Huntington Gap Wildlife Management Area (WMA) is a 1,568-acre parcel located in the towns of Huntington, Buels Gore and Fayston. It is adjacent to Camel’s Hump State Park. It lies mainly on the west side of the main range of the Green Mountains between Burnt Rock Mountain and Molly Stark Mountain, including a low saddle known as Huntington Gap. The Long Trail, Catamount Trail and a VAST snowmobile trail cross portions of the WMA. The WMA is owned by the State of Vermont and managed by the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department. Timber rights on most of the WMA are owned by A. Johnson Lumber Company.
The WMA is completely forested. Elevations vary from 1,800 to 2,800 feet. Baker’s Brook flows through the southwest section of the property. The WMA supports a mix of northern hardwood forest and transitional yellow birch–red spruce forest. Red and sugar maple, yellow birch, beech, hemlock, red spruce, balsam fir and mountain paper birch are common tree species. Shrub species include hobblebush, striped and mountain maples, red-berried elderberry and mountain ash. Over 50 kinds of herbaceous species – including blue cohosh, wild sarsaparilla, mountain aster, Canada-violet, sweet cicely, dogberry, red trillium wood-nettle, foam flower, twisted- stalk, wild lily-of-the-valley and wood-sorrel occur here. Some of the ferns on the WMA are spinulose wood-fern and rattlesnake, Christmas, Braun’s holly and hay-scented ferns.