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Ice Mountain Preserve

 

Canada mayflower
 

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What's New

Learn why scientists are concerned that a warming climate could break the natural air conditioning system at Ice Mountain.

Go Deeper

See what else the Conservancy is doing in the Central Appalachians, one of the world’s most diverse natural areas. 

Volunteer at Ice Mountain

Help us with our stewardship efforts! Contact the West Virginia office at (304) 637-0160.

Schedule a Visit

To schedule a tour, please call (304) 496-7359, or visit our trained volunteers’ web site.  Once your tour is confirmed, you can meet your guide by using the following directions:

From Winchester, VA

- Take 50 West to Capon Bridge, WV
- In Capon Bridge, cross the bridge then turn right on Cold Stream Rd/Springfield Grade (by the white Methodist Church).
- Proceed 8 miles to North River Mills.
- You will see the white North River Mills Methodist church on your right, then pass a house and barn on your right.
- The Old Inn is the next long white house on the right.

From Romney, WV
 
- Take Rt. 50 East, and proceed 9.5 mi.
- Turn left on Rt. 29 North.
- Proceed 6.9 mi. to Slanesville, WV
- Turn right on Cold Stream Road (Springfield Grade, across from the Slanesville General Store).
- Proceed 4 miles to North River Mills
- Cross a single lane bridge and watch for Johanson's block house on the left.
- The Old Inn is the second house on the left about a mile beyond the bridge.

Don't forget to take the Ice Mountain factsheet with you on your visit!

Ice Mountain Preserve

For generations of North River Mills residents, summertime meant weekend pilgrimages to Ice Mountain. There, at the rocky base, they’d chip off chunks of ice to cart home as the critical ingredient in fresh, homemade ice cream and chilled lemonade.

Ice Mountain gets its name from the refrigeration effect that takes place inside its talus — a sloping mass of boulders at the foot of a mountain. In cooler months, dense, cold air sinks deep into the talus, and ice masses form inside. As the weather warms up, the cooler air flows out of vents among the rocks at the bottom of the slope. It’s here, at the foot of the mountain, that many local children would eagerly gather ice.

While it’s no longer necessary for people to collect the ice that forms there, the mountain’s base still sees its share of visitors who come to see the site’s rare plant community, native forest and the North River. 

What You'll See

Ice Mountain Preserve, located in Hampshire County, protects a collection of boreal plants usually found much further north. Sustained by the cool air flowing from some 60 small holes and openings at the base of the talus, species such as twinflower, dwarf dogwood, Canada mayflower, and bristly rose all can be found here. 

The 149-acre preserve also provides habitat for breeding neotropical birds such as warblers, vireos and thrushes, as well as a collection of birds and animals that are typical of the Central Appalachians. Lucky visitors may spot a raven nesting on the outcrops of "Ravens Rocks," catch a glimpse of an otter or mink fishing the North River, or hear a coyote howling at dusk. 

Two trails traverse the preserve, taking visitors through the forest to either the rare plant area or the sandstone cliffs.   The preserve is open for guided visitation most of the year, and visitors are asked to reserve a trip three weeks to a month in advance. Trips are usually held on Saturdays. To minimize impact, groups are limited to 15 participants. To schedule a tour, please call (304) 496-7359 or visit our trained volunteers’ web site

Current Conservation Work

The Nature Conservancy has been working to combat threats to Ice Mountain Preserve through research and restoration efforts. These include:

  • Working with volunteers to control invasive non-native plants, such as tree-of-heaven, garlic mustard and Japanese stillgrass, which compete with the preserve’s native and rare plants.
     
  • Partnering with the US Forest Service and West Virginia Department of Agriculture to prevent the death of hemlocks (which shade and cool the ice vents) from an infestation of a non-native insect pest – the hemlock woody adelgid. 
     
  • Cooperating with West Virginia University geologists on research about the formation and conservation of the ice vents system. 
     
  • Monitoring natural forest regeneration in tornado damaged areas to inform forest restoration efforts.

Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © Kent Mason (Ice Mountain); Photo © Kent Mason (Canada mayflower).