complements the space. The light fixtures add a hefty dose of modern to the rustic vibe.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Compass New England
A-frame cabin living room with large windows, wooden floors, a fur-covered sofa, two armchairs, a round coffee table, and a cowhide rug, overlooking a wooded outdoor area.
The open loft area overlooks the main living area, enhancing the copious natural sunlight and woodsy surroundings.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Compass New England
A cozy bedroom in an A-frame cabin features a large bed with neutral bedding, wooden beams, a gold side table, decorative pampas grass, and a black accent wall by the stairs.
The loft is versatile and can be used however you choose – as a home office, reading space, play area, bedroom, or something else!
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Compass New England
A cozy room with a wooden floor, white walls, a dark wood ceiling, a small sofa, a side table with a plant, a pouf, a cowhide rug, and a distressed sliding barn door.
The lower level has an entryway, two bedrooms, a bathroom, and a bonus room, so there’s space for everyone.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Compass New England

What do you think of this New Hampshire chalet? See more of our favorite New England real estate spotlights!

Editorial Note: Yankee editors like to mosey around and see, out of sheer curiosity, what turns up when you go house hunting online. We have no stake in the sale whatsoever and would decline it if offered.

Home Details

Price: $379,000 • 1,632 Square Feet:  • Acres: 1.35 • Beds: 3  • Baths: 2
(Brie Stephens, Compass Real Estate, 603-819-8071)

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10 Best Things to Do in Boston This Summer 2025 https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/10-best-things-to-do-in-boston-this-summer-2025/ https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/10-best-things-to-do-in-boston-this-summer-2025/#respond Thu, 24 Apr 2025 23:46:51 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2195813 Discover the 10 best things to do in Boston this summer—from Italian street festas and harbor tiki cruises to rooftop pools, scenic bike rides, and Shakespeare under the stars.

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Looking for the best things to do in Boston this summer? Whether you’re craving city-spanning adventures, sky-high relaxation, or flavors from around the globe, this curated list of 10 can’t-miss experiences has you covered. From feasting in the North End and catching Shakespeare under the stars to pedaling through the Emerald Necklace or sipping cocktails on a tiki boat, these are the most unforgettable ways to soak up summer in the Hub—whatever your perfect day looks like.

10 Best Things to Do in Boston This Summer

1. Join the Party in the North End – Celebrate Italian heritage at Boston’s lively summer street festas.

The colorful, flavorful, and semi-chaotic glory of the North End’s festas (or feast days) celebrates the southern Italian heritage of honoring beloved saints and martyrs with processions, music, food, and prayer. Streets fill with revelers, live music echoes off brick buildings, and the air is scented with savory sausage and peppers. Two of the largest are the Fisherman’s Feast, August 14–17, and Saint Anthony’s Feast, August 28–31, but all are worth checking out.

2. Dine by the Water in Eastie – Savor Italian fare with million-dollar skyline views.

The best-kept secret in waterfront dining is East Boston, where the million-dollar views of Boston’s skyline seem to outshine any other on the harbor. Water taxis board at Fan Pier or Long Wharf on the Boston side and disembark on the Eastie side just steps from Mida, chef Douglass Williams’s award-winning Italian restaurant, where the meatballs, gnocchi cacio e pepe, and clam pizza hold their own against the scenery.

3. Pedal the Parks – Explore Boston’s green gems by bike on a guided or DIY ride.

Don’t get so distracted by the harbor’s sapphire waters that you forget the city’s Emerald Necklace. Urban AdvenTours runs a four-hour guided bike tour through the beautiful string of parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. From the Esplanade to the Southwest Corridor Park and the Arnold Arboretum, you’ll cover more than 15 miles and several of the city’s most beloved urban oases. Or, strike out on your own with a rented e-bike from the network of Bluebikes parked all over Boston, and you’ll barely break a sweat.

4. Soak Up Free Culture – Enjoy outdoor concerts and Shakespeare under the stars.

The Boston Landmarks Orchestra hosts open-air concerts at the Hatch Shell throughout the summer. Grab snacks and a beer before the show at the Esplanade’s Night Shift Brewing beer garden. Alternatively, Free Shakespeare on the Common presents performances of As You Like It from mid-July through early August on Boston Common. Nab picnic supplies at the newly opened Flour Bakery at the nearby Concession Pavilion and savor a repast beneath the stars.

