<p>All of those places are urban jungles compared with Berry.</p>
<p>What about NYU?</p>
<p>Lewis & Clark</p>
<p>I believe willamette in oregon is woodsy. carleton in mn is nEXT TO / adjacent a nice tract of woods. kenyon is nestled</p>
<p>I agree with Sewanee. My brother checked that college out and it is very isolated and is lodged in the woods. They didn’t even have cable!</p>
<p>Berry is absolutely beautiful. Young Harris College in the North GA mountains is also nestled in the woods and quite beautiful. Oxford College is another one that is quite beautifully wooded and serene.</p>
<p>Washington & Lee - Located in the beautiful Shenandoah Valley. Blue Ridge Mountains, Skyline Drive, Appalachian Trail, hiking trails, horse farms, the caverns, river rafting etc., all nearby.</p>
<p>Look at Berry College in Rome, GA. They have over 25,000 acres, quite a lot of it wooded.</p>
<p>I can’t believe only one person has mentioned Dartmouth. </p>
<p>Oh well, Dartmouth.</p>
<p>Can’t get any more nestled than Warren Wilson College, Asheville, NC.</p>
<p>Oops… I don’t know how that happened…</p>
<p>Is the NYU post a joke?</p>
<p>Definitely Kenyon.</p>
<p>dartmouth and sewanee are the first that come to mind.</p>
<p>Definitley Richmond</p>
<p>Another vote for Lewis & Clark in Portland – nestled under towering fir and pine trees, paths wandering through fern-filled gullies, views of Mt. Rainier, gorgeous.</p>
<p>And Lewis and Clark is also located right next to a state park.</p>
<p>Sewanee/Univ. Of The South (name depends on who you’re talking to) is about as rural as it gets. The nearest wal-mart/dept. store is more than 10 miles away.</p>
<p>Middlebury is pretty forest-rural, I believe; Marlboro is atop a giant hill/mountain.</p>
<p>Middlebury is located amongst rural meadows and farmland, not forests. Bowdoin is FILLED with pine trees. Skidmore as well</p>
<p>Willamette has lots of trees but could hardly be considered in the woods. Humboldt on the other hand is situated up against a forest (Arcata Community forest - 793 acres of redwoods) and some of the dorms are actually within the forest boundaries. School is often referred to being “in the redwoods. on the beach” [The</a> Aerial View • Humboldt State University](<a href=“http://www.humboldt.edu/~humboldt/videos/fly.html]The”>http://www.humboldt.edu/~humboldt/videos/fly.html)</p>