Adventures in the Pemi

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Papa Bear

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Well I made it back and didn't get lost or break an ankle. Weather was excellent in spite of dire forecasts. I will put in complete reports in a day or two, for now I'll summarize.

Tuesday: Drove up early from Boston, parked at the Hale Brook Trailhead on Zealand Road and took the AMC shuttle to the Lafayette Place Campground in Franconia Notch. Hiked up to Lonesome Lake Hut where I registered for the night. Then I hiked up the Fishin' Jimmy Trail to the Kinsman Ridge Trail. The idea was to then cross the Cannonballs and climb Cannon. This was a tactical error. The 'Jimmy was very tough and I ran out of time. I crossed the Cannonballs but due to lack of time and impending rain, I had to skip Cannon and retreat via the Lonesome Lake Trail back to the Hut. I should have simply gone up this trail, climbed Cannon, returned and climbed NE Cannonball (NEHH) and gone back down the way I came, skipping most of the Kinsman Ridge and 'Jimmy trails. So I missed Cannon, but bagged NE Cannonball. There's always a next time.

Wednesday: Long day. I hiked down the Cascade Brook Trail (the AT) from Lonesome Lake, crossed under I-93 and climbed the Liberty Springs Trail to the Ridge. I then took a right, climbed Liberty and Flume, then turned around and hiked the whole ridge line back to Lafayette and descended to Greenleaf Hut. This was around 5700' of elevation gain. Tired!

Thursday: This was to be the Big Day. Well, it was a little less big but satisfying nevertheless. I got up at 4:40 and left the Hut a little after 5:00 AM. Surprise: Lafayette stood above the Hut in full view - no clouds. First time I ever saw that at first light. I climbed Lafy, hiked over to North Lincoln and got on to the north prong of the Lincoln Slide. Went down and scrambled to get out of the gully and follow the stream down. Had some problems but eventually found my way out to Lincoln Brook and the Trail. Hiked down to the Owls Head slide entrance, went up (ouch - steep and exhausting, especially with my overnight pack), and arrived at the OH summit about 11:10 and took about a 35 minute lunch break. It was now about 11:45. Since I was bushed, I made a descision to head to the Franconia Brook Campground tonight rather than trying to bushwhack up Bondcliff and hike over to Guyot. I would however bushwhack down the east side of OH. This was long and tiring and in a word, rather bad (sorry, two words). I tried to stay on the east ridge but ended up in the gully to the north of it. [Edit] After checking the maps and my notes (and memory) I realize I "fell" into the gully/stream to the south of the ridge, not the north. See the full report below (when it gets written :)). [End Edit] But eventually I got out to Franconia Brook, and went down that boulevard of a trail, the Franconia Brook Trail, to the Campground. I got there about 4:30 PM, almost 12 hours after leaving the Hut.

Friday: Another long day. I was not giving up my hopes to bag the Bonds and Hale (and I had to get back to my car, far to the north) so what to do? Simple, hike up the Wilderness Trail, do the complete Bondcliff Trail (skipping West Bond), then hike across the Twinway, bag Zealand (for old time's sake) down to the Lend-a-hand Trail, bag Hale, then down to the car. Another 11+ hour day and almost 5800' of elevation. Was I tired? In a word "you better believe it!" (sorry, four words)

I managed to bag 5 new 4ks (Liberty, Flume, Owls Head, Bondcliff and Hale) and one NEHH (NE Cannonball), the weather and views were spectacular, and I made it back in one piece. Life is good!

Pb
 
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I've got the pictures of this trip up: Pemi Trek Pictures. Enjoy!

Question: What are the mountains seen from Mount Hale in pictures # 153 and 154 (second last page)?

Detailed reports to follow shortly.
 
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Re: nice hike!!!!

post'r boy said:
anybody wanna go whackin'?
So where were you when I was stuck in blowdowns sliding down 8' ledges on the east side of OH last Thursday? :D :D :D

Thanks for the IDs. That's was I thought, but I never saw Tom-Field-Willey end on before. They look much less pointy from Zeacliff.

Pb
 
PapaBear,

Outstanding hike and photos. Glad you had a good time and are back safe and sound. Sorry I could not get away to join you for a day. Next time.

JohnL
 
Ouch! That bushwhack down OH looks nasty. Ya shoulda took the ridge to the REAL OH and then headed down. Couldn't a' been any worse, and you would have come out closer to the camp site.

But Lincoln Slide sure looks inviting. I've got to try that.
 
Excellent job! I wish I had the free time to try such an endeavor.
 
Tuesday August 2, 2004: Franconia Notch to Lonesome Lake Hut and to Northeast Cannonball

I took advantage of this hiking trip to get in a short visit to my son and his family in Natick, MA. I took the bus up from New York on Monday, picked up the rental car in Framingham, and spent the night with them. My grandson is almost 3 and his little sister is just short of 2 months old.

