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Town of Mendon seal
Trails of Mendon
Hybrid map along the Inman Hill Ridge Link connector

Inman Hill Ridge Link

Short connector between the eastern ridge path network and the Inman Hill Road parking sector—ideal when you are stitching together a longer day from the many miles of mapped routes on Trail 179. Use it as a return leg after Quissett East Trail or to reach the Beaver Pond Loop kiosk area without backtracking the whole ridge.

0.3 mi 75 ft

Elevation profile

00.1 mi0.3 mi
+156 ft gain0 ft loss294450 ft

What you might spot

Barred owl perched on a branch
Wildlife

Barred Owl

Strix varia

Large brown-and-white owl with dark eyes; classic “Who cooks for you?” call at dawn and dusk. Often perches low along wooded streams.

Year-round resident; most vocal late winter through early spring

📍 Quissett Wildlife Management Area — wooded wetlands along the East Trail, Round Meadow, and Old Quissett corridors.

Male wood duck showing iridescent green head pattern
Wildlife

Wood Duck

Aix sponsa

Male: iridescent green head with bold white face stripes. Female: gray-brown with teardrop eye-ring. Listen for squealing flight calls at dusk.

Spring migration and nesting; broods on Mendon ponds May–July

📍 Inman Pond and associated beaver impoundments in the Meadow Brook Woods complex.

Cinnamon fern with cinnamon-colored fertile frond among green sterile fronds
Plant

Cinnamon Fern

Osmundastrum cinnamomeum

Large vase-shaped clumps; fertile fronds emerge first, turning cinnamon-brown and spore-bearing by early summer. Sterile fronds stay green with a tuft of cinnamon-colored wool at each pinna base — the reliable field mark.

Fronds emerge April; fertile fronds visible May–June; green through October

📍 Meadow Brook Woods — dense clumps line the boardwalk sections and beaver-impounded swamp edges; one of the most visible plants on the Inman Pond loop.

Highbush blueberry shrub with clusters of blue-black fruit
Plant

Highbush Blueberry

Vaccinium corymbosum

Multi-stemmed shrub to 10 feet; white bell-shaped flowers in May, blue-black fruit July–August, brilliant scarlet fall foliage. The species behind commercial blueberries, but wild fruit is smaller and tangier.

Flowers May; fruit July–August; fall color September–October

📍 Quissett WMA — dense shrub thickets along the East Trail and impoundment edges; fruit ripens in late July when MassWildlife allows incidental foraging.

White swamp azalea flowers at wetland edge
Plant

Swamp Azalea

Rhododendron viscosum

Deciduous shrub with clusters of white (sometimes pale pink), tubular, intensely fragrant flowers; sticky-hairy tubes are the key field mark separating it from other native azaleas. Blooms after leaves are out — mid-summer, later than Mountain Laurel.

Blooms late June through July along Mendon wetlands

📍 Quissett WMA — lines the shrub-swamp margins of the East Trail corridor; the fragrance carries on warm mornings in July.

Skunk cabbage spathe emerging from mud in early spring
Plant

Skunk Cabbage

Symplocarpus foetidus

Mottled purple-green spathe (hood) emerges directly from mud in late winter — often pushing up through ice. Giant cabbage-like leaves follow in April. Generates heat (thermogenesis) to melt surrounding snow. Unmistakable skunky odor when crushed.

Spathe February–March (earliest wildflower in Mendon); leaves April–July

📍 Meadow Brook Woods — seep hollows and stream-margin flats along the lower Inman Pond corridor; look for spathes rising from standing water in late February.

Beaver swimming with distinctive paddle tail visible
Wildlife

North American Beaver

Castor canadensis

North America's largest rodent; paddle-shaped tail and large orange incisors. Active at dawn and dusk — look for the V-shaped wake as it swims. Evidence is often easier to find than the animal: gnawed stumps, mud-and-stick lodges, and bark-stripped sticks in water.

Year-round; most visible at dawn and dusk spring through fall

📍 Quissett WMA — beaver activity is responsible for the impoundments along the East Trail and Beaver Pond Loop; active lodges and fresh gnaw-cuts are visible from the trail.

Spotted salamander showing yellow spots on dark body
Wildlife

Spotted Salamander

Ambystoma maculatum

Stout, dark (charcoal to black) body with two rows of bright yellow spots from head to tail. Adults reach 7–9 inches. Lives underground most of the year — emerges explosively on the first warm (above 45°F) rainy nights of late March to reach vernal pools.

Annual spring migration late March; egg masses in pools April–May; adults rarely seen other times

📍 Meadow Brook Woods — the kettle topography and certified vernal pools along the Inman Pond corridor are prime spotted salamander breeding habitat; egg masses visible in pools in April.

History in this area

Blackstone Heritage Corridor Era

1986
Modern

Mendon's inclusion in the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor connected local conservation to a wider regional preservation strategy.

LAND, CPA, and the trail network you walk

Modern

How state and local programs helped stitch together the interconnected preserves the Town lists today.

Permitted uses

HikingMountain BikingHuntingFishingNordic SkiingDogs (leash)

Same WMA rules as other Quissett / Inman Hill routes: hunting in season (no Sundays), blaze orange, no ORVs, fishing with MA license. Confirm on-site postings.

Surfaces

Dirt
Accessibility
Mobility-aid friendlyStroller friendlySensory friendly

Max grade

9%

Firm surface

45%

Short but can be rooty; connects to busier parking sector — watch for vehicles at road approaches.

History

This segment sits on the same Inman Hill / Quissett land-management story as the Beaver Pond Loop and Quissett East Trail: MassWildlife-managed WMA lands mixed with Inman Hill conservation parcels, public hiking access promoted through the Town's Taft Library facilities pages, and Trail 179 for official cartography.

The ridge link follows a mapped foot path (OpenStreetMap) that trends westward toward the higher-traffic Inman Hill Road trailhead zone. Expect mixed woodland tread and occasional wet spots after snowmelt.

Trailheads & parking

East path junction

No dedicated parking

Meet Quissett East Trail and other east-side paths; use GPS or Trail 179 to confirm.

Inman Hill Rd sector

Parking available

Near 98 Inman Hill Rd kiosk parking — same general access as Beaver Pond Loop.

Trail maps (PDF)

Official resources

More trails in this preserve