5. Catch a Tropical Wave – Sip tiki cocktails while cruising Boston Harbor.

Tiki Boat Boston operates a fleet of three pontoon boats, all decked out in full tiki bar fashion with palm roofs and tropical silk flowers arranged around a full bar complete with bartender and DJ. Parties of up to 24 can sip mai tais and palomas while cruising Boston Harbor and soaking up views of iconic landmarks on the 90-minute trip. Private and corporate reservations are available, too.

Five ice cream cones with different flavors and toppings are lined up against a blue background.
At Greater Boston’s top-shelf ice cream spots, it’s hard to stop at just one cone, let alone just one scoop. (Pictured, from left: Toscanini’s, New City Microcreamery, Crescent Ridge, FoMu, and Honeycomb Creamery.)
Photo Credit : Toan Trinh/styling by Monica Mariano

6. Get Your Licks In – Take a scoop-filled tour of Boston’s best ice cream spots.

Take inspiration from the Massachusetts Ice Cream Trail, which highlights 100-plus sweet spots across the state, to plot your own scoop-filled journey across Greater Boston. Emack and Bolio’s in Charlestown and the Back Bay, Gracie’s in Somerville, and Honeycomb Creamery in Cambridge are all worth a visit, along with locally owned mainstays like New City Microcreamery, Toscanini’s, and Christina’s in Cambridge; Boston Ice Cream Factory in Dorchester; Crescent Ridge at the Boston Public Market; and vegan specialist FoMu in the South End, Fenway, and Quincy Market.

Best Things to Do in Boston This Summer . Rooftop pool area with lounge chairs, umbrellas, and cabanas overlooking a cityscape at sunset.
The scenic rooftop pool at The Colonnade Hotel raises the question: Who needs a beach when you’ve got the city at your feet?
Photo Credit : Courtesy of The Colonnade Hotel, Boston

7. Take a Sky-High Dip – Lounge poolside above the city at the Colonnade Hotel.

The Colonnade Hotel boasts a lovely rooftop pool with views of the Back Bay and the South End, food and drink service, and cabanas to rent. It’s open to the public Monday through Thursday and on Sunday afternoons for a fee of $55, which seems fair for a full day of waterside luxury in the heart of the city.

8. Chow Down in Chinatown – Eat your way through a neighborhood rich in flavor and history.

Along with roughly 7,000 residents, Chinatown is home to legacy eateries and newcomers, plus bakeries, barbecue spots, and enough other treasures to fill a weekend itinerary. Boston Chinatown Tours, led by longtime resident Jacqueline Church, takes you to the best of the best, with delicious bites and deep insights along the way.

9. Go ‘Fourth’ and Conquer – Celebrate Independence Day the Boston way.

There’s more to Independence Day in Boston than the Pops and fireworks. Attend the annual reading of the Declaration of Independence from the balcony of the Old State House in the morning, then head to the Seaport to view the turnaround cruise of the USS Constitution. In the afternoon, head to Downtown Crossing for an ice cream social and the reading of Frederick Douglass’s electric 1852 speech “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?”

10. Roll with It – Enjoy the ultimate lobster roll with harbor views to match.

A great lobster roll eaten by the water is the ultimate expression of the form. ReelHouse Oyster Bar sits at the very end of Fan Pier, and its lobster roll, served cold with mayo or hot with butter, is excellent. The restaurant is upscale, with seafood towers and caviar service (along with Neapolitan-style pizzas for the seafood-averse). Looking for a seafood-shack vibe? James Hook & Co. has all the classics—hot and cold rolls, lobster pie, chowder—just a stone’s throw from the spot where Fort Point Channel meets the harbor.

See More: 2025 Boston Travel Guide | Hotels, Dining & Attractions

What tops your list of the best things to do in Boston this summer? Let us know!

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10 Best Things to Do in Connecticut This Summer 2025 https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/10-best-things-to-do-in-connecticut-this-summer-2025/ https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/10-best-things-to-do-in-connecticut-this-summer-2025/#respond Thu, 24 Apr 2025 21:00:54 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2195657 Discover the best things to do this summer in Connecticut—from splashy new resorts and scenic movie trails to drive-in nostalgia, beachfront bites, and buzzy restaurant debuts.