I left Natick around 5:30 AM to make the drive up to New Hampshire. I had been given estimates of between 3 and 4 hours to make the trip to the Whites. I needed to get to the AMC shuttle pick-up point at the Zealand Trailhead on Zealand Road by 10:10 AM so I could get over to my starting point in Franconia Notch and get going by 11:00 AM. I took the Mass Pike in to Route 128 (I-95) and then 128 up to I-93, which took me all the way up and through Franconia Notch. I stopped on the way at some unremembered New Hampshire town at a Dunkin Donuts for a poor excuse for a breakfast. The traffic was next to nil and I was in Twin Mountains by 8:15 (the 3 hour estimate was more than adequate). I stopped at the Twin Mountain Trading Post for a parking permit, and then drove over on Route 302 to Zealand Road. I parked at the Hale Brook Trailhead and changed into my hiking stuff, saved my car clothes, and donned my overnight pack, which I had pared down to 20 lbs (minus the water which added about another 3 -4 lbs). I then tested my legs by hiking the easy mile along Zealand Road up to the Zealand Trailhead where the shuttle stop was located. I was way early, getting to the shuttle spot by about 9:20. It was a clear sunny day, but a bit warm and humid. Good for views, but not great for strenuous hiking.

The shuttle showed up about 10 minutes early and the older gent who was driving had my name on the list and those of another couple who showed up about that time. The shuttle seems to run on time and at $10 for anywhere to anywhere it was a good deal. My trip was quick: just up to Twin Mountains and then down to Franconia Notch, but longer trips (like those originating in Pinkham Notch) can take quite a while. The shuttle made one stop at the Gale River Trailhead and then went down Route 3 and I-93 to the Lafayette Place Campground where the Lonesome Lake Trailhead is located. I arrived just at 11:00, exactly on time.

The Hike up to Lonesome Lake Hut was fairly easy. The trail up is 1.6 miles (and about 1000' of elevation gain) of first a flat section, then some rocky going and finally a few ledges till we finally caught sight of Lonesome Lake, which in my opinion is beautiful in any weather and from any direction. I circled around the pond to the Hut where I registered for the night, unloaded most of the heavy stuff from my pack and had a lunch break. It had taken me just under an hour to get to the Hut from the Notch.

The plan was to climb Cannon Mountain and the Cannonballs. First I thought I would start at the tramway parking lot and climb Cannon from the north and the cross over the Cannonballs on the Kinsman Ridge Trail and then down to the hut. But the shuttle did not stop at the Cannon tramway and besides I thought it would be easier to go up to the Hut first, dump most of my stuff and then do the peaks as a loop from the Hut. This was supposed to be a short easy day.

So I hiked up the Fishin' Jimmy Trail to the Kinsman Ridge Trail. The idea was to then cross the Cannonballs and climb Cannon. This was a tactical error. The 'Jimmy was very tough and I ran out of time. The very steep and rough route combined with the heat and humidity torpedoed my plan. I also got a few sprinkles on the Kinsman Ridge Trail. So I crossed the Cannonballs all right, but I had to skip Cannon and retreat via the Lonesome Lake Trail back to the Hut. I should have simply gone up this trail, climbed Cannon, returned and climbed NE Cannonball (NEHH) and gone back down the way I came, skipping most of the Kinsman Ridge and 'Jimmy trails. So I missed Cannon, but bagged NE Cannonball. There's always a next time.

I got back to the Hut around 4:30. The sky was getting dark and rain would soon follow. I changed into "camp clothes" and straightened out my stuff. This hut has separate bunkhouses and I met my roommates: a couple with their 10 year old son who were up here for the first time. One thing I always love to see is all the newcomers and families at the huts. You can see future hikers in many of these 6, 8 or 10 year olds. And I admire the family who will spend the money on this very rough vacation (especially for young kids) instead of another trip to Disneyworld. And I love it in the evenings with folks playing cards or Scrabble with their kids. You know at home they would all be just watching the **** tube. But I digress.

It rained rather hard for a few hours and I was glad to find myself under a roof. A couple of thru-hikers ("Publics" a SOBO flip-flopper and "Roadrunner" a NOBO) showed up and got work-for-stay. Roadrunner said the Kinsmans were the toughest section of the AT he had done yet. I told him wait till you get to the Mahoosucs. They were good guys enjoying their hikes.

I was off to bed at 9:30, lights out time. Tomorrow would be a long day.

Total mileage: 6.3 miles (plus 1 mile on Zealand Road), elevation: +2950', -1986', time: 5:00
(Elevation gain/loss measured by my Suunto)
 
Wednesday August 4, 2004: Lonesome lake Hut to Greenleaf Hut via Flume, Liberty, Little Haystack, Lincoln and Lafayette

Tuesday evening I was feeling a little down since I had to shorten my planned route and missed Cannon Mountain. I started thinking that I should shorten today's plan and just go up to Greenleaf Hut the "easy way" (Lonesome Lake Trail down, Old Bridle Path up) and save my strength for Thursday. However I slept well and in the morning I felt strong and refreshed and I was rearing to go. So it was back to Plan A: do the Whole Franconia Ridge starting at Flume Mountain all the way over to Lafayette and then down to the hut. I did make a slight but important modification to the plan however: I decided to skip the Flume Slide Trail and go up the Liberty Springs Trail and then go over to Liberty and Flume and then back again. This is only slightly longer (less than you'd think - just one mile) but the Liberty Springs climb is MUCH easier than the Flume Slide climb, especially with my overnight pack. When I got to Flume and looked down that slope I was convinced I made the right choice. How could anyone climb that slide??

