The Outdoors · Hudson Valley
Windham Follows the Batavia Kill
Windham's identity ties Main Street name changes, the Batavia Kill, public walking paths, ski-area gravity, and Catskill ridge trails.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Windham’s story sits in the valley as much as on the ski hill.
Town history records the hamlet’s business district once used the name Batavia, tied to the Batavia Kill and the Batavia Patent. The Windham Path makes that older geography easy to feel today: town records describe it as a public 1.5-mile looping trail with access to the Batavia Kill, fields, woodlands, streams, and views of the Great Northern Catskills. DEC adds the public-land edge with Elm Ridge Wild Forest in the Town of Windham, open year-round and free.
Put together, Windham reads as a Catskill resort village with a creek memory underneath it. Main Street, mountain recreation, and low valley paths all point back to the same corridor.
The Windham Path is what makes that landscape easy to feel without buying a lift ticket. Fields, streams, Batavia Kill access, and Catskill views give the valley its own identity beside the ski-area story.
That balance is Windham’s strength. The mountains draw attention, but the creek, path, and Elm Ridge public land keep the hamlet tied to everyday outdoor life.