DayTrip
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This summer I will be making my first trips to NY to hike some of the Adirondack High Peaks. I've bought the Adirondack Mountain Club High Peak Trails Guide and related map and was a little "thrown off" by some of the stuff. Was hoping to get some clarification here from regulars to the area. Pretty much all my hiking to date has been in the White Mountains of NH, which seems comparatively more simple and straightforward.
1) It appears as though trails are numbered in the high peaks and have a related color code as opposed to the named trails and relatively few colors of blazes in NH. Do the trail signs actually just have numbers or are the names on them as well? It sounds as though the colored trail markers are tags too, not paint blazes. Correct? So, for example, if I'm following the "Hopkins Trail" am I watching for "Hopkins" on signs or for a yellow "2" tag on the trees? The guide describes the trails in fairly tedious detail, particularly intersections, so I'm curious how obscure the labeling actually is and how critical it is to know the color and number of trails. (I always carry a paper CalTopo map of my route in addition to official map so making the notations isn't a huge deal.) The map that I got with guide is almost unreadable with all the numbers and symbols all over it.
2) Is there such a thing as a "standard" trail head parking rate? I see amounts listed in some area descriptions but not others and amounts ranging from $5-$10 day. Can you buy a season pass for all of NY the way you can in NH and if so is there a website or mail in option for it? Driving to NY just to get the pass is not an option for me, especially if the office hours are restrictive.
3) I assume camp ground pressure is just as bad or worse than NH in terms of driving to a campground on a Fri or Sat night and finding an open site without a reservation. My ride to most trail heads is going to be 4 to 4.5 hours one way. I normally day hike but this length of drive combined with what sounds like longer hikes is probably unrealistic. Can anyone recommend a camp site or cheap hotel along Rte 73 or the last stretches of Rte 87 that is far enough away from "attractions" to make last minute reservations feasible? It looks like many of the peaks I am interested in have trail heads in the Lake Placid area, which I assume is very popular. I will not be camping out on the trail. It would be car camping or hotel/motel.
4) Sounds like there are hiker registers all over the place. I presume you have to sign in at many points along the trail. Not used to this. What happens if you forget? Say I sign first two registers and forget rest. Do they literally dispatch F&G to look for me and send me a bill or do they just use these logs as needed?
5) These are the peaks I am hoping to do this Summer and the related routes I'd like to do. Any feedback or suggestions on them would be appreciated.
Mt Marcy via #61 Van Hoevenberg Trail
Algonquin/Boundary/Wright via Avalanche Lake #67,68,71 and others
Skylight/Haystack via undecided (looking for suggestions) - should this be tied in with Marcy? Too long?
Gothics/Basin via undecided (looking for suggestions)
Any feedback on the above questions or NY High Peak hiking in general would be greatly appreciated! Thanks.
1) It appears as though trails are numbered in the high peaks and have a related color code as opposed to the named trails and relatively few colors of blazes in NH. Do the trail signs actually just have numbers or are the names on them as well? It sounds as though the colored trail markers are tags too, not paint blazes. Correct? So, for example, if I'm following the "Hopkins Trail" am I watching for "Hopkins" on signs or for a yellow "2" tag on the trees? The guide describes the trails in fairly tedious detail, particularly intersections, so I'm curious how obscure the labeling actually is and how critical it is to know the color and number of trails. (I always carry a paper CalTopo map of my route in addition to official map so making the notations isn't a huge deal.) The map that I got with guide is almost unreadable with all the numbers and symbols all over it.
2) Is there such a thing as a "standard" trail head parking rate? I see amounts listed in some area descriptions but not others and amounts ranging from $5-$10 day. Can you buy a season pass for all of NY the way you can in NH and if so is there a website or mail in option for it? Driving to NY just to get the pass is not an option for me, especially if the office hours are restrictive.
3) I assume camp ground pressure is just as bad or worse than NH in terms of driving to a campground on a Fri or Sat night and finding an open site without a reservation. My ride to most trail heads is going to be 4 to 4.5 hours one way. I normally day hike but this length of drive combined with what sounds like longer hikes is probably unrealistic. Can anyone recommend a camp site or cheap hotel along Rte 73 or the last stretches of Rte 87 that is far enough away from "attractions" to make last minute reservations feasible? It looks like many of the peaks I am interested in have trail heads in the Lake Placid area, which I assume is very popular. I will not be camping out on the trail. It would be car camping or hotel/motel.
4) Sounds like there are hiker registers all over the place. I presume you have to sign in at many points along the trail. Not used to this. What happens if you forget? Say I sign first two registers and forget rest. Do they literally dispatch F&G to look for me and send me a bill or do they just use these logs as needed?
5) These are the peaks I am hoping to do this Summer and the related routes I'd like to do. Any feedback or suggestions on them would be appreciated.
Mt Marcy via #61 Van Hoevenberg Trail
Algonquin/Boundary/Wright via Avalanche Lake #67,68,71 and others
Skylight/Haystack via undecided (looking for suggestions) - should this be tied in with Marcy? Too long?
Gothics/Basin via undecided (looking for suggestions)
Any feedback on the above questions or NY High Peak hiking in general would be greatly appreciated! Thanks.