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White Mountain National Forest

White Mountain National Forest

White Mountain National Forest is a real national forest in New Hampshire that works as a practical scouting base for the New England. Mountain Hardwoods, Spruce Ridges, And Old Camps. Use it for trips planned around maple-beech forests, birch groves, and coastal spruce woods, slate roadcuts, glacial beaches, and fossil shell banks, and the site-specific access patterns that shape successful field days.

Activities

  • Mushroom foraging
  • Metal detecting where local rules allow
  • Trailside fossil scouting
  • Backcountry navigation

What You Can Find

  • Seasonal edible mushrooms
  • Common invertebrate fossils in float
  • Historic camp relics
  • Old road and homestead traces

Route stack

Step back from White Mountain National Forest into timing, law, metro, and trail context.

Specific ground is only useful when it still connects cleanly to the state, month, and access layers that shape the actual day plan.

Law layer

New Hampshire state guide

Start with the managing agency for the exact tract you plan to visit, then confirm whether the area is a state park, state forest, national forest, wildlife area, or local shoreline. Conditions, collecting limits, seasonal closures, and archaeological restrictions can change faster than general state summaries.

Open the law layer →

Metro layer

City hubs in New Hampshire

No city hubs are published for this state yet.

Regulations

Collection rules on US Forest Service land in New Hampshire vary by district. Personal-use mushroom gathering is often allowed, while metal detecting and fossil collecting remain subject to site-specific rules, archaeological protections, and seasonal closures.

Access

Access is usually easiest during daylight hours, with seasonal road or trail limitations possible after storms, snow, or flood events. National Forest visits work best when you confirm parking, entrance fees, and current closures before heading out. Mountain hardwoods, spruce ridges, and old camps.

TroveRadar app

Save this route for offline field use.

Keep the route, notes, and access context connected to your offline field workflow.

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Take TroveRadar into the field

Carry the plan, the species notes, and the access checks outside.

Use the mobile app for offline reference, private find logging, route memory, and the working notes that matter after the browser window closes.

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