Sunday, December 15, 2013

Freezing on the Hancocks - Nov. 24, 2013

As the title suggests, this was a cold one. The weather all week long had been pointing towards this being a cold and windy day, so a sheltered hike was in order. The Hancocks are a good fit for such days, as 3/4 of the hike is down in the valleys with a short, steep climb up to the ridge, which is well-covered in trees. This hike was also one I was leading for the Northeast Peakbaggers Meetup group, a group I occasionally lead for (and it had been a while since I posted one). Coming along was Theresa, who I've hiked with a lot this year, and HossinNH even came out of a long no-hiking spell to join in on the fun. 2 other great folks I had never met before joined in as well, Jeff and Alexus, and so our merry band of 5 set off from the frigid Hancock overlook parking lot around 8:15.

The Hancocks provide a nice 2.5-mile flat warmup on old logging railroad beds (the Hancock Notch and Cedar Brook Trails mostly follow old railroads), and we moved right along to keep warm. The wind was virtually non-existent here as we were well-sheltered in a valley, and the 2 inches or so of snow that had fallen overnight was coating everything and looked magical as always. It's great to see winter coming, I'm ready for some winter hiking!

There are a number of stream crossings on this route, and just like the day before on the Downe's Brook Trail, there were ice-glazed rocks. However, the first couple of stream crossings offer plenty of rocks to hop on (and are far tamer than the Downe's Brook crossings), and we managed without trouble without adding the microspikes. Reaching the first major crossing on the Cedar Brook Trail (not the one right at the junction with the Hancock Notch Trail), we unanimously decided to take a herd path that bypasses that and the next crossing (only 1/10 mile later). This proved to be a good move as at the second crossing, when we intersected the trail, we saw offered little in the way of rocks to stand on.

The final couple crossings were fairly straight-forward too, and in decent time we were at the folk in the trail of the Hancock Loop Trail. Originally we intended to ascend the South peak first, a direction I have yet to do the loop in, but the wind seemed like it might be in our faces across the ridge if we did that, so we climbed the North link first. It is a steep route, but the trail was surprisingly ice-free, and we had little difficulty getting to the summit aside from the usual huffing and puffing from a really steep climb. We layered up just below the summit, and popped up to the sign were there were no views (as expected).

Hiking towards the Hancock Loop Trail split

A quick picture or two later, and we motored across the ridge to South Hancock. Nearing South Hancock, we were thrilled to see the terrific work done by trail crews this summer in installing a lot of wooden bog bridges through all of the massive mudpits that abound in this area. That will be really nice for those hiking in here throughout the non-snow season, as some of those mud pits were frequently multiple feet deep!

Winter Wonderland on South Hancock

At South Hancock, we all put on the microspikes for the descent, and found the temperature was a "balmy" 2 degrees above zero (and that's why there are only 2 pictures from this hike. My fingers didn't want to come out of the gloves)! Brrr, coldest day of the year so far! We also found that the wind was going to be a little bit in our faces for the first part of the descent, whereas we had hardly felt it at all crossing the ridge...can't win them all. We were all well-prepared for the conditions though, and made it down to the trail split again without any problems. The exit hike was basically a repeat of the entry hike, and in about 7 hours from when we left the cars, we were back. Maybe not the fastest day out on the Hancocks, but a very enjoyable hike with a great group, and we all stayed warm and comfortable all day. Most of us were headed West to Lincoln to get home, and had a quick bite at the Woodstock Inn (4000-footer IPAs!) before heading home.

Summary:
Route: Hancock Notch Trail, Cedar Brook Trail, Hancock Loop Trail
Peaks: North Hancock (4420', NH4K), South Hancock (4319', NH4K)
Mileage: 9.8 miles
Elevation Gain: 2700'
Book Time: 6hr 15min (actual 7hrs)



Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Another NEHH Finish - Tripyramids and Sleepers, Nov. 23, 2013

As the end of the year drew closer, there were 3 4000-footers in New Hampshire that I had yet to hike in 2013. The Tripyramids (North and Middle) were 2 of those (I had hiked them on Dec. 30, 2012) and so when I was invited along on a hike including those 2 peaks, I jumped at the opportunity. This hike was also going to include East (and West) Sleeper, which is a peak on the New England 100 Highest List. I had previously visited this trailed, but viewless, peak, however, East Sleeper was to be the final peak on the list for Scott Disnard, and so for my second trip in a row I'd be present at someone's finishing peak.

