Levi Pond Wildlife Management Area (WMA) is a 262-acre parcel of land owned by the State of Vermont and managed by the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department. The WMA consists of 24-acre Levi Pond and 238 acres of land surrounding the pond in the town of Groton, Caledonia County, Vermont. The access road, which is suitable only for foot travel, is located at the corners of Marie Orr Road, Mays Cross Road and Goodfellow Road, near Route 302 in Groton. Access is at the discretion of private landowners, as there is no legal right-of-way to this WMA.
Prominent features of the WMA are Levi Pond and Wesson Hill, which rises 220 feet above the pond to the southeast. Levi Pond is a rather shallow, warmwater pond, with one of the State’s largest concentrations of great rhododendron. The slopes of Wesson Hill are dominated by red maple, sugar maple, yellow birch and beech. Also present is a red spruce-balsam fir-hemlock forest, primarily at the south end of the pond and in nearby lowlands. The remaining area is mixed hardwood and conifer forest. Beavers have built dams and created wetlands along Red Brook, which flows through the WMA.