Cannon Mtn. Jan. 14, 2005

vftt.org

Help Support vftt.org:

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

gaiagirl

New member
Joined
Sep 16, 2005
Messages
547
Reaction score
43
Location
Boston, MA
Jim Frati, his 12 year old daughter Nicole and I had planned to backpack this past weekend, possibly doing part of Franconia Ridge heading up Falling Waters and staying at campsites and/or shelters along the way. We met in North Conway around 10AM Saturday amid pouring rain but decided to drive a bit and think about something that might be doable considering the weather and the upcoming forecast for rapidly dropping temperatures and howling wind the following day. We settled on the idea that we could head up to bag Cannon and plan to go over to Lonesome Lake so we could avoid taking all of our gear by staying at the hut.

Driving over to Franconia Notch things did not look inspiring. It was raining harder and the wind was pushing it sideways in addition. Jim left it up to us what we wanted to do, so we went inside the Lodge at the Cannon Tramway and waited until 1PM to see if the weather would clear a bit. At 1 oclock nothing much had changed and we were ready to go and all decided we would try to bag Cannon as a day hike at the very least the wet messy weather be damned. So, we drove over to the far lot at the Kinsman Ridge Trail and began our hike around 1:25PM.

For the first 20 minutes of our hike, the trail was simply packed snow, though somewhat soft on top. As we began to hit the slope in the trail, however, the trail became slushy brook for the most part :eek: !!! Water was simply gushing from the slopes, it looked for all the world like spring thaw in the mountains and I marvelled to think that this was mid-January!! What challenging winter conditions. I am getting more and more experience with winter hiking as every week passes, but I still consider myself a novice --- But here is something I have known for a while, borne out by this past weekend's experience ---- cold = GOOD, warm = BAD .... and snow = GOOD, rain = BAD when it comes to winter hiking!!! :mad: ....LOL
Not much more to report so far as our ascent goes, except to say that my boots were nice and waterproof .... for the first 40 minutes or so of hiking in those slushy streams .... and then they saturated and just weren't anymore!!! LOL .... I'm not sure anything outside of a double plastic would have been so i'm not too upset, but i'm gonna NIkwax the hell out of these things today, for certain! We made it up to the top in about 2.5 hours ... Nicole wasn't feeling perfect but she soldiered on like the tough little trooper she is, not even batting an eye when we got to the Tram on top and found the snack bar (and everything else) closed .... No chicken fingers on the top on this day, sadly :( .
We decided to come down the fastest, easiest and most fun way we possibly could. Yes, for a good part of the way we SLID on our backsides down the deserted ski slopes. Speaking for myself, it was the most fun I have had in quite some time. I would say it took us not much more than a half hour to get down. The fast part was good but the fun part was better; I haven't giggled uncontrollably in a long time, but that was the feeling, and I hope I get to have it again soon.
The next day I was feeling utterly miserable, so opted not to try for Willey, Field and Tom. The temp had dipped and wind had picked up in N. Conway but it wasn't terrible yet. As I drove the Kanc though, the summits looked awful .... wind-whipped snow and freezing fog, or so it appeared. Jim went out and bagged Willey and reported that the wind was like a freight train. I woke yesterday thinking I might try to Join Poison Ivy and friends for the Tripyramids, but I wasn't sure I was over this sinus infection, so I decided to try to bag something small alone instead. I went out Tecumseh with my pathetic thinly-lined Sorrels since my new Montrails were STILL damp .... I hiked about an hour in perfect blue sky but very COLD beauty before I turned around. I'm praying to the weather gods now that the coming weekend will bring more blue skies and cold temperatures so I can venture out there for more fun and views and peace soon :) .
 
Chris, you must have been wading up a river to get those Montrails to soak through. ;)
Did you have good gaiters on ? I've gotten mine wet by water coming in over the top, or from sweat, but not soaked through yet. How was the warmth and comfort ? Mine were warm on Sunday in the Cats as long as I kept moving (about 9 degrees all day, partially frozen mud, ice and snow all day). I actually started the hike on sunday by jamming my feet into frozen, snow filled boots as I had left them in the tent vestibule Saturday night :( . I could feel the cold when we stood around, which was why I got a bit anti-social towards the end of the day. :eek:
Anyway, glad to hear you made it out this weekend.
 
Good report Chris, you failed to mention that your boots were soaked because when we stepped on the snowwe sank and where there was snow it then turned to slushy water. It was sooo wet because there was water running under and over the snow in some places. I was wearing a 8000meter boot by Kayland that has the intergrated gaitors and my feet got damp. All said it was a great trip with 2 good troopers. Niki though said her feet stayed dry in her Koflax Degree's.
You are a good hiker Chris and I enjoyed the day. Jim :)
 

Latest posts

Top