Our large group met in the morning at the trailhead for the Downe's Brook Trail, where we left a couple cars there and headed over to the Pine Bend Brook Trailhead. We made good time up to the top of the ridge, where a couple of us spent a few minutes clearing out a blowdown mess that obscured the trail while the rest of the group caught up a couple minutes later. From there it was time for the occasionally tricky (especially with hidden ice here and there - some folks put on microspikes here because of it) climb to North Tripyramid. This was my 4th time on the summit, but I believe the first where I actually went to the NorthEast viewpoint near the summit area.

A quick break down low

Doing some blowdown maintenance

Before we did this, there was a wall of spruce here!

The final steep climb to North Tripyramid

Mount Carrigain from near the summit of North Tripyramid

Nice view from the NorthEast viewpoint on North Tripyramid

The Eastern end of the Sandwich Range towards Mount Chocorua

Mount Chocorua from North Tripyramid


A short break later, and it was time for the jaunt over to Middle Tripyramid, where we stopped long enough to snap a couple pictures and immediately head off to South Tripyramid, a short distance away (it does not have enough prominence from Middle Tripyramid to count on the 4000-footer list). There we descended a short distance on the South Slide, before dodging into the woods onto the Kate Sleeper Trail. (Note: this trail turnoff is very easy to miss. The sign is small and on the opposite edge of the woods from the normal route down the slide and it is not hard to pass right on by it!)

Waterville Valley - Mount Tecumseh (L) and the Osceolas (Main and East peaks L->R)

Passaconaway (the pointy one on the right-center) and Whiteface (far R)

The double-peaked top of Sandwich Dome, another New England 100-Highest Peak (3980')

Descending the South Slide (carefully!)

Last peak at Mount Tecumseh from the Kate Sleeper Trail
The Kate Sleeper Trail, after briefly cutting into the woods alongside the main South Tripyramid slide, then drops 100 feet or so down a parallel slide before entering the woods for good. From there, the Kate Sleeper Trail is a pleasant walk in the woods, with gentle grades. It soon climbs to just a few yards from the summit of West Sleeper (unmarked, but a few herd paths meander over to a clearing where the likely summit is) and then drops before climbing up to the spur trail to East Sleeper. A short jaunt on the spur trail, and we were at the summit (marked by a sign). A couple people had brought up champagne, beer, cookies, cheese and crackers, and so we had a nice mini celebration.

Easy walking on the Kate Sleeper Trail

A blowdown blocked the spur trail to East Sleeper...

Scott on East Sleeper

Celebration time! Congrats Scott!

The whole group on East Sleeper
After packing everything up, we headed off for the final ~6 mile leg of the hike. The first mile took us through a stretch of forest that was completely leveled by Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Essentially the whole section of woods was knocked over on its side, and a huge amount of work was done by volunteers and various trail maintenance groups to clear it again, all with hand tools only (it is in a Wilderness Zone, so power tools are not permitted). Thanks again to everyone that worked on this stretch so we can enjoy it!


What a mess this must have been!

A whole section of woods alongside the trail on its side




But thanks to the effort of many, only a few inconsequential blowdowns were on the trail, and we were able to get through without any trouble. Then we just had the long descent on the Downe's Brook Trail. The first part of this trail is harmless enough, if a bit rough underfoot in places. But about halfway down, the stream crossings pick up in earnest, and we also ran out of daylight. The crossings (of which there are 10 major ones) were wide, fast, and littered with ice-glazed rocks. There also weren't many options for crossing locations, and it took a while to get the whole group across each one safely, especially with the last 6-7 coming after dark. In fact, someone did slip into the water, but luckily on the lat crossing which is just over 1/4-mile from the parking lot, and so we were able to get him to a warm car quickly. It took us over 3.5 hours to pick our way down the 5 miles of this trail!

