Flume Slide and Liberty Springs - 7/23

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David Metsky

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Sep 3, 2003
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I had bagged out of Poison Ivy's hike in Maine because of the early start and long travel :( but still wanted to hike. Seeker and I made a preliminary plan to try for the Sleepers but we backed off on that after looking at the map on the drive north. Instead, we settled on the Flume Slide trail, which I'd done once many years ago and she had always wanted to try.

In a fine alpine start we hit the trail at 10:30 and found ourselves at the Flume Slide trail junction in short order. There were a surprising number of groups headed that way, some we would play leapfrog with all day. The traverse across to the base of the slide was a little wet in places, but a nice walk in the woods. Temps were pretty nice, only in the 70s making for very comfortable hiking.

Eventually we hit the base of the slide, which climbs gradually over loose rock at first, then climbs steeper to a few tricky sections. A couple climbing ahead of us appeared stymied at one section, not clear where to go or how to get there, but we all eventually made it up. A little higher we were quickly passed by a group of 4. Ah, to be young and French-Canadian once again. Just above that the trail slips quietly to the right, an obvious but poorly marked footbed below a difficult climb. Clearly, lots of folks have missed this turn as the rock above had many herd paths. The trail cuts over to the right about 100' then climbs again in a much drier and more open slide. We heard the French-Canadian group laughing to our left, but they seem to have found their way back to the trail above us somehow.

During this adventure we enountered 3 people hiking down the Slide. The first guy (in sneakers) clearly hadn't counted on this from his reading of the map and was questioning his choice, but he was far enough down that it was probably easier to continue. The other two knew what they were doing and charged down the trail at a breakneck speed. More power to them. Apparently another group started down a bit later in the day and were turned around by climbers going up, they were definately not up for that descent.

So, we popped out at the ridge and quickly found a spot on the summit of Flume for lunch and a view. We met Highhorse, a fellow VftT'er who helped us spot the Wildcats poking out from behind Washington. The wind was a bit chilly and everyone put on jackets but the views of the Pemi were spectacular. After lunch and my ice cold frozen waterbottle (!) we pushed on to Liberty. Along the way we heard some ravens squawking like I've never heard before. Someone up there was quite upset with someone else and was making his or her opinion well known to the tri-state region.

On Liberty we again spent some time lounging and taking in the still wonderful views. A family arrived soon after we did, with a kid on the dad's back in a carrier. He bounded up to the top, not pleasing the kid or the mom too much. :eek: We stayed there soaking up the sun for a bit, but we needed to head on down. Off to Liberty Springs then the long downhill.

We both left our poles in the car due to the scramble up the slide but they would have felt nice on the descent. Still, once you get past the top mile and a half it's pretty mellow. We got out to the car around 5:30, so a 7 hour trip total with plenty of summit lounging. From there we headed to the Mountain Wanderer to say hi to Steve, and met up with Eric Savage (Mr 4000'er committee :p ) and discussed the latest 4000'er Owl's Head controversy. He came to the Station with us for dinner, then we headed south again.

Pix to follow.

-dave-
 
Gee Dave, I see you had another almost "crack of noon" hiking start. This is becoming a habit with you :D . Glad you and Seeker had a great day.
 
wonder what the ravens were fighting over?? :D
looking forward to the pics!
 
haha, crack of noon start... that was my day precisely.

i hate to say it, but those were some fools heading down flume slide.
one guy looked like he was on the verge of losing it and he was bleeding from the leg. two boys looked to be descending as gracefully as possible on that trail (and it was far from graceful). a group of 17-18 year-old girls scared me the most. i witnessed one of them nearly do a somersault and take out her homies. it was bad. near the summit, two people actually heeded my advice of descending via Liberty Springs. great views from the top (hehehe), and it was fun playing the identifying mountains game with some people from the site.
 
Thank you. Wonderful shots. Liberty and Flume are scheduled for next month and I expect them to be #46 and #47. I am eagerly anticipating this hike now thanks to your pictures.

Steve
 
David:

I have some friends coming up from CT this weekend to do some hiking. I was thinking of either doing Falling Waters to OBP or Flume Slide to Liberty and out. I’ve never done Mt. Flume from the slide, so I was wondering if it might be a tad too much for a 12 year old girl. Although her father says she has hiked in the Whites before, from your photos it seems like a few spots might give her pause. Any thoughts?
 
There are a few spots where you are definately scrambling, using your hands and stretching to find hand/footholds. Some kids love that stuff, others might be wigged out by it. As you can see in the photos, there are places where you can fall, and while it wouldn't be fatal it could hurt an awful lot.

It the 12 year old is active and likes challanges, this would be a great hike. I'd avoid the trail if it is wet.

-dave-
 
I hiked Flume and Liberty via this route on Saturday. I won't write a full report. If you're planning on doing this, note where Dave says the trail "slips quietly to the right" on the slide. If I did, it would have saved me twenty minutes of scrambling and feeling lost! Other than that, it was a beautiful day for two great peaks. The slide was dry and no problems were had climbing it.
 
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