So off I went down the Cascade Brook Trail (the AT). It is a pleasant, easy descent of about 3 miles along side the brook to the crossing under Route 3 (I-93). The trail crosses the brook at one point but this turned out to be an easy rock-hop. The streams are not particularly high. I remember when I did this trail a few years ago I had quite a problem crossing this stream. I met a thru-hiker moving south named "Pick" and we chatted briefly.

I took a short break where the trail goes under the highway and changed into shorts and my short sleeve Coolmax top. The weather was not as warm as yesterday and much less humid so it was a real good hiking day. Skies were clear with a mixture of sun and clouds. It looked like it would be a great day to be on the ridge.

I then started up my one tough climb of the day: the Liberty Springs Trail, which rises over 3000' in a little over 3 miles. The terrain varies from packed dirt, rocks, rock stairs and occasional ledges, but the direction is always up. It's not as steep as some trails such as the climb up South Kinsman or Wildcat, but it falls just slightly behind those. It's rather like the trail up South Twin from Galehead, but about 3 times longer. I felt my pack on this climb, I'll tell you. But I was feeling good because I knew once I hit the ridge, the gradient would be much easier and the views would be great. I passed the campground which appeared deserted and eventually got to the ridge line. It took about 2 hours to climb this trail. I was planning to drop my pack before I went over to Flume and back but I decided to keep it until I got to Mount Liberty which was only .3 miles further on. The trail up was gentle at first and then, as is typical of so many White Mountain summits, it was steep and rocky the last tenth of a mile or so to the summit. And what a summit! I had never before been to the Franconia Ridge when it wasn't shrouded in fog or rain, and I'd never been to Mount Liberty before, ever! This is one spectacular peak. With it's double jagged rocky pinnacles, it's 360 degree views, and the correspondingly spectacular surrounding mountains. From Flume directly to the south, around west to the Kinsmans, around to that ever impressive cliffside of Cannon, to the Whole Franconia Ridge to the north, to the Twins to the northeast then the Bonds to the east and Owl's Head down in the middle of it all. Breathtaking. I never realized Liberty was such a gem.

But I had places to see and miles to go before I slept, so after a short break I stashed my pack and went off to Flume to the south. It was just a few minutes past noon. Just as I left, a camp group of about 10 boys and a couple of teen age leaders showed up, so my timing was impeccable. The trail down to the col was rather ledgy at first but then was rather gentle and pretty through pleasant second growth and a few boggy areas. Flume Mountain has a rather rounded peak when approached from this side. The steep part is on the west side facing Franconia Notch. The summit is a series of crags overlooking the steep slides and cliffs. There were a couple of hikers here and I got one to take my summit photo. I asked, rhetorically, "How could anyone climb that trail?" nodding over to the slide ascending from below from the west. One of the other hikers chimed in "With great difficulty!". How true.

I then hiked back to Liberty and retrieved my pack. There was a family group here and the father took my picture before I moved on back along the Franconia Ridge. The peaks here were all familiar but I had never before seen them on a clear day. It was not sunny - the clouds were taking over the remaining patches of blue - but the fog and clouds and rain I had always encountered here were no where. I met a thru-hiker named "Nightrider" moving south who was overwhelmed by the views. When he said he had camped last night at Garfield Campground, I kiddingly said "You're moving slow today". He answered "how can you hurry with views like this". I liked that.

Of all these peaks, I like Lincoln the best. It is impressive both from the west, with it's multiple slides and scars, and the east with the massive Lincoln Slide, and along the ridge line it has impressive crags and pinnacles with vertical drop-offs, especially towards the west. In contrast, I think of Lafayette as a boring lump. But a spectacular boring lump! I did some visual scouting of the Lincoln Slide both from Lincoln and North Lincoln and found a series of ledges leading southeast off of North Lincoln that looked like the right approach to the slide I would descend the following day. I stuck my red bandanna in a rock at the point where the ledges led off the trail in case the ridge happened to be completely socked in when I got here early the next morning. The last climb, to Lafayette, was longer than it looked at first. It always is. It's such a massive peak you tend to compress the distance in your mind's eye when you look at it across from Lincoln. "Why it's just over there" you think, but in fact it's WAY over there. But I finally made my way to it's summit on tired legs by about 4:30 and started down to the hut, a mile and 1100' below. It seems whenever I descend Lafayette, the skies always seem to clear as I make my way down, and today was no exception. By the time I got to the hut and turned around, much of the ski was clear again and Lafayette and Lincoln looked particularly majestic in the late afternoon sun.

