Butler Lodge Trailhead

Hiking area · Chittenden County

Butler Lodge Trailhead

Hiking area · Chittenden County

1

Stevensville Rd, Underhill, VT 05489

Photos

Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by dylanvt (Atlas Obscura User)
Butler Lodge Trailhead by Walter Bender (CC BY 3.0)
Butler Lodge Trailhead by Famartin (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Butler Lodge Trailhead by dylanvt (Atlas Obscura User)
Butler Lodge Trailhead by dylanvt (Atlas Obscura User)
Butler Lodge Trailhead by dylanvt (Atlas Obscura User)
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null
Butler Lodge Trailhead by null

Highlights

Located just outside Mansfield, this clean, inviting lodge offers a rewarding hike with stunning views and delightful watering holes to explore.  

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Stevensville Rd, Underhill, VT 05489 Get directions

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Information

Static Map

Stevensville Rd, Underhill, VT 05489 Get directions

google.com

Features

wheelchair accessible entrance

Last updated

Mar 5, 2025

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9 Places in Vermont to Go Before You Die—or After

"Wampahoofus Trail starts from Butler Lodge around 3,000 feet up the side of Mount Mansfield, Vermont’s highest peak, and continues until it meets the legendary Long Trail atop Mansfield’s generally comparatively unpeopled Forehead area. To get to Wampahoofus, you’ll first have to hike up the 1.8 mile Butler Lodge Trail. You can stay overnight in the lodge or continue directly to Wampahoofus. The trail was named for a mythical creature of Vermont’s Green Mountains that predates even the yeti and Bigfoot in the Western consciousness. Also known as a gyascutus or a sidehill gouger, the wampahoofus was known for its uneven legs (a pair on one side was always longer than the other) that allowed it to move in only one direction around the mountain. If a clockwise wampahoofus met a counterclockwise peer on a ridge, they would fight to the death so one could pass. They could mate only when their circular routes intersected. Eventually, their shorter legs became so short that they couldn’t move or mate, and they soon died out. The trail was purportedly named by a Professor Ray Buchanan, who noted a rock formation that looked like the profile of the wampahoofus. A short way along the trail you can take a detour down the short but aptly named Rock Garden Trail, which connects to Maple Ridge Trail. Otherwise, if you stay on Wampahoofus, you’ll soon find yourself clambering up some rugged, rocky faces to the top of the Forehead with spectacular views of the Champlain Valley behind you. The top has 360-degree views and room to picnic, and is one of the few places east of the Mississippi that can support rare alpine tundra, with stunted trees and plenty of delicate flora underfoot. From here, the Long Trail continues north to the Chin (the actual summit) or south toward Camels Hump, Mount Ellen, and Mount Abraham, thus connecting four of Vermont’s five tallest peaks. Take care not to get lost, lest you end up like a wampahoofus yourself, stuck in a perpetual circle on the slopes of Mount Mansfield." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/9-places-in-vermont-to-go-before-you-die-or-after
View Postcard for Butler Lodge trailhead

Christina Young

Google
Great hike. Kids loved it. Dry when we were there. No bugs. We started hiking at 8:30am before it got too hot. Lodge is clean and adorable. Definitely will be doing this hike again.

Laura Maroon

Google
Recommend this trailhead and trail Not as busy as others to head up to Mansfield Trail is well maintained and you can do the challenging forehead

Andrew Corvin

Google
Good hike with a great view at the top, but not an easy hike.

Stefanie Smentek

Google
Moderate trail up but no scrambling or anything difficult

Andrew Howrigan

Google
A great hike that is not too long but still challenging enough. Progressively steeper as you get up to the lodge, which is clean and welcoming. Views are good enough, you can see back to the lake, but not 360° like some of the slightly more challenging hikes around that you could also do.

Doug Morin

Google
Easy to access and well-maintained road drive slow lots of people walk up there definitely a great place to go fishing

Liisa Reimann

Google
Misread a trail marker and ended up doing double what we had intended. Challenging for 50+ knees, but a good calorie burner for sure! Going DOWN the Butler Lodge trail was especially rough on the joints, but I think going up might have killed us, LOL. The streams are lovely and the watering holes at the parking site divine.

Brett Danis

Google
Always a fun hike