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Looking for the best things to do in Connecticut this summer? Whether you’re in the mood for cultural deep dives, coastal bites, or cool mountain escapes, this curated list of 10 can’t-miss experiences has you covered. From following a Christmas movie trail in July to catching drive-in double features, splashing around at a brand-new water park, or dining with skyline views in Hartford, these are the most memorable ways to explore the Nutmeg State—whatever your summer style.

10 Best Things to Do in Connecticut This Summer

1. Find Christmas in July – Follow Connecticut’s new holiday movie trail through real-life storybook towns.

More than 20 holiday movies have been filmed in Connecticut, and you don’t have to wait for actual flurries to fly (the directors don’t!) to open your heart to a bit of magic. Follow a stretch of the new Connecticut Christmas Movie Trail (ctvisit.com/articles/christmas-movies-in-connecticut), and you’ll encounter screen-worthy towns, cozy eateries, attractive inns like Wethersfield’s Silas W. Robbins House (silaswrobbins.com), and maybe that old flame you’ve never erased from your brain. You never know.

2. Delight in the Museum – Explore 200 years of history (and coffee!) at Hartford’s reimagined cultural hub.

The Connecticut Museum of Culture and History looks as much to the future as the past in its “Then, Now, Next: 200 Years and Counting” exhibition, opening May 22 in the midst of a yearlong bicentennial celebration for this Hartford institution. There’s a jolt of energy that’s fueling museum programming, expansion plans, and events that you’ll sense even before you wander through the multisensory exhibition “Coffee: A Connecticut Story,” also on view through early 2026.

3. Catch a Drive-In Double – Watch movies under the stars at the retro-cool Mansfield Drive-In.

The Mansfield Drive-In turned 70 last year, and with nightly double features on three outdoor screens, it’s as robust as ever. Affordable ticket prices make it easy to splurge on fresh-popped corn, fried dough, and slushies. Your quiet canine is welcome to join you for an under-the-stars night of entertainment. If you’d like to make a weekend of it, the dog-friendly Daniel Rust House is eight minutes away in Coventry.

4. Make a Splash at Great Wolf – Dive into Connecticut’s newest indoor water park in Mashantucket.

Rain or shine, it’s a water-play day at Great Wolf Lodge. This new indoor water-park resort in Mashantucket will welcome its first families on April 25, so get there while grand-opening deals are available and the hoopla is at a high. Kids will love the nonstop entertainment and log-lodge-style rooms, while their parents find the 21-and-up North Hot Springs inviting. Word is there’ll be a waterslide here unique in the Great Wolf universe.

Modern lounge with large windows, city views, beige seating, round tables, potted plants, and ceiling lights in daylight.
From 20 floors up, get a new perspective on Hartford’s dining scene—and the city itself—at The Foundry.
Photo Credit : Rebellion Group

5. Take It to the Top – Dine above the skyline at Jeff Lizotte’s hot new Hartford restaurant, The Foundry.

One of Connecticut’s premier chefs is back on top of the world, and you can be among the first to savor what Jeff Lizotte is cooking up in his window-walled space atop the Hartford Steam Boiler building. At The Foundry, expect an always-changing, seasonally inspired menu of dishes that exist only here at this moment in time. All signs indicate this will be summer’s toughest reservation to score, so plan accordingly.

A musical performance takes place on a stage in a large wooden hall, with an audience seated and watching under warm lighting.
Inside the dramatic Music Shed concert hall at the Norfolk Chamber Music Festival.
Photo Credit : Sonja Zinke Photography

6. Chill Out in Norfolk – Escape the heat with hikes, concerts, and cool mountain air.

Norfolk is known as the “icebox of Connecticut,” and naturally cooler temperatures make this an ideal escape for hiking at Dennis Hill State Park and Haystack Mountain State Park, as well as for spreading out a blanket on the green for free Friday-night concerts. Stay at the comfortably regal Manor House Inn and you might bump into acclaimed musicians who are here to play in Yale School of Music’s enduring Norfolk Chamber Music Festival.

7. Eat to the Beat in Madison – Pair beachfront dining with free Thursday-night concerts.

Toes in the sand, drink in hand—be sure to allow time for a private-beach stroll before your reservation at The Wharf Restaurant at Madison Beach Hotel. Who knew some of the highest-caliber free summer concerts are in Madison on Thursday nights? You do now, so reserve a table on the porch and listen in as you devour grilled swordfish or a hot lobster roll. Lighter bites are available for purchase on the lawn on show nights if you’d rather bring your own chairs. Our Weekends with Yankee crew met up at The Wharf with Connecticut-based vegan chef Chrissy Tracey for Season 9 (check your local PBS listings).