I got to the hut about 5:10 and found a bunk (near the bathroom, of course) and had some of that wonderful lemonade they always seem to have ready. Supper was great as usual, and the evening had a gorgeous sunset. I was more than ready for sleep at 9:30. Tomorrow would be my earliest start of the whole week. I was tired, but feeling very, very good.

Total Mileage: 14.7, elevation: +5700', -4260', time: 9:27
(Elevation gain/loss measured by my Suunto)
 
Great trip reports! I have both ascended and descended the Flume slide trail, and you made a VERY wise decision to take Liberty springs. The FST is a fun climb but not with a pack! I am especially interested in your account of the Lincoln slide, as I would like to descend that someday too!

J
 
Thursday August 5, 2004: Greenleaf Hut to Franconia Brook campground via the Lincoln Slide and Owls Head

I slept lightly that night at Greenleaf Hut. I had packed my stuff almost completely the night before and put it out in the main room. I set my watch for 4:40 AM and got to bed early. There was some chatter from a group of young teens in the next room and an occasional "Quiet!", "Shut up!" etc. but eventually that faded away. The guy across from me snored very loudly and I wish I had remembered my ear plugs but that too didn't keep me awake. When my watch alarm went off I was very groggy, but I did what I had to do and dragged myself out of my bunk and very quietly folded my blankets "once long ways, twice cross wise ..." and stole out of the bunk room without waking anyone. When I looked out the windows and up at Lafayette I expected to see a wall of fog and clouds. Surprise: Lafayette and Lincoln stood above the Hut in full view - no clouds. This was the first time I had ever stayed at Greenleaf Hut where we were not socked in the early in the morning. Apparently the force would be with me this morning. I managed to eat a power bar and some cheese and had some lemonade that was there and I got out the door just after 5:00 AM.

The climb up Lafayette felt easy in spite of the steep slope and my overnight pack. The adrenalin helped as did the beautiful sunrise happening before me. First I saw the sunrise clouds over Lafayette Click for photo and then near the top was the sight to the west of the sun hitting the top of Cannon Mountain behind me with the hut far below - still sleeping soundly [Click for photo].

I rounded the top of Lafayette and took time to change my clothes. It was quite cold (I would estimate under 50 degrees) and windy, but hardly arctic. As long as I was moving I felt warm. The chill would continue on until I got over the east side of the ridge at North Lincoln where I would get out of the wind. I had made it to the summit in just about an hour, typical for me.

I hiked over to North Lincoln and found the spot I had marked with my red bandana the afternoon before. It was just before you reach the top of North Lincoln where there are two boulders on the left (east) of the trail [Click for photo].

The Lincoln Slide, summary:
Let me summarize the slide route by breaking it into three sections:
1) Getting onto the north prong from North Lincoln
2) Working down the slide
3) Getting out of the stream gully to the left bank of the stream, into the woods and doing the bushwhack.
I would say that 1) and 2) went well and were no problem even with my pack, but 3), getting into the woods and doing the bushwhack did not go easily. Although here I am writing this so I obviously made it out.

The Lincoln Slide: getting onto the north prong from North Lincoln:
[See photos 88 - 93. You can go from photo to photo by clicking on the double arrowhead on the upper right of each shot. Click for photo #88.] From the point I had marked with my bandanna, I moved off the trail to the left, slanting southeast and moved down two or three slabs which slanted down. From the last slab, there are some boulders off about 20 yards to the right and slightly up hill. I got off the slab (on the left - the drop was too high at the tip end) and circled around below the tip of the slab towards the right and then worked my way over to the boulders. It's pretty open here and I felt a little guilty stepping on the occasional Diapensia and Mountain Azalea. When you reach the boulders you are but a few yards from the tip top of the slide. You need to just work through some Krumholz for these few yards and you are there. One thing you don't want to do is bushwhack through Krumholz if you can avoid it. You can reach the slide in 5 minutes from the trail, or 10 minutes if you are overly cautious.

The Lincoln Slide: working down the slide:
[See photos 93 - 103. Click for photo #93.] I must say, the slide itself was rather easy. This is a very loose, dirty slide where most of the surface is covered by gravel and pebbles together with rocks of all sizes up to boulders. I suspect that this is because it is not as steep as some slides (Owls Head for example) where most of this small loose stuff has long since washed away. It was like walking in loose sand. On every step you would slide down a few inches (or more) and you just had to be very careful not to dislodge anything large. I stayed to the far left of the slide. The left (north) prong, which I was on, reaches higher then the main prong and seemed easier. The middle and right side of the slide looked more rocky and a fairly steep gully went down the center. I got myself down to the "bottom" of the slide in about 40 minutes from it's top, or 50 minutes from the trail on North Lincoln.

