Vision Quest, Somerset Lake, Vermont
August 14, 2025 - August 24, 2025
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Vision Quest Somerset Lake, VT
$1,595.00
Discover Your Purpose, Passion, and Path… your Nature in Nature …
The fertile Earth reveals herself in lush woodlands, streams, and lakes. Moose wander a forest thick with ferns and moss-covered boulders. Beaver ponds and the lake’s glassy water reflect mountains and sky. Life abounds – almost erupts – as geese honk, ducks quack, and loons call across the distance. Beaver and otter patrol the shoreline as eagle and osprey dive for fish. Hiking assessment: Moderate – about 2-1/2 miles, rolling to mostly flat.
For a more-detailed description, see What is a Vision Quest?
FAQs
Everyone has fear when approaching a vision fast, even those of us who have gone out twenty times or more.
Remember that you do not do it all at once. From our living room it seems an enormous leap, but it is in fact many smaller steps, each one do-able. We write a letter of intent, arrange our schedule, make travel plans, pack. We arrive in a new place, meet our guide and companions, and tell our stories. In a small group we share our fears, address physical and safety needs, learn about ceremony and what to expect, practice sleeping out under the stars. By the time we walk alone out of base camp, we have already left behind most of the fears and questions that seem so imposing to us now.
That question is between you and your physician. There are some medications that it may make sense to lower the dosage or do without during the fasting phase. For some conditions that is out of the question, and many of these medicines should not be taken on an empty stomach.
Many people who have to take medication have undergone vision quests, bringing with them small amounts of crackers, juice, or other supplements to allow them to continue a healing regimen.
Medicine is about becoming whole: physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Taking care of you physical health is important. It is not ‘cheating.’ A vision quest contains many kinds of ‘medicine,’ for healing the heart, soul, and spirit. Remember that you will be alone, in wilderness without books, conversation, electric lights, hot showers, and entertainment. You will be ‘fasting’ in many other ways.
In thinking about a vision quest, you might consider it as an interaction between ‘set’ and ‘setting.’ ‘Set’ encompasses what you bring to the experience – emotions, expectations, motivations, intentions, etc. – while setting is what appears to be outside – landscape, climate and weather, animals, etc.
Your set, whether positive or challenging (desires and demons, purposes and fears) will likely be the same regardless of where you undertake a vision quest, while the settings can vary widely in different locations and different times of the year.
Particular settings do have unique qualities and differing energies. Death Valley is a land of grand vistas and immense space, is dominated by the elements of air and fire, while, Vermont, and with its wildlife, streams, and lakes embodies the elements of earth and water. (A more detailed description of sites is provided on the website www.questforvision.com)
Some people consider it important to quest within the area and ecology closest to where they live, while others feel drawn to go outside of what is familiar to them. However, a quest always involves the encounter between the known and unknown, and the desire to discover what is unknown and wanting to emerge in ourselves will lead us to approach even the most familiar settings in new and unusual ways.
Yes, you could, but it would be very different. Although the core of the vision questing process is solitary, traditionally this activity was never done alone. There have always been guides, mentors, and shamans who prepared the initiate to cross the threshold into the sacred world. These same guides were there when the initiate returned, to help him/her make sense of the journey and translate vision into the forms and terms of social and everyday life.
If our intention is to journey beyond the self we know and are familiar with, leaving the preparation in the hands of that self is poor strategy. “Old tapes,” habits, and repetitious ways of looking at the world can easily accompany us into the wilderness and back. There are important teachings about ritual, ceremony, physical preparation, and the methodology of the questing process that we would not get if we were doing this alone. And the presence of guides and companions who provide different perspectives, compassionate mirroring, honest feedback, and stories in which we see ourselves in new ways is an invaluable resource.
Going it alone can be powerful. Fasting, solitude, and the contact with the spirit in nature are excellent teachers. But the instruction involved in the preparation phase and the emotional support and help in integrating one’s story make it a qualitatively different experience.
Many people have undergone a vision fast with little or no camping experience. You will be sent an equipment list long before you leave home and be well-instructed in safety procedures and shelter techniques during the preparation phase. The basics, such as backpack, sleeping bag, etc., can often be borrowed from a friend or rented from camping equipment stores if you don’t have them. We can sometimes be of help (especially in Vermont programs) recommending or providing equipment.