8. Shuck and Sip Along the Trail – Slurp your way through the new Connecticut Oyster Trail.

Thanks to the 2024 debut of the Connecticut Oyster Trail, you now have a handy map to the Nutmeg State’s bevy of bivalve farms and the restaurants that serve their salty-sweet harvest. Only have time for one stop? Make it Fair Haven Oyster Co., overlooking the lovely Quinnipiac River, where you can trust that chef Emily Mingrone is serving the best raw-bar selections, along with clever cocktails and savory plates including what Gwyneth Paltrow has hailed as “one of the best cheeseburgers of my life.”

9. Get Cooking Again – Learn from the pros at the revived Silo Cooking School in New Milford.

Dormant for years since the days when it attracted celebrity-chef teachers like Martha Stewart and Jacques Pépin, The Silo Cooking School in New Milford is making a comeback. Register for a public class or book a private session for your group, and experience the inspiring environs of Hunt Hill Farm as it aims to become Connecticut’s culinary epicenter once again.

A basketball player in a white jersey prepares to shoot while being defended by an opponent in a black jersey during a game.
Former UConn standout Olivia Nelson-Ododa helps the Connecticut Sun bring the heat.
Photo Credit : Courtesy of the Connecticut Sun

10. See the Sun Rise – Catch WNBA action as the Connecticut Sun light up Mohegan Sun Arena.

Just when you’re missing March Madness, the Connecticut Sun season is heating up at Mohegan Sun in Uncasville. From mid-May through mid-September, every WNBA star will make an appearance in this arena, but do consider cheering for the home team—the only pro-level squad in Connecticut.

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10 Best Things to Do in Rhode Island This Summer 2025 https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/10-best-things-to-do-in-rhode-island-this-summer-2025/ https://newengland.com/travel/new-england/10-best-things-to-do-in-rhode-island-this-summer-2025/#respond Thu, 24 Apr 2025 20:36:05 +0000 https://newengland.com/?p=2195656 Discover the 10 best things to do in Rhode Island this summer—from seaside sips and polo matches to buzzing food halls and beachside strolls.

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Whether you’re craving coastal views, culture, or culinary surprises, Rhode Island delivers in a big way this summer. From sipping bubbly at Castle Hill Inn to watching world-class polo matches in Newport and diving into the food scene at Providence’s new Track 15, these can’t-miss experiences prove that the Ocean State is small but seriously mighty. Explore our top picks for the best things to do in Rhode Island this summer—including beach strolls, pinball palaces, and a sunset toast or two.

10 Best Things to Do in Rhode Island This Summer

1. Drink in a Sunset at Castle Hill Inn – Raise a glass to golden hour from Newport’s most iconic lawn.

If there’s a more glorious slope of lawn in New England than the one at Newport’s Castle Hill Inn, it’s probably not open to everyone—but Castle Hill’s is. Claim an Adirondack chair (first come, first served), and order bubbly or a glass of crisp white wine. You have everything you need to chef’s kiss the sun goodnight.

Best Things to Do in Rhode Island This Summer. Intricate sand sculpture of an owl with ornate wings, perched in front of a large moon and surrounded by cone-shaped sand formations.
A beachy masterpiece at South County’s Atlantis Rising International Sand Sculpture Competition.
Photo Credit : Tandem for South County Tourism Council

2. Have a Sand Blast in Charlestown – Atlantis Rising returns with epic art—and a new summer vibe.

South County’s fun-for-all Atlantis Rising International Sand Sculpture Competition returns after a one-year hiatus, and it’s relocating to a new venue and moving up from October to May. Yay! Head to Ninigret Park in Charlestown May 30–June 1 to marvel at massive, intricately carved sand creations. Live music, food, photo ops, and locally made goods add to the festive energy—and keep an eye out for the two ginormous troll sculptures tucked into the 227-acre park last year by Danish recycling artist Thomas Dambo.

3. Eat Your Way Through Track 15 in Providence – Union Station’s next act? A sizzling new food hall.

Providence’s new Track 15 food hall transforms historic Union Station into an exciting dining hub with indoor-outdoor seating for you and about 400 friends you haven’t met yet. Savor diverse fare from seven all-star vendors: Dolores (Mexican); Dune Brothers (seafood); Giusto PVD (Italian); Little Chaska (Indian); Mother Pizzeria (pizza); There, There (burgers); and Tolia (Turkish).