The Lincoln Slide: getting out of the stream gully to the left bank of the stream, into the woods and doing the bushwhack:
First off let me say there is no abrupt point where you can say the slide has ended and you are "just" in a stream gully. One of the problems is figuring out when you've had enough of the stream and make your way into the woods. Judging by other accounts, I stayed too long in the stream. I climbed down in the stream bed itself a considerable distance past photo #103 [Click for photo] and when I finally made my way up the left bank it was a very tough push to get through the very thick brush on the very steep bank. I went up once, gave up, went down the stream further another 50 yards or so and pushed through again. This time I kept pushing since I knew some relatively open woods were in there somewhere and finally made it through to more reasonable terrain. Advice #1: find someone who has done this and find the right spot to enter the woods!

At this point I was in a fairly easy bushwhack. But here in retrospect I realize I made my second mistake, I worked my way down hill without paying much attention to where I was with respect to the stream. I suddenly realized I could no longer hear the stream. Since I had a map and knew the bearing the stream took on its way down, I worked my way to the right about 45 degrees up from that bearing, so I would get over to the stream while still moving down the slope. After 10 or 15 minutes I could hear the stream again and I found that there was a ridge or hogback that paralleled the stream perhaps 50 or 100 yards to the left of it, and this is what I followed down. Advice #2: Always stay close enough to the stream so you can hear it. The slope eventually got gentler and I could now occasionally see the stream through the trees. No longer was it a tumbling rill, now it was just a lazy stream. I had to work around an occasional boggy area but nothing substantial. Eventually I began to hear an loader sound: I was nearing Lincoln Brook. I reached Lincoln Brook just 10 or 20 yards form the confluence with the slide stream, just at a point where a beautiful cascade tumbled down [Click for photo]. I could rock hop across Lincoln Brook just below this cascade and after climbing perhaps 10 or 20 yards, I found myself on the Lincoln Brook Trail. It had taken me altogether 2 and a 1/2 hours from the top of the ridge. I know others have done it in half that amount of time or less. My biggest delay was due to the problems negotiating the bushwhack. If you can get some expert advice on that section you should be able to do it faster than I did.

Owls head
I changed out of my sweaty long bushwhack clothes and quickly hiked down the Lincoln Brook Trail to the large Cairn marking the start of the trail up to Owls head. By the measure of what I had done yesterday and this morning this was a walk in the park. I started up about 9:45. I soon reached the Owls Head slide [Click for photo]. Ouch! This was steep and exhausting, especially with my overnight pack. This slide differed noticeably from the Lincoln Slide: it was steeper (my Maptech software reads it as a 40% - 45% grade, and the Lincoln Slide as a 30% - 35% grade) and was more rocky, with a number of ledges to scramble over. It had much less gravel and small pebbles which characterized the Lincoln Slide. Although the WMG says to stay to the right going up, I just followed the path of least resistance and moved from side to side as the terrain seemed to indicate. The slide was also shorter than the Lincoln Slide, but because I was going up, not down, it seemed to go on forever. But forever was not forever and I eventually got to the trail, which was steep at first but soon leveled off as I reached the ridge line. Then it was an easy walk along the ridge to the high point. The so called "summit" had an old blowdown to sit on, a cairn,and a sign nailed to tree. It took me an hour and 25 minutes to reach the top. It was 11:08 and I was tired so I decided it was time for lunch.

(Continued on next note)
 
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(continued from previous note)

Down the east side of Owls Head
At about 11:45 I decided to move on. Since I was bushed, I made a decision to head to the Franconia Brook Campground tonight rather than trying to bushwhack up Bondcliff and hike over to Guyot Campground. I decided however to bushwhack down the east side of OH, bushed though I was. Actually I just didn't want to go back down the OH Slide (though I know now it would have been shorter by far then the bushwhack I took). This was long and tiring and in a word, rather bad (sorry, two words). There was a herd path leading east off the summit so I followed that for a while. After about 100' of elevation loss it petered out, but not before I found this: [Click for photo]. This was a surprise to find in the absolute middle of no where. But I'm glad I found it! I pushed on and tried to stay on the east ridge but ended up in the gully/stream to the south of the ridge. It was probably a matter of over compensation for the thick brush that was steering me to the left, so I pushed to the right - too far it turned out. The slope got very steep and I found my self in a gully. There was a stream there but it was mostly underground up here. I decided the best course was to move down this gully but that was easier said then done. The rocks and ledges became bigger and I found myself negotiating my way down first 4' ledges and then 8' - 10' ledges. BTW, when does a ledge be come a cliff? There were bigger drops I managed to avoid but this was not a fun route. To make matters worse, blowdowns seemed to concentrate in this gully, probably because of the thin soils on the steep sections. I knew I had to get out of this gully so I pushed over towards the left side. At about this point I noticed that the bushwhack gremlins had snatched my map out of the pocket of my tummy pack. I lost both the Topozone printout I made of my route, but also my waterproof AMC Franconia/Pemmigewasset Map. To make matter worse, the gremlins also snatched by VFTT patch from where it was pinned to my tummy pack. Never mind losing the map, losing the VFTT patch really pissed me off! Around about this time I recalled a conversation I had the night before with one of the hut croo. I said I'd like to give her a copy of my route for today and explained where I would be going (including what I was doing right this minute). She said was I doing it with someone else, and I said no, I would be doing it solo. She said something like "That really doesn't seem like such a smart idea". No map, no VFTT patch, no, not too smart. But I still knew down hill from up so I pushed on and found my way to a ridge line above and to the left of the gully and slowly, very slowly, made my way down. Eventually I reached a very gentle area and the stream curved to the right. I still, of course, had my compass and knew the original bearing of the ridge and gully so I kept to that and lo and behold, I came out to Franconia Brook, running wide and swift. Much relieved, I changed to my Tevas and forded this stream (about knee deep) and made my way up to the path on the opposite shore. It was about 2:45, three hours after starting down from the OH summit. But I knew where I was, map or no map, and it was where I wanted to be, so I was as happy as a pig in ****!

