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New Haven
Born in America Pizza Kitchen
206 Route 80, Killingworth, CT 06419
This new to town (September 2010) pizza place offers not only fresh, thin crust New Haven-style pizza but a new service…More - pizza delivery seven evenings a week! The first "Born in America" location was established 23 years ago. Born in America Pizza Kitchen offers not only fresh pizza (nothing out of a can is used, dough is handmade, sauce is homemade, and all toppings are fresh), but salads, calzones, dinner and lunch entrees, heroes and wraps. Delivery is free (a .99 cent fee is added to debit and credit card deliveries under $30). Gluten free pizza crust is available.
206 Route 80, Killingworth, CT 06419
This new to town (September 2010) pizza place offers not only fresh, thin crust New Haven-style pizza but a new service…More - pizza delivery seven evenings a week! The first "Born in America" location was established 23 years ago. Born in America Pizza Kitchen offers not only fresh pizza (nothing out of a can is used, dough is handmade, sauce is homemade, and all toppings are fresh), but salads, calzones, dinner and lunch entrees, heroes and wraps. Delivery is free (a .99 cent fee is added to debit and credit card deliveries under $30). Gluten free pizza crust is available.
Cockaponset State Forest
18 Ranger Rd, Haddam, CT 06438
Cockaponset State Forest is Connecticut's second largest state forest with 16,000 acres sprawling across 10 towns…More in Middlesex and New Haven counties. The rocky wooded area features a pretty lake where swimming and fishing are permitted and miles of trails for hiking, mountain biking and horseback riding. Once thick with oak, hickory and chestnut, the forest was extensively cut over in the 19th century, and great swaths were also cleared for pasture lands. Today old stone walls running through woods are reminder of the land's past use.
18 Ranger Rd, Haddam, CT 06438
Cockaponset State Forest is Connecticut's second largest state forest with 16,000 acres sprawling across 10 towns…More in Middlesex and New Haven counties. The rocky wooded area features a pretty lake where swimming and fishing are permitted and miles of trails for hiking, mountain biking and horseback riding. Once thick with oak, hickory and chestnut, the forest was extensively cut over in the 19th century, and great swaths were also cleared for pasture lands. Today old stone walls running through woods are reminder of the land's past use.