If you can walk for a mile and a half with a backpack on, you are likely in good enough physical condition to participate in a quest. Since people often enroll months in advance, you can practice walking with a pack and build endurance if you are in doubt. Over the years people with various physical disabilities and conditions have been able to successfully undertake vision quests.
During the solo time, your activity level will be up to you. Some questers are very active while fasting, undertaking long walks, performing ceremonies, or staying up through the night, while others are quiet or contemplative, staying in a relatively small area.
Surprisingly, fasting is rarely a problem for anyone. Eating is highly conditioned by routines, schedules, or stimuli such as the smell of food. Or it can often be driven by unconscious emotions, such as escaping from stress. Away from the everyday patterns and habits of our lives, it is a much different experience.
Hunger itself is usually momentary and fleeting during the first two days of a fast. Later, it often disappears altogether. The main purpose and effect of fasting is the expansion of awareness and the change of consciousness it engenders. There can be physical challenges to not eating, such as a lower level of energy, but hunger is unlikely to be one of them.
These FAQ’s cannot truly describe the feeling of community that forms around the experience of a vision quest: the sense of belonging, being heard, and making a difference. This can be unexpected, as our pre-arrival time is focused on our personal intentions. These communities often stay in touch for years after a quest, writing, providing support, and sometimes getting together for reunions and further journeys.
Participation in a vision quest starts long before one walks into the wilderness. The seeds may have been planted long ago, and your arrival may seem part of a process unfolding steadily and naturally. Or the decision may be sudden, a crisis or transition causing something long hidden to burst forth with a compelling force, one cannot deny or refuse. It may just seem “the right thing to do,” an affirmative way to answer a question, mark a change, or renew the spirit.
Whatever path brings you here, whether you feel called or driven, you enter a process that is solitary, unique, and universal. We stand alone before our mother, the Earth; we stand before our gods and goddesses; we stand in our authentic selves. As kindred souls have done for millennia, we come to experience a dying and rebirth.
Good preparation is important, and you will begin well before leaving home. You will be asked to write a letter of intent, responding to questions designed to help the process of focusing and clarifying your purpose. You will undertake a medicine walk in the month before you arrive and read The Trail to the Sacred Mountain (provided in your welcome pack), a handbook giving detailed information about the concrete, mythical, and allegorical structure of the quest experience.
Upon your arrival, we will establish our preparation or base camp. Having said good-bye to friends and family, having left home and packed the equipment and belongings deemed necessary, one’s purpose becomes focused and clarified. Four days of council are devoted to completing your preparation. Others may be preparing with you and, though focused on their own solitary quest; their presence lends support and provides insight. Friendships and a deep sense of spiritual community are unexpected blessings.
The days will pass quickly and there is much to be done. Our meetings will focus on creating physical and emotional balance; refining and clarifying one’s myths, goals, and life story, and how these relate to your purpose. You will receive instruction on traditional forms and vision quest “events:” creating ceremony and ritual, the mirroring aspects of nature; myths, and allegories of the vision quest; the dynamics of fasting; safety procedures; medicine wheel teachings, and ritual forms of purification and attunement. You will be helped to integrate these teachings into your personal worldview and situation.
We then journey to an area where you will find your place of power, where you will live alone for four days and nights. In sunrise ceremony you will take your leave and cross the threshold into the Sacred World. During this time you will be completely alone, but close enough to base camp to receive aid, should you need it. Once a day you will visit a designated place (your stone pile), leaving a sign that communicates your safety. Other than this minimal requirement, your time is yours to be in intimate contact with nature in its many forms, with yourself and the Spirit-in-all-things.
Returning to base camp marks the beginning of incorporation. There you will be welcomed with simple ceremony and the sharing of food. With reflection and celebration, we begin the journey back into the human world. The work of incorporation is to again take on the cloak of our civilized life and to wear it lightly and gracefully.
This phase of the program lasts three days. After washing off the dirt and dust of wilderness we will feast together, observing the fast-paced world we left behind. We will participate in an Elder’s Council, sharing stories of our time in the “Sacred World.” Your story will be attentively witnessed and listened to, and you will be assisted in finding your truths and meanings, owning your gifts, and claiming your power.
How are the seeds we bring back to be planted in the daily world with its dysfunction and distraction? How can we protect what is important and sacred, nurture it, and make it grow? What gifts do we have to give to our people? We must ask and answer these questions if our vision is to guide us in daily life. We must find a way to say, “Yes!” to life as it is to be effective and give thanks for the gifts we’ve been given.