On to Franconia Brook Campground
After changing and eating a bit, I found my way from the path I was on up a bit farther to the Franconia Brook Trail. Boy talk about contrast. This sucker could be wheel chair accessible if a wheel chair could manage to get in here! It was a literal boulevard. They had laid this trail along an old railroad right-of-way and you could actually see some old RR ties here and there. Luckily I had studied the map rather well before managing to lose it, so off I went the 3 or so miles down the trail to the Franconia Brook Campground. I first passed a couple of pretty lakes on the left and at another point the trail went to the left around a beaver bog before returning to the railroad right-of-way. At 4:30 PM, 11 and a half hours after leaving Greenleaf Hut, I crossed the East Branch of the Pemi on the stepping stones, over to the Campground. This was a USFS campground (=free!) so I just had to pick a spot an register myself. I pitched my tent, eat, hung my food and was in bed by 7:30. Quite a day. And guess what? I met not one other hiker all day long!

Total Mileage: 9.1, elevation: +2810', -5600', time: 11:22.
 
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Congratulations on your great adventure. E-mail me your postal address and I'll send a VFTT patch as an award :)
Papa Bear said:
I decided to skip the Flume Slide Trail and go up the Liberty Springs Trail and then go over to Liberty and Flume and then back again. This is only slightly longer (less than you'd think - just one mile)
I think you will find that now that the Flume Slide Trail doesn't start at the Flume it's actually a longer route to Flume than the Liberty Spring Trail, but with a couple hundred feet less climb. And the trail goes up a nondescript slide to the L you don't see not the one on the face which I want to do sometime - oops, you don't want to hear more of my ideas.

I decided however to bushwhack down the east side of OH, bushed though I was. Actually I just didn't want to go back down the OH Slide (though I know now it would have been shorter by far then the bushwhack I took).
Actually I think you will find the bushwhack route to be a mile shorter in distance although it may take longer. Didn't I warn you to stay away from the stream gully? And did you read the note from John Swanson where he sometimes has a dozen copies of the map?
 
Looks like you had another great adventure, nice pictures and trip report as always!You should be in fine form for Baxter next month, especially the Fort and Traveler bushwacks. Can't wait!
 
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RoySwkr said:
E-mail me your postal address and I'll send a VFTT patch as an award :)

Thanks anyway Roy, but I have a few spare patches I got when they were available. For the important things I believe in redundancy. :)
Pb
 
Friday August 6, 2004: Franconia Brook Campground to the Hale Brook trailhead via the Bonds, Zealand and Hale

I didn't sleep well Thursday night. It wasn't that I was in my tent on my Thermorest rather than in a bed in a hut. I was chilled towards morning. To save weight in my pack which I had to carry 4 days for this one night, I took only my tent fly and groundcloth but not the tent proper. I figured bugs would not be a problem and the weren't. I also just took my bivy sack (some kind of aluminized Mylar) and my silk bag liner. This combination had served before on cool summer nights. I figured it would at worst get into the high 40s. And it did. But the problem was the combination: cold air moved through under the tent fly where there was a gap of a few inches above the ground cloth. This must have brought the temperature below the dew point where I was lying since I got an inordinate amount of condensation and the silk liner was actually wet around my upper body. I should have shouldered the extra 1.5 to 2 lbs. and either brought the tent or my summer bag (or both). By morning I had to pile on extra clothes including my Frogg Togg tops and bottoms. I wasn't in danger of hypothermia, but it was uncomfortable and so I didn't sleep well. I dragged myself out of bed about 5:15 AM, broke camp, ate some cold food and was off by around 6:00 AM.

