Donate
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Join Our Mailing List
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

Hilltown Land Trust

Dedicated to protecting the working lands, native habitats and rural beauty of the Hilltowns since 1986

  • About
    • Board & Committees
    • Staff and TerraCorps members
    • Affiliation with The Trustees
    • Announcements
    • Newsletters
    • Contact
    • Open Positions
  • Land Protection
    • Conservation Restrictions
    • Agricultural Preservation Restrictions
    • Financial Incentives
    • Donating or Selling Land
    • Estate Planning
    • Landowner & Town Resources
  • Properties
    • Trails & Maps
      • Big View Trail
      • Bradley
      • Breckenridge
      • Clary Hill
      • Conwell
      • Hilltown Boulders
      • Historic Dam Trail
      • Locke’s Loop Trail
      • Robert’s Meadow Brook Trail
      • Round Top Hill
      • Stevens
      • Two Mamas Farm Waterfall Trail
    • Land Stewardship
    • Conservation Stories
  • Get Involved
    • Events
    • Volunteer
    • Donate
    • Support
    • Legacy Giving
    • Gorge après Gorge
    • Vernal Pool Conservation
You are here: Home / Protected Lands post archive / Hiking Trails and Maps / Hilltown Boulders

Hilltown Boulders

Margaret Waggoner, seen from behind, walks along a path in the woods using a walking stick. She is dressed in jeans and a red top with a red vest. Next to her is a long rock wall, and she is surrounded by autumn leaves on the trees.

Conservation restriction donor Margaret Waggoner in her woods.

At the Hilltown Boulders, you’ll find yourself feeling small next to all the glacial erratics dotting the woods. As you walk along the gently sloping trail, you’ll also pass built stone features, a field of quartz, huge branching wolf pines, and the outskirts of the 100-acre Sears Meadow wetland.

A lush verdant wetland, seen from a bird's-eye drone view.

A resilient landscape

Conserved forests and wetlands at the Hilltown Boulders buffer against climate change by:

  • Safeguarding water quality
  • Providing plant and wildlife habitat
  • Storing carbon

Sears Meadow, which is partially conserved by Hilltown Land Trust at the Boulders. Photo by Bob Labrie.

Trails

The trail system is made up of two three-quarter mile loops off Sears Road: the Sentry Loop to the north and the Saxifrage Loop to the south, with a short connector trail between. One trail spur off the Sentry Loop leads to RT 112 (no parking), where the DAR State Forest can be accessed via an unofficial trail to the north. Another spur off the Saxifrage Loop leads to the Split Rock. All 1.8 miles of maintained trails are marked with Ashfield Trails medallions. 

The trails are on private property protected by a conservation restriction held by Hilltown Land Trust. Hilltown Land Trust has collaborated with Ashfield Trails on the management of these trails.  

Note that there are no restrooms or other facilities at this location. 

Property Guidelines

The trails are open to the public following property guidelines: 

  • Dogs must be kept on a leash when others are near. Owners must remove pet waste from the property.
  • Hunting is permitted subject to all state and town laws.
  • No camping or fires.
  • No motorized vehicles.
  • Please respect the privacy of residents and neighbors and remain on maintained trails.
  • Park only in designated spots and not along the road.

Public access is open from dawn until dusk.

A warmly dressed man poses with his arms flung open, gazing up at a giant snow-ringed boulder.

Trail Map

Trail map of the Hilltown Boulders. Click for a larger version.

Boulders Trail Map

Parking & Directions 

The parking area and trailhead are on the southeast side of Sears Rd in Ashfield. Two cars can fit in the parking area. Do not park along the road.

Traveling Northbound on RT 112

Take a left on Sears Rd, approximately 2.5 miles north of RT 9 in Goshen. Travel down Sears Rd for 0.4 mile. At a sharp bend to the right, you will see the trailhead and a small parking area on the left. Do not park along the road. Additional parking is in a plowed area 1/3 mile south of the trail entrance (away from RT 112) at the Ashfield-Goshen town line. 