After we have held our councils, had our feasts, and shared our ceremonies we must part. With renewed commitment and gratitude for the insight, rich experience, and friendship we have shared, it is time to walk our “path with heart,” re-entering the world we left behind to make real our vision. There the living work of the vision quest awaits us.
Enrollment
Costs and Registration: The cost of a vision quest program is $1395 if a participant registers 30 days or more in advance, $1595 thereafter. Advance registration with a non-refundable deposit of $400 is required, with the balance due 30 days prior to the start of the program.
Upon receipt of your registration and deposit, you will be sent a preparation packet containing a guidebook on vision questing, as well as other information related to transportation, equipment, recommended readings, etc. In addition, you will be expected to write a letter of intent and return a health questionnaire and liability release form.
Think seriously about whether you are ready to do this before you commit. Indecision and anxiety — especially as the quest dates approach — are a common experience, and the choice to act from our purposes and intentions rather than our fears is an important and empowering decision. Should unavoidable circumstances make your participation impossible, your deposit — if you notify us at least a month prior to your scheduled starting date — may be applied toward another program taking place within a year of your registration. You will receive a full refund for any courses canceled by Circles of Air and Stone, although this happens rarely.
If your intent to undertake a quest is sincere and you cannot currently afford the full cost of the program, payment plans and/or scholarship assistance can sometimes be worked out depending on need, circumstances, and available funds — through calling or emailing the office. The world we live in has huge disparities of wealth and income, and people have very different perspectives on what is inexpensive, affordable, or extravagant. We offer this option for up to two participants on each program.
Scheduling:
The experience of a vision quest is profound, and it has the potential to be a pivotal point in major life transitions. We highly recommend declaring your intention early to allow for a thorough preparation. Early enrollment facilitates scheduling, since courses often fill up; makes travel arrangements simpler and more economical; and it prevents any unnecessary cancellations of programs.
Directions
Directions:
We will meet on the porch of the Putney Co-op at 9:30 AM on the first day of the quest. Programs finish around Noon on the last day.
The town of Putney is located off Interstate 91, at Exit 4 in Vermont. Interstate 91 runs north-south through western New England. Coming from the east, I-91 may be intersected via routes 101 and 9 in New Hampshire, Route 2 in Massachusetts, or I-90 (Massachusetts Turnpike). From the west, I-91 is intersected via Routes 7 and 9 through Albany NY, Interstate 90 in Springfield, MA, and I-84 in Hartford, CT. From the north, I-91 is met by I-89 in White River Jct., VT.
Upon taking exit 4, follow the signs to Putney. You will be looking for the Putney Co-op, which is on the south end of the town of Putney. If you have been traveling north on Interstate 91, you will turn left at the end of the freeway exit and proceed up the hill. At the top of the hill the Putney Co-op will be directly across the street from you.
If you have been traveling south on I-91, you will turn right at the end of the exit, proceeding north on Route 5. In less than 1/4 mile, the Putney Co-op will be on your left.
Travel:
If coming by plane or bus: The nearest major airports are in Hartford, CT, Manchester, NH, Boston, MA, and Albany, NY. There are smaller airports in Burlington, VT and Keene, NH, the Keene airport being the closest. There is a bus service from any of these airports, and from most cities in the New England/New York area to Brattleboro, VT. Brattleboro is approximately 10 miles south of Putney. If you make arrangements in advance, we can most likely pick you up at the bus station in Brattleboro.
Often participants will carpool; sharing the expenses of a rental car, or gas and mileage costs if someone is local or brings a vehicle. A month before the start of the program, we will provide you with email addresses and phone numbers of the other participants if you wish to explore this option.
Food and Lodging
Food:
The responsibility for food during the preparation and post-quest phases is up to the individual participant. There are several small, but good restaurants in the center of Putney, as well as a general store and a co-op with excellent produce and health food items. We will be meeting about 5 miles from the center of town, which makes it quite accessible for provisions and supplies. Sharing of meals, rides, etc. among the participants often is the case.
Lodging:
Most participants in a vision-fasting quest choose to camp for the preparation and return phases of the quest, and there is camping space available. However, there are those who prefer to stay in other accommodations during these phases, and there are many motels and inns available within 30 minute drive from our meeting area. The choice and responsibility for accommodations is up to the individual quester.
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