Please be aware that
Daylight Saving Time (DST) changes in Vermont do not necessarily occur on the same date every year.
In Vermont, DST starts on the 2nd Sunday in March and ends on the 1st Sunday in November.
Facts About Vermont
Information for Travelers
Vermont is a state in the northeastern United States known for its natural landscape, which is mostly wooded.
Part of the New England region, it is also known for being home to over 100 19th century wooden covered bridges and as a major producer of maple syrup.
Thousands of hectares of mountainous terrain are crossed by hiking trails and ski slopes.
Vermont is represented by bustling Burlington, Manchester's shopping malls, Killington's frantic after-ski scene and Brattleboro's unlikely mix of gritty factory workers and grown-up '70s hippies.
Even the state's agricultural mainstay takes on a new look, as dozens of artisan cheese makers transform Vermont's dairy industry and tourists eagerly follow the Vermont Cheese Trail to sample them.
Culture
Vermont is equal parts myth and reality, home to a mystique other states can only envy.
A mere mention of his name and images appear: sunlit meadows of cows in black and white, ski trails in dazzling white, farms arranged on the slopes, red maples blazing along a stone wall, covered bridges, buckets that collect sap for maple syrup.
Read about Vermont in Wikipedia