Last month I hiked Madison and Adams going up Madison by the Watson path and Adams by the Star Lake trail. Today I repeated the basic loop with some interesting additions.
I took the Valley Way to the Brookside and immediately after the (easy) brook crossing took the Inlook Trail to Dome Rock and the Upper Inlook. There were excellent views to the south on the many sections of open ridge along that trail. At the Upper Inlook I took the Kelton trail to the Brookside, which I followed to its junction with the Watson path.
My original plan was to take the Lower Bruin back to the Valley Way, as last month I found the section of the Watson Path below treeline very disagreeable, writing:
After lunch in the hut I repeated the ascent of Adams by the Star Lake Trail, but descended by Lowe's Path and below Thunderstorm Junction took the Spur Trail all the way to the Randolph path. The section of the Spur Trail above treeline has good views into King's Ravine, but the best views come from three lower outlooks: Knight's Castle a bit above Crag Camp, Crag Camp itself, and Lower Crag a bit below the camp. Chemin des Dames was easy to see, as were some sections of the King Ravine Trail going up the headwall.
The Spur Trail got me down to Randolph Path, from there I once again returned to my car by the Amphibrach.
This is the first time that I have done the Inlook and Kelton trails; they are well worth the slight increase in distance. I now believe that the Watson Path and Star Lake Trail are definitely the best ways to climb Madison and Adams from Appalachia. The upper part of the Spur Trail IMHO is a better descent route than Lowe's Path if going west of King's Ravine.
The excellent weather plus constant views made this an outstanding trip.
I took the Valley Way to the Brookside and immediately after the (easy) brook crossing took the Inlook Trail to Dome Rock and the Upper Inlook. There were excellent views to the south on the many sections of open ridge along that trail. At the Upper Inlook I took the Kelton trail to the Brookside, which I followed to its junction with the Watson path.
My original plan was to take the Lower Bruin back to the Valley Way, as last month I found the section of the Watson Path below treeline very disagreeable, writing:
JohnL suggested that the fact that the trail was wet the day I did it may have contributed to my difficulties, so I decided to try it again. The footing was definitely better now that it was not slippery, and the "car washes" I got in the overgrown sections disappeared. Steep and rough, but definitely tolerable. The section above treeline, of course, is the justification for using that trail; 1,000 vertical feet as opposed to a mere 500 by the Osgood Path.Below treeline the trail has no redeeming value; it is steep, rocky, rooty and overgrown.
After lunch in the hut I repeated the ascent of Adams by the Star Lake Trail, but descended by Lowe's Path and below Thunderstorm Junction took the Spur Trail all the way to the Randolph path. The section of the Spur Trail above treeline has good views into King's Ravine, but the best views come from three lower outlooks: Knight's Castle a bit above Crag Camp, Crag Camp itself, and Lower Crag a bit below the camp. Chemin des Dames was easy to see, as were some sections of the King Ravine Trail going up the headwall.
The Spur Trail got me down to Randolph Path, from there I once again returned to my car by the Amphibrach.
This is the first time that I have done the Inlook and Kelton trails; they are well worth the slight increase in distance. I now believe that the Watson Path and Star Lake Trail are definitely the best ways to climb Madison and Adams from Appalachia. The upper part of the Spur Trail IMHO is a better descent route than Lowe's Path if going west of King's Ravine.
The excellent weather plus constant views made this an outstanding trip.