The one picture taken during the descent - and assisted in Photoshop a little. Crossing one of the wide crossings of Downe's Brook (the group was all at least half-way across).

 Once again, a hearty congratulations to Scott for finishing the New England 100-Highest list!

Summary:
Route: Pine Bend Brook Trail, Mount Tripyramid Trail, Kate Sleeper Trail, East Sleeper Spur, Downe's Brook Trail
Peaks: North Tripyramid (4180', NH4K), Middle Tripyramid (4140', NH4K), South Tripyramid (4090', TW72), West Sleeper (3881'), East Sleeper (3860', NEHH)
Mileage: 13.25 miles
Elevation Gain: 4000'
Book Time: 8hr 40min (actual 11 hours)



Saturday, December 7, 2013

Bushwhack to Peak Above the Nubble - November 10, 2013

It turned out this weekend was going to be bushwhack weekend, which was OK for me because that's mostly what I have left on the New England 100 Highest list. Pam, Trey, and Philip stuck around overnight and the four of us tackled this peak on Sunday before heading home (we all needed it for our New England 100 Highest Lists). Peak Above the Nubble is the unofficial name for this peak, which is merely denoted " 3813' " on topo maps. The unofficial name, though, comes from the fact that it lies on the ridgeline above a small but prominent peak called "The Nubble" (or sometimes "Haystack Mountain") in the town of Twin Mountain, on the side of North Twin Mountain.

There is no trail to this mountain, but 2 routes have evolved over time for peak baggers heading to this peak. One route heads up on some old logging roads and a herd path from the Gale River Road extension to The Nubble before bushwhacking to a slide that heads up to near the summit of Peak Above the Nubble (aka "PAtN", pronounced "patton" like the famous US general). This was initially our intended route as it promised some great views along the way, but it snowed overnight and we were concerned about ice on the slide as well. Thus, we took the alternate, and more common, route from Haystack Road.

We started by hiking along Forest Road 304A, which departs Haystack Road about 1.75 miles in from Route 3 and has 3 large boulders blocking its start (room for parking a couple cars if you park each other in). About 1/4 mile in, we hung a right just past a large hill sitting on the left onto an obscure logging road running up a minor ridge. The road was not terribly obvious at its start, and in fact we walked ~10-15 minutes past it before we realized we missed it, and we went back looking harder. Once on it though, the road is easy enough to follow into an old logging clear-cut, which is now overgrown with tons of saplings, but with all the other undergrowth mainly dead, it wasn't too bad to push through (and in fact someone has hacked a few saplings here and there to form a rough herd path through the clearing). I wouldn't want to go through here in summer though, I'd probably opt to skirt the clearing instead.

Heading off on Forest Road 304A

Old birds nest along the old logging road

Near the top of the overgrown clearcut, looking Northward
From the upper end of the clearcut, we took a visual bearing to the slight col dead ahead (a false summit of PAtN was visible to the left, and a minor bump to the right - see the map at the end of this report for a visual aid) and climbed a couple hundred feet through mostly open woods (once leaving the fringes of the clearing) to the col. From there, we merely followed the ridgeline up, skirting a few thick spots, but largely finding easy woods up to the false summit 1/4 mile or so from the summit of PAtN. From there, an obvious (and apparently cut) herd path leads to the summit of PAtN, though there was a small ring of blowdowns to climb over near the summit.

Climbing through open woods up the ridgeline to PAtN

Still mostly open woods

Ice forming on the large rocks in the woods

On the herd path along the upper ridge to PAtN
The weather on this day was slightly threatening, though it was mostly clear below 4000 feet. The temperature was hovering around freezing all day, which led to wet snow and we actually donned the rain gear to push through some of the snow-covered trees in order to stay dry. I also found that my winter boots need to be waterproofed again, they soaked through after a few hours of hanging out in slushy snow.

The summit of PAtN offers a terrific viewpoint on a short herd path nearby; none of us expected this kind of view from a bushwhack summit!

Philip and Trey at the overlook near the summit of PAtN

The Presidentials in the clouds

A LONG, large, steep slide heading up North Twin Mountain. I believe this is the one known as the "checkmark slide".