Traveling Eastbound on RT 9

Take a left on Sears Rd, 4.5 miles from Main St in Cummington. Travel up Sears Rd for 1.8 miles and look for the trailhead and a small parking area on the right. Do not park along the road. Additional parking is in a plowed area 1/3 mile south of the trail entrance (away from RT 112) at the Ashfield-Goshen town line.

Attention!

Out of courtesy for neighbors and plows, do not park along the road near the trail entrance without permission. Additional parking is available 1/3 of a mile south of the trail entrance (away from RT 112) at the Ashfield-Goshen town line in a plowed parking area off Sears Rd. 

Silhouettes of the HLT logo bear and cub.

Events Calendar

Today
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
26
27
28
4:30 PM - Forest Carbon and Land Management
29
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
12:00 PM - Native Bees Webinar - Diversity, Decline, and Conservation
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
12:00 PM - Solar Development Webinar
28
29
2:30 PM - Black Bear Research Webinar
30
31
1
2
3
4
5
6
Forest Carbon and Land Management
Forest Carbon and Land Management
Apr 28th, 2020    
4:30 pm - 5:30 pm
What role does carbon play in the forest? And what impact do forest conservation and management have on carbon storage within a forested landscape? Learn [...]
More Info
Native Bees Webinar - Diversity, Decline, and Conservation
Native Bees Webinar - Diversity, Decline, and Conservation
May 7th, 2020    
12:00 pm - 1:15 pm
  • Webinar
Fourteen native bee species are in decline in the northeast, but why is this happening and what can we do to keep these important pollinators [...]
More Info
Solar Development Webinar
Solar Development Webinar
May 27th, 2020    
12:00 pm - 1:15 pm
  • Webinar
Solar Development in MA: State Incentives and Municipal Planning This webinar will provide a brief overview of solar development in Massachusetts to date, explain the [...]
More Info
Black Bear Research Webinar
Black Bear Research Webinar
May 29th, 2020    
2:30 pm - 3:30 pm
  • Webinar
Interested in learning more about black bear behavior in Massachusetts? Join us for a webinar with Kathy Zeller, a post-doctoral researcher in the Mass Cooperative Fish [...]
More Info
Events on Apr 28th, 2020
Forest Carbon and Land Management
Forest Carbon and Land Management
28 Apr 20
Events on May 7th, 2020
Native Bees Webinar - Diversity, Decline, and Conservation
Native Bees Webinar - Diversity, Decline, and Conservation
7 May 20
Events on May 27th, 2020
Solar Development Webinar
Solar Development Webinar
27 May 20
Events on May 29th, 2020
Black Bear Research Webinar
Black Bear Research Webinar
29 May 20
  • About
    • Board & Committees
    • Staff and TerraCorps members
    • Affiliation with The Trustees
    • Announcements
    • Newsletters
    • Contact
    • Open Positions
  • Land Protection
    • Conservation Restrictions
    • Agricultural Preservation Restrictions
    • Financial Incentives
    • Donating or Selling Land
    • Estate Planning
    • Landowner & Town Resources
  • Properties
    • Trails & Maps
      • Big View Trail
      • Bradley
      • Breckenridge
      • Clary Hill
      • Conwell
      • Hilltown Boulders
      • Historic Dam Trail
      • Locke’s Loop Trail
      • Robert’s Meadow Brook Trail
      • Round Top Hill
      • Stevens
      • Two Mamas Farm Waterfall Trail
    • Land Stewardship
    • Conservation Stories
  • Get Involved
    • Events
    • Volunteer
    • Donate
    • Support
    • Legacy Giving
    • Gorge après Gorge
    • Vernal Pool Conservation

Learn

  • Announcements
  • Staff and TerraCorps members
  • Contact

Participate

  • Events
  • Volunteer
  • Donate
  • Subscribe

Hike

  • Bradley
  • Breckenridge
  • Stevens
Land Trust Accreditation seal
Contact Us
admin: Log in
© 2026 Hilltown Land Trust | Hilltown Land is a 501c3 nonprofit organization | Est. 1986