Ironically, today, although the longest hike with the most elevation gain, was almost an anticlimax to yesterday's double bushwhack. But once I got moving I warmed up and enjoyed the trails. The Wilderness Trail was as easy as yesterdays walk on the Franconia Brook trail. It was also built along an old RR, and in this case the ties were pretty much all still in place, although they were slowly rotting away. After a couple of miles I hit the Bondcliff Trail. I would do this trail complete, end to end. In fact I would cross the Pemigewasset Wilderness complete, south to north today. The Wilderness Trail is the southern boundary and the Twinway is the northern boundary.

The Bondcliff Trail
The Bondcliff Trail started as an easy woods trail as it slowly rose on the south side of Bondcliff. It was mostly packed dirt with your occasional roots, and a fair smattering of rocks. After about an hour we crossed and recrossed an old slide or dry stream gully and things got rather steep for a while. There were a sequence of rock steps and switchbacks as we crossed the valley we were in onto the east side of the valley and onto the southwest ridge. Here the trail rose steeply but not roughly and finally reached the point where the trees became Krumholz above 3500'. Finally the trail took a 180 degree turn to the right as it rose towards treeline and I had to climb one rather enormous ledge. Definitely this was not wheelchair accessible :). At this point I took careful note of the vegetation and terrain down to the west. The Krumholz was thick and unrelenting, and the sharp west ridge showed little or no open areas. I think if I had attempted to bushwhack up to this point the day before it would have been very tough going.

Bondcliff
Soon after the big ledge we rose above treeline and the ridge opened up before me. The wind was strong and cold and the views were gorgeous. My notes say "Fabulous, incredible views. Best day." The sky was a mixture of sun and clouds and I was alone on this marvelous summit. I saw the rock pinnacle just past the summit where folks like to get their picture taken. Aw shucks, no one was here to take my picture! Luckily the wind was blowing in from the cliffs, so I was in little danger of getting blown off. The views across to West Bond with those three inviting slides were spectacular. The Franconia Ridge, capped in clouds were beautiful as were the Presidentials peeking out from behind Mount Bond. And Mount Bond itself and the intervening ridge line was a great sight. In a way I'm glad now that I didn't have time last year to get down here when I did the other 2 Bonds. It was rainy and cloudy. For a first time on Bondcliff, this was the best. But I was getting cold, and I got moving, passing 2 sets of 2 hikers coming up from the north. But I was first on Bondcliff for the day and I had it all to myself for a while.

The hike across the col was longer than it looked. I checked the slope up the steep side from Hellgate Brook and said to myself "Now that looks interesting". So my mind is still thinking about how to do the bushwhack that I skipped yesterday. I got back into the woods and climbed to the top of Mount Bond. I wonder why this peak, more than 400' higher than Bondcliff is mostly wooded except for the very top, whereas Bondcliff is entirely above treeline? I'm sure it's rock or the direction or the steepness or something or other. I moved along but didn't pass another hike until I got to the West Bond cutoff. A family was there just staring up to that peak. I skipped West Bond (sorry) since I had done that before and I had a long day in front of me. I passed by Guyot Campground and got to the Twinway about 11:40. I love that little bump you go over just before you hit the Twinway. I call it South Guyot or sometimes Little Guyot. It has a beautiful cairn topped by a big chunk of quartz.

The Twinway
Now It was the Twinway towards Zealand, Zeacliff and Zealand Falls. I always remember this section as relatively flat. You go up South Twin, across the Twinway then down Zeacliff. But you don't! There is a good deal of elevation gain between Guyot and Zealand including steep ledges to try the tired legs. When I got to the Zealand cutoff, I went in to see that wonderful sign. What do I find but a couple of 50ish thru-hikers, "C'est la Vie" and "Louie". They said they came in when they say the sign to just "check it out" and stayed to have lunch. Bless them, thru-hikers are not know for side trips just to "check something out". I told them not to miss the views from Zeacliff, and I was off again. The trail to Zeacliff was longer than I remember and the steep down hill was in two parts, one by Zealand Pond and one at Zeacliff. It's good to see these trails periodically. There are lots of details that fade from memory. Along this section I met Ann from VFTT and she recognized me. We chatted briefly as her dog was mooching some snacks from her.

Finally I got to Zeacliff which I went over to to check out the views. Although the clouds had mostly crowded the blue out of the sky, there were still patches of sunlight on the flanks of Monroe and Washington visible over to the east. I met a section hike named "Detour" here and he was quite a character. He would not stop talking and ran off at the mouth almost the whole way down to the stream above Zealand Falls. Thank goodness he was not going to Mount Hale as I was, or I would have gone crazy. Finally when we got the that flat slab where the trail crosses the stream he decided to hang out for a while so I went ahead to the junction of the Lend-A-hand trail, just a little further on. I had decided I would stop at the hut if I needed water, but I checked and still had over a liter so I decided to forgo that little side journey. It was 2:10 and I took a break and ate some food. My last real break for the day. I still had about 5 miles before me to climb up Mount Ha;le and then down to Zealand Road. I was on schedule but there was no slack. I got moving again around 2:30 PM.

