A Belated Summary of my Single Winter 48

vftt.org

Help Support vftt.org:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Mike Foster

New member
Joined
Apr 2, 2008
Messages
3
Reaction score
7
Hello,

Well, I’ve finally got myself onto VFTT. I’ve been poking around for a while (doing the single winter 48 I was quite curious as to what trails were broken out.) and I’ve met a number of members out and about.

Last year I had my first go at the single winter and got 37 peaks. I’m in college and play hockey so time is hard to come by. My plain this year was to finish over my winter break and not have to deal with mixing classes, mountains and hockey practice. Inspired by the exploits of mountaineers of yore I devised an epic plan to finish fast. I would backpack across the Whites, solo, starting at Appalachia and finishing at Franconia Notch, tagging the peaks in between. I would then tear into the remainder of the mountains, sleeping in my car or wherever I could and finishing on or about January the 15th, with the whole effort lasting about 20 days.

When the 15th rolled around I had tagged a whopping 20 peaks.

So it goes.

Three things I failed to take into account:
1) Laying around my dorm room not doing much of anything last fall was not exactly the best preparation for such an undertaking.
2) The snowiest winter anyone can remember.
3) Its difficult, maybe impossible, to make yourself sleep in a car when there’s a nice warm bed you can drive it to.

I did finish, but the whole thing was much more modest than I had envisioned. Here are some points I remember most:

I. Prelude
I was turned back in the deep snow just below East Osceola in the wee hours of the morning on the first day of winter. I saw the first faint green light of a winter sunrise over Mt. Kancamagus from the top of the old slide. I was 0 for 1, but the view was wonderful.

II. Wet Snow
The epic crossing never happened. I had to break it into sections to make it feasible. After Crossing from Crawford notch into the bonds I awoke one morning at Guyot to find the world was melting. The snow stuck my snowshoes in twenty-pound lumps. I had to forget about Garfield ridge retreat back to Zealand, soaking wet. For a moment, on the warmest day of the winter, I was in the worst danger I’ve ever experienced in the whites. I would have spent a cold, wet night at Zealand had I not been offered a ride from Zealand Rd. to Crawford by a real peakbagger (and I thank you again).

III. Breaking Things
I broke trail, a lot of trail. And snowshoes too, I broke every major brand this winter, MSR, Atlas and Tubbs, I’ve wrecked them all. The people at EMS must think I’m running some sort of scam. The snow was brutal. I got very friendly with more spruce trees than I care to remember. The Tripyramids turned out to be the hardist. They took more effort than Owl’s Head and Isolation combined. That was the nature of this winter.

IV. Cause For Concern
I was frightened by the multitude of rescues and tragedies that occurred this winter. I did not head up on a reasonably nice day because it seemed somehow wrong for me to go play when someone was lost and quite possibly dying up there. It seemed to me that the mountain gods were angry. Later, crossing over little haystack under the most perfect blue skies I was humbled by what I knew had happened there. Experience is a wonderful safety device, but this winter reminded us all what the mountains are capable of.

V. Bittersweet Triumph
I thought for a while that I should stop at 47, leaving the task unfinished out of respect for the hills. Unfortunately I’m not that unselfish, and on the Ides of March, 2008 I finished. My last hike took me to Monroe by way of Ammonoosuc Ravine. The trail was short and crowded, and the air was thick with warm fog that made it clear that winter was over. I did not linger on the summit, someone there was speaking in an imitation Borat voice that made the occasion completely void of sentimentality, which looking back, is really the way it ought to have been.


Now it’s time to lie around my dorm room, not do much of anything, and wait for summer to come. I’ll be working as a caretaker for the AMC’s Backcountry Shelters Program this summer, so I’m sure I’ll see a lot of VFTT folks while I’m on the job.

-Mike Foster
 
Congratulations Mike! Really enjoyed reading your report.
Sounds like you have a great summer ahead of you!! :)
 
Wisdom

Reading your report it is obvious you have wisdom beyond your years and a very healthy respect for winter in the White Mountains. This will serve you well in life. Nice job!

KDT
 
Never got the chance to meet you this winter, Mike, but at Woodstock Station I met some of the others who turned around on the Tri's the day you described. They were muttering something like "....then this guy Mike Foster caught up with us, then led the way breaking trail, but we still could not keep up with him." Fine post and congrats on a great winter hiking season!
 