Hale (L) and North Twin (Rish) from Peak Above the Nubble

Eisenhower briefly emerged from the clouds

Pano from PAtN

Us on Peak Above the Nubble (yes, a blowdown right by the summit.)
Heading down was easy and much quicker, as we merely followed our footprints until about halfway down to the initial col we had climbed to (where the snow had melted away), from which point we kept heading to the col until we reached where we had come up in the morning (we could see the clearcut too) and from there it was easy to return. Just as we loaded up into the cars, it started lightly raining, nice timing!

This was a surprisingly nice, and pretty easy bushwhack/hike. Having all the leaves on the ground and the various undergrowth all dead made for easy navigation (we could see our destinations most of the day), and the woods were pretty open until the upper ridge (where there is the herd path). That said, I (and I think the rest of the group) want to return (yes, return to a bushwhack!), but this time taking the other side up the slide. Maybe next summer?

This was peak #85 on the New England 100 Highest List for me. 1 remains in New Hampshire (Scar Ridge - a bushwhack), 3 in Vermont (all 1/2-day trailed hikes), and the remaining 11 in Maine, 7 of which are bushwhacks. I hope to finish these off by the end of 2014!

NOTE: The herd path we followed along the ridge top comes up from the valley nearer the North Twin Trailhead (I think it leaves FR304A about a mile from Haystack Road and ascends PAtN from the E). The entire route was cut by someone without permission (it is National Forest land) and it widely felt to be a major erosion hazard as it ascends to the false summit of PAtN. The AMC 4000-Footer committee requests that people do not use that route to ascend to the ridge so as to avoid causing environmental damage. The route we took did not use this herd path to ascend to the ridge, though we did use the portion from the false summit to PAtN (really there is no other option save pushing through dense spruce), which is not really an erosion risk. The worst part of our route honestly was the short stretch getting through the clearcut. You can see from the pictures above that the woods up to near the false summit are nice and open anyway, and it was an easy route that I'd have no qualms about doing exactly the same again.

Summary:
Route: FR 304A, unknown logging road, bushwhack, herd path
Peaks: Peak Above the Nubble (PAtN) (3813', NEHH)
Mileage: ~4.5 miles (estimated)
Elevation Gain: ~2100'
Time Taken: 5hr 45min (we lost ~30 minutes when we missed the second logging road on the way in)



Thursday, November 28, 2013

A Bushwhack to Vose Spur and Mount Carrigain - Nov. 9, 2013

On November 9, a group of us headed to bushwhack a peak that most of us needed for our New England 100 Highest List: Vose Spur. Situated on a North-running ridge of Mount Carrigain and forming one side of Carrigain Notch, Vose Spur is a trail-less summit reaching over 3800' above sea level. As if that wasn't going to be enough, Ian and I were also going to bushwhack from Vose Spur through over a mile of thick and steep woods to the summit of Mount Carrigain, which has one of the finest views in the White Mountains.

Around 8AM our group of 7 plus a dog (Ian's dog Marlie) met in the parking lot on Sawyer River Road and began our trip into Carrigain Notch. The first ~2 miles is on the Signal Ridge Trail, which has had a couple minor relocations in this stretch since I last traveled it in early 2012. The junction with the Carrigain Notch Trail has been moved further in as a part of one of these relocations, making this stretch slightly longer than the 1.7 miles it used to be, but being all flat, it was a quick and easy jaunt to our first landmark of the day.

The old Signal Ridge Trail/Carrigain Notch Trail junction. Now you continue a little further to the left on what used to be the Carrigain Notch Trail.
From the junction, we were to take the Carrigain Notch Trail into the heart of the notch, where a little before the height-of-land there is a large boulder that most people heading to Vose Spur start their bushwhack from. Here we headed into the woods, heading for a South-running sub-ridge of Vose Spur that we then followed uphill. The woods in here were mostly open and easy going, though steep in spots. Soon enough though, we topped out on the ridge, and eventually stumbled across a herd path that took us up to a large talus field below the summit. Crossing this talus field, we re-entered the woods on the upper left side of it, and the herd path took us right to the summit area (albeit VERY STEEPLY). The woods never got terribly thick, and it was a pretty straight-forward bushwhack in fact, yeay!

