NH_Mtn_Hiker
New member
After hiking the Huntington Ravine Trail and the Arrow Slide, Dugan and I decided we needed something a little more challenging this weekend. We decided on the Adams Slide Trail to Mt. Adams.
Since others had expressed some interest in slide trails we posted the hike here at views. Only Thunder Dan expressed interest in the hike. Little did he realize what he was getting himself into.
We met at the Great Gulf trailhead at 8:00 and at about 8:20 we headed out. We made our way up the Great Gulf Trail over two suspension bridges to the Six Hunbands Trail. This we followed a half mile to the Buttress Trail. We followed the Buttress Trail about .1 mile to a sharp right turn after which the trail emerges from the trees onto the talus.
From the sharp turn the, now abandoned, Adams Slide Trail proceeds straight up the steep overgrown slope. From the corner, looking uphill, several stones are visible forming a step(no photo). After about 50' the trail becomes more obvious. We saw about a dozen red blazes along the lower portion of the trail. Further up, the trail becomes more difficult to follow. Several times we had to bushwhack around blowdowns and severly overgrown areas until finally we realized......we'd lost the trail.
I consulted my GPS (Etrex Vista) and realized the trail had made a right turn behind us and we were following a dry streambed. Rather than backtrack down the steep slope we decided to bushwhack, as if we weren't already bushwhacking, over to the trail which was about 250' to our right. I got the distinct impression Thunder Dan didn't like this part of the hike. Nobody ever told him we'd be bushwhacking a bushwhack. It took us about 40 minutes to plow, climb, and crawl over to the trail.
A few hundred feet more up the trail we emerged from the trees onto the lower part of Adams South shoulder. From here the trail was a mixture of rock hopping and scrub for about .2 miles and then all rocks to the junction with the Star Lake Trail. From here it was a short steep climb to the summit of Mt. Adams. While some areas above treeline on the Adams Slide Trail had plenty of cairns, other areas had none and the GPS had to be consulted a couple more times to find the trail.
After leaving the Buttress Trail it was about 1.3miles, 2,300' climb, 3.5 hours, and about four false summits to the top of Adams, arriving at about 2:00.
After snacks and a group photo, Dugan and I said goodbye to Thunder Dan as he headed off towards Mt. Jefferson.
It seems Dugan had forgot to mention she needed to get in to work early Monday, therefore she couldn't hike half the night. So we canceled our plans to bag Monroe and everything in between, and instead, bagged Sam Adams, J.Q. Adams, and then Headed up the "weanie" (as Stinkyfeet puts it) Osgood Trail, over Madison and back down to the Great Gulf Trail. We arrived back at the parking area around 7ish, followed by Thunder Dan about 10 minutes later. He had come down the Six Husbands Trail from Jefferson, so he didn't seem quite as chipper as Dugan and I. (The Six Husbands Trail has a very steep section)
Thunder Dan wasn't real pleased with the hike, but it couldn't have been all bad, he expressed interest in climbing the North slide on Mt. Osceola sometime. (edited: to change West Peak to Osceola)
Note:
Though the word slide is used in the name of the Adams Slide Trail, there is little evidence of a "slide". Picture the steep portion of the Ammonoosuc Ravine Trail above the Gem Pool with almost no turns and 35 years of abandonment. That's not to say this trail doesn't get hiked at all. There was evidence others have been up it in the last few years.
All things considered, it was another great hike with great company on a beautiful day, followed by a shower at the PNVC and then a terrific dinner in North Conwayr at Delaney's . Though not quite as good as the home cookin' I had last weekend
Pics are here
Since others had expressed some interest in slide trails we posted the hike here at views. Only Thunder Dan expressed interest in the hike. Little did he realize what he was getting himself into.
We met at the Great Gulf trailhead at 8:00 and at about 8:20 we headed out. We made our way up the Great Gulf Trail over two suspension bridges to the Six Hunbands Trail. This we followed a half mile to the Buttress Trail. We followed the Buttress Trail about .1 mile to a sharp right turn after which the trail emerges from the trees onto the talus.
From the sharp turn the, now abandoned, Adams Slide Trail proceeds straight up the steep overgrown slope. From the corner, looking uphill, several stones are visible forming a step(no photo). After about 50' the trail becomes more obvious. We saw about a dozen red blazes along the lower portion of the trail. Further up, the trail becomes more difficult to follow. Several times we had to bushwhack around blowdowns and severly overgrown areas until finally we realized......we'd lost the trail.
I consulted my GPS (Etrex Vista) and realized the trail had made a right turn behind us and we were following a dry streambed. Rather than backtrack down the steep slope we decided to bushwhack, as if we weren't already bushwhacking, over to the trail which was about 250' to our right. I got the distinct impression Thunder Dan didn't like this part of the hike. Nobody ever told him we'd be bushwhacking a bushwhack. It took us about 40 minutes to plow, climb, and crawl over to the trail.
A few hundred feet more up the trail we emerged from the trees onto the lower part of Adams South shoulder. From here the trail was a mixture of rock hopping and scrub for about .2 miles and then all rocks to the junction with the Star Lake Trail. From here it was a short steep climb to the summit of Mt. Adams. While some areas above treeline on the Adams Slide Trail had plenty of cairns, other areas had none and the GPS had to be consulted a couple more times to find the trail.
After leaving the Buttress Trail it was about 1.3miles, 2,300' climb, 3.5 hours, and about four false summits to the top of Adams, arriving at about 2:00.
After snacks and a group photo, Dugan and I said goodbye to Thunder Dan as he headed off towards Mt. Jefferson.
It seems Dugan had forgot to mention she needed to get in to work early Monday, therefore she couldn't hike half the night. So we canceled our plans to bag Monroe and everything in between, and instead, bagged Sam Adams, J.Q. Adams, and then Headed up the "weanie" (as Stinkyfeet puts it) Osgood Trail, over Madison and back down to the Great Gulf Trail. We arrived back at the parking area around 7ish, followed by Thunder Dan about 10 minutes later. He had come down the Six Husbands Trail from Jefferson, so he didn't seem quite as chipper as Dugan and I. (The Six Husbands Trail has a very steep section)
Thunder Dan wasn't real pleased with the hike, but it couldn't have been all bad, he expressed interest in climbing the North slide on Mt. Osceola sometime. (edited: to change West Peak to Osceola)
Note:
Though the word slide is used in the name of the Adams Slide Trail, there is little evidence of a "slide". Picture the steep portion of the Ammonoosuc Ravine Trail above the Gem Pool with almost no turns and 35 years of abandonment. That's not to say this trail doesn't get hiked at all. There was evidence others have been up it in the last few years.
All things considered, it was another great hike with great company on a beautiful day, followed by a shower at the PNVC and then a terrific dinner in North Conwayr at Delaney's . Though not quite as good as the home cookin' I had last weekend
Pics are here
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