In the interest of full disclosure, I was one of the three guys who met the professor, Dr. Dasypodidae, at Woodstock Station on the Sunday we attempted the Tri's. Roy T. and I had turned back at appx. 2,600', probably about 3 miles in on Pine Bend Brook Trail. It had taken us over 3 hours to reach this point, breaking trail with another gentleman (Andrew from New Bedford, MA) in anywhere from 12-18" of unconsolidated snow. Just as Roy T. and I were calling it a day, the estimable Mr. Foster came chugging by, and joined forces with Andrew and the third member of our trio, Spaderman, to push on to the summit(s). Alas, Spaderman also gave up the chase after another hour or so, and Mike Foster is the only confirmed Tripyramids summiteer on 3/2/08; we don't know about Andrew. Mike may have been the beneficiary of our earlier trail-breaking efforts, but I have no doubt that he probably didn't need any help - he had displayed his considerable winter hiking and bushwhacking prowess earlier in the season when he passed us not once, but twice on our abortive attempt on Isolation! Spaderman gets credit for recommending Mike for VFTT membership; Mike, congratulations for accomplishing in a single winter season a goal that many of us have been chasing for a number of years, and hope to finish before we hit 60!! Best regards to all.
 
Great Pumpkin said:
In the interest of full disclosure, I was one of the three guys who met the professor, Dr. Dasypodidae, at Woodstock Station on the Sunday we attempted the Tri's. Roy T. and I had turned back at appx. 2,600', probably about 3 miles in on Pine Bend Brook Trail. It had taken us over 3 hours to reach this point, breaking trail with another gentleman (Andrew from New Bedford, MA) in anywhere from 12-18" of unconsolidated snow. Just as Roy T. and I were calling it a day, the estimable Mr. Foster came chugging by, and joined forces with Andrew and the third member of our trio, Spaderman, to push on to the summit(s). Alas, Spaderman also gave up the chase after another hour or so, and Mike Foster is the only confirmed Tripyramids summiteer on 3/2/08; we don't know about Andrew. Mike may have been the beneficiary of our earlier trail-breaking efforts, but I have no doubt that he probably didn't need any help - he had displayed his considerable winter hiking and bushwhacking prowess earlier in the season when he passed us not once, but twice on our abortive attempt on Isolation! Spaderman gets credit for recommending Mike for VFTT membership; Mike, congratulations for accomplishing in a single winter season a goal that many of us have been chasing for a number of years, and hope to finish before we hit 60!! Best regards to all.

Good stuff! So, as you guys left the Station that evening, Scotty the bartender asked me if I knew you guys. Did you leave him a huge tip or something? :D
 
Dr. D: In terms of a "tip", I think we just gave him the same wise counsel that we dispense to all, free of charge: Stay out of dark alleys late at night! Just kidding ;) Best regards.
 
Well, I’m very sorry that I haven't written anything back sooner. I had papers then finals and then graduation and well... you get the picture. Thank you for all the kind comments.

Someone asked (probably two months ago) who I played hockey for. I was the Captain of the Saint Joseph's College Monks, which is actually a club team(not varsity) and not a very good one at that!

Great Pumpkin, had you not broken the first part of that trail, I probably wouldn't have gotten out of my car that day! Never-mind made both summits (which, for the record, Andrew joined me in doing).

I will try to find some pictures; I have only a few since I rarely carried a camera, (or a cell phone, or a GPS, or other such electronic gadgetry). I did however catch a fantastic sunrise at Garfield.

I write tonight because tomorrow I leave for Camp Dodge to begin two weeks of training as a backcountry caretaker. I have been assigned Speck Pond and look forward to meeting some of you there. Thanks again and see you all on the trails!


n172700444_30320033_9744.jpg
 
Last edited:
Speck Pond

Hey, Mike, Have fun at Speck Pond this summer, one of my favorite places in the Whites. I will look for a link to a study of the lake sediments there done by colleagues a few years ago. Dr. D.
 
Hi Mike: Thanks for your kind words re. our trail-breaking efforts on Pine Bend Trail that day; we were glad that somebody got the benefit of same. Also very pleased to finally learn that Andrew (who certainly contributed more than his share of trail-busting) was a Tripyramid sumitteer on that fine day; this had been a mystery to us for the last couple of months. We weren't sure that anybody could keep up with you!! Your pictures, especially the one of Lonesome Lake, looking back to the Franconia Ridge, brought back all my best memories of this past winter. Congratulations on graduation, and best of luck in your caretaker assignment at Speck Pond this summer.
 
Top