4. Get in the Game at the Tennis Hall of Fame – Newport’s hallowed tennis grounds debut a bold new look.

Newport has deep tennis roots, and that’s just one aspect of the game that will be getting extra love when the International Tennis Hall of Fame reopens in May following a multimillion-dollar transformation. Be among the first fans to engage with an augmented-reality sculpture in the Celebration Gallery, which toasts the sport across generations. The new Hall of Famers’ Gallery features a cast racquet representing each legendary inductee. Even the Roger Federer hologram is serving up some new surprises.

Best Things to Do in Rhode Island This Summer. A pepperoni pizza in an open box, a slice on a plate, arancini balls in a takeout container, drinks, and a cup of gelato on a light textured surface.
The Roni Island pizza plus baked clams, gourmet frozen custard, and house-made cocktails, all from Providence’s Pizza Marvin.
Photo Credit : Angel Tucker

5. Obsess Over Every Bite at Pizza Marvin – One of New England’s best pizzas is right here in Providence.

Chef Robert Andreozzi of Providence’s Pizza Marvin made a Caprese with bluefin tuna, tomato gelée, stracciatella, and pepperoni vinaigrette for the annual A Taste of New England event that was unreal. A year later, I still think about it—obsessively. No surprise: This year Andreozzi has been named a James Beard Foundation semifinalist for Best Chef–Northeast for the second time. If you’re a pizza-loving foodie, you know what you must do.

6. Wing It to Blithewold’s Bamboo Bird Exhibit – Bristol’s giant sculptures fly away soon—don’t miss your shot.

Big Beautiful Bamboo Birds … you don’t have to be able to say it 10 times fast to appreciate how remarkable these six towering bird sculptures by artists The Myth Makers are. They landed last summer at Blithewold in Bristol, and they’re flying away after August 11 this year, so wing your way to this multifaceted waterfront estate, where the largest giant sequoia on the East Coast will also make you look remarkably small in photos.

Two people sit on a picnic blanket with food and drinks, watching a polo match on a grassy field under a clear blue sky.
Sipping and snacking in style at a Newport Polo match.
Photo Credit : Corey Favino/Discover Newport

7. Step Right Up for Newport Polo – International matches, dapper tailgates, and divot stomping await.

“Stomping divots” isn’t the name of a punk band—it’s an amusing thing you’ll get to do when you attend a Newport Polo match. You’re encouraged to bring your own picnic food and wine, and at $25 for lawn seats (children 15 and under are admitted free), you can’t beat the value for the upscale vibes. Each match has a theme: It’s an excuse to dress your summer-chic best to cheer on the ponies and players. Yet for all the frivolity, the June–September schedule features serious international competition. USA’s rematch with Scotland on June 21 is bound to be a highlight of this biggest-ever season. Expect bagpipes.

8. Play All Day at Electromagnetic Pinball Museum – $10 unlocks unlimited retro fun in Pawtucket.

Unlimited pinball, Skee-Ball, and arcade games … no quarters, no tokens. That’s what $10 buys at Pawtucket’s Electromagnetic Pinball Museum and Restoration, where you can play your way through time and space as you wander a collection of 100-plus games that date from the ’40s to today. Curious about their history? Or how they work? The team here will indulge your desire to geek out. If your eyes are glued to the flippers of a rare game, though, they get that, too.

9. Twirl Your Fork at Ida’s in Middletown – 5,000 pounds of fresh pasta can’t be wrong.

Federal Hill in Providence is known for its Italian eateries, but over in Middletown, the Puerini family quietly made and served more than 5,000 pounds of fresh pasta last year at their unassuming little Ida’s Restaurant. That’s the weight of a smallish adult elephant! If you’re in the Newport area, try this local favorite for espresso martinis, mac and cheese with homemade cavatelli, and lasagna stacked so high it leans like that tower in Pisa.

10. Reach the Beach in Little Compton – Stone House Inn leads you to the edge of the Ocean State.

With 16 cool suites, Stone House Inn in Little Compton feels like such a secret hideaway. Especially when you wander across the back lawn, turn left, and follow the road and the siren call of waves crashing against rock outcroppings. In minutes, you’ll be at Rhode Island’s very edge, sharing the brown-sugar sands of Tappens Beach with precious few souls.

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