The large boulder along the Carrigain Notch Trail that signifys the start of the bushwhack. We actually passed it a little but before starting our trek.

On the early portion of the bushwhack up to the subridge of Vose Spur.

Entering the talus field

Trey and Anne climbing up the talus field on the side of Vose Spur

Passaconaway from the talus field

Mount Tremont, with Chocorua off in the distance to the right


Philip (of Sectionhiker.com) on the talus field


Passaconaway and Whiteface from the Vose Spur talus field
Once at the summit we had a small celebration since one person in our group was finishing the New England 100 Highest list today on this peak. Congrats again Randy! After some wine, cheese, and assorted snacks, the group parted ways, with most folks heading back to the cars while Ian and I headed up to Carrigain.

The group on Vose Spur

Mount Carrigain off to the left with a subpeak in front, our first destination on the trek to Carrigain.
Our plan was essentially to follow the ridge up to Carrigain, crossing the false summit along the way, so as to avoid the steep ravine to the South of the ridge. It was a steep drop into the col, with a few tricky ledges to descend, but we made it without much trouble. A few feet above the col on the Carrigain side is another talus field (visible in the picture above) which while not very high, was very wide and offered a number of great views, especially into Zealand Notch and towards the Presidential Range.

Snow-covered reindeer lichen

Mount Tremont from the second talus field

The short, but wide talus field in the Vose Spur/Carrigain col

Ian and Marlie check out the views from the second talus field

The cloud-capped Presidential Range from the second talus field

Zealand Notch, with Zeacliff on the cleft, Hale in the back, and Whitewall Mountain on the right. Just visible as a tiny speck well below Hale's summit is Zealand Hut

Tom, Field, and Willey (L->R)

Tremont

Last look at the Presidential Range
From the talus field, we entered the woods, and climbed steeply and thickly at times until we eventually reached the summit of the sub-peak on the way to Carrigain. Here there was a tiny cairn, and from here to the tower on Carrigain we frequently had a faint herd path to follow, which made the going a little better. The big help though was that the grade in here was much more moderate, which made climbing over blowdowns and the like much easier. Nearing the summit, we hit a small alpine shoulder which offered some nice, albeit windy and cold, views, before we entered the spruce for the final push to the summit area.

Marlie on the false summit between Vose Spur and Carrigain

The tower is in sight!

Signal Ridge from the alpine shoulder of Carrigain
With the final push, we popped out of the woods on the summit of Carrigain right by the newly-redecked fire tower, almost 2 hours from when we had left Vose Spur. Up top it was cold (19F, first real cold for us this year) and windy (20-25mph), so we only stuck around long enough for a few pictures before heading down. The descent was uneventful, with only a few minor and avoidable pockets of ice, and we saw only one group of people, near the road. A few minutes before the parking lot we had to break out the headlamps, but we still got back barely an hour after the rest of the group did.

It was a great hike with a great group of folks. Congrats again to Randy for finishing another list, and thanks to Ian for coming along for the bonus bushwhack after you had already been to Vose Spur before!

The bedsprings from the old FireWarden's cabin near the summit of Carrigain

Signal Ridge from Mount Carrigain

Partial pano from the Carrigain summit tower


Vose Spur on the right; the upper talus field is the one we climbed en-route to that peak. The rest of the ridge visible was our bushwhack route to Carrigain

Nancy, Anderson, and Lowell from Signal Ridge

Vose Spur and the other side of Carrigain Notch

Looking back at the summit tower from Signal Ridge

Pano from Signal Ridge

The Presidential Range from Signal Ridge
Summary:
Route: Signal Ridge Trail, Carrigain Notch Trail, bushwhacks, Signal Ridge Trail
Peaks: Vose Spur (3862', NEHH), Mount Carrigain (4700', NH4K)
Mileage: ~11.5 miles
Elevation Gain: ~3700ft
Time Taken: 8hr 40min