Mount Hale
The Lend-A-Hand showed signs of being a new trail. The treadway was not packed and there were plenty of roots and plenty of moss on the rocks. The first section was a easy trail up a moderate grade with occasional rocky sections. Then there was a long section through a boggy area across puncheons. It's easy to walk on this type of trail and the area was quite lovely. Then as we got closer to the peak, the trail got rather steep and we climbed first a sub-peak and then after crossing a gentle col, the main peak. I reached the summit just after 4:00 PM, my 5th new 4k of the week (plus I did that NEHH). The top was wooded but a large circular clearing was there and the foundations of a fire tower, long gone. There was a huge cairn in the center and by standing on it you could get reasonable views of the Twins to the west and the Willey Range to the southeast.

I took the Hale Brook Trail down off the summit. This seemed clearly to be an older, more well established trail. The grades were gentler and it showed signs of good maintenance over the years. After a mile of so, the grade got gentle and we moved down through an open hardwood forest to the road. I finally got to the trailhead, was saw my car was there in one piece and breathed a sigh of relief. It was almost 5:30 PM, another 11+ hour day!

A great day, a great week.

Total Mileage: 18.0, elevation: +5790', -5410', time: 11:16.
 
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I seem to take as long or longer to get a completed trip report finished as it takes me to do the trip in the first place. But I have managed to get all the stuff from this trek, plus pictures, links etc. onto my web site and I think it came out pretty good.

I'm not sure anyone else is like me in this regard, but I tend to "do" my treks 3 times: once when I do them in the wild, the second time when I write them up and try to remember what all the pictures are of and what my cryptic nortes mean, and a third time when I reread the report later.

Anyway, here's the "final" version of my Pemi adventure report: Pemi Adventure report

PS: I finally learned to spell "Pemigewasset". No wait, that's "Pemmigewasset". No, no it's "Pemigewassat". No wait ... whatever! :D :D

Enjoy
Pb
 
Papa Bear said:
I'm not sure anyone else is like me in this regard, but I tend to "do" my treks 3 times: once when I do them in the wild, the second time when I write them up and try to remember what all the pictures are of and what my cryptic nortes mean, and a third time when I reread the report later.
How about all the time spent going over the trip on maps and online in advance, I "do" many of my trips so much beforehand I'm too tired to go :)
 
Recon of Richard's Ridge

Last Thursday was such a fine day that I decided to go hiking in spite of a cold that was trying to exhaust the entire contents of my body through my nose. I wanted a route up The Cliffs of Bond that did not involve the boring circuitous trail, and decided to try the W ridge which PapaBear had planned for a route.

I left the Franconia Brook Trail somewhat N of the relocation and angled uphill N until I was about E of the cliffs on the SE end of Owls Head, then turned more E to ascend the actual ridge. There were a variety of hardwood and softwood types but generally good going, one feature was a talus field among the birches with a band of cliffs about 10' high that I had to circle. The 2889 bump was mostly birches with a fern understory, there was lots of moose sign and a couple times I heard large animals running but did not see them. Almost all in softwoods to 3314 but not particularly thick except the actual summit which is easy to bypass.

The col beyond was longer than I expected, and the first couple hundred feet up the far side were easy. After a short section described as thick and thicker, I got my first (and last) view of the ridge ahead which appeared to be softwoods. After more moderate going, the scrub started becoming very thick. It was look for an opening and follow it, then look for the next. Sometimes there would be a wall of green ahead so I would
pull on some branches to see where the space was, and if there wasn't any move laterally and try again. At a rest stop I discovered that the main strap on my pack was chafed halfway through, not encouraging when I was trying to yank the pack through holes narrower than it was. After some thought I had some ideas to jury-rig a replacement, but fortunately it never broke. Eventually I arrived at the lowest talus which was mixed with scrub and had looked awful from above, but I finally got a break: the rock scrambling was trivial for someone just back from Colorado and the intervening scrub was only knee deep. In fact it would be easy for someone wanting to look at the cliffs from below to come down this far from the top. It took just a few minutes to reach the trail and a few more to the summit. Bondcliff is a place that I'm either there late in the day or in a hurry to be elsewhere, and this time was no exception. After a few minutes looking around, I headed down the trail to use up the remaining daylight. I wasn't afraid of dark or cold with 2 headlamps and
a couple of jackets I never wore, but it's a long slog out however you look at it. The bushwhack of maybe 2.3 straight-line miles took me (gasp) about 6.5hours, and if that doesn't sound slow enough about a third of the time was on the last .4 straight-line miles.

Now PapaBear is easily twice as fast as I am on level ground based on his marathon time, and presumably could also do the bushwhack faster even with an overnight pack. There are plenty of level campsites on the ridge but no water. For those like me
starting at the road rather than Hellgate Brook, going up the ridge
instead of around by the trail saves no time, but oh the adventure. It is about the thickest going I have seen anywhere on Bond, much worse than the W ridge of W Bond for example. Going up the brook valley N or S is much easier as can be seen by observing the vegetation where they reach the trail.
 
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