following moose trails in the Sandwich Range, Nov.1st

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forestgnome

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November is a special month, IMO. The time between the fall and the snow is a wonderfull time in the forest off-trail. Although I'm looking forward to ski season this year (I'm a snowboard instructor at Wildcat this year) I wouldn't mind if the snow holds off for a few weeks in the lower mountains. These days are few and short.

Champney Falls Trail still had a few beeches holding their leaves. I tried to capture the actual fall of the leaves. Nothing heralds November like the falling leaves in the air.

nov109aaa5.jpg





Around 2,800' I left trail and headed northish. Eventually you can find a ledge that is occasionally visited by bushwackers, but this view is only a little different from the view provided from a view ledge that is right on the trail near the trail junctions.

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My general idea was to explore the area beneath this ledge, where you can see lots of birch, then proceed back up the spruce-fir-covered ridge to the right and then make my way westish towward the cliffs of the northern end of the Mt. Paugus massif, until bumping into the Bolles Trail.

Lots of moose trails to follow...


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I'm pretty sure this is a Bicknell's Thrush. We were at around 2,600' and the color of olive was distinctive in the field. She'll soon be travelling south for winter.

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more moose trails through the ferns. Even the ferns turn a nice rich gold, similar to tamaracks...

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fresh scrapings from a bull moose removing the velvet from his antlers...

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Back along the crest of the ridge, I found a wonderful little moose oasis with heavy hoof traffic...

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The forest floor was still wet from the rain and I was travelling as quietly as possible, but the days are now short and I wanted to make the Bolles Trail before dark so I was moving along. I found a very fresh track and I wondered if I had pushed moose out of that little area. I slowed and went quietly as I could and caught up to a bull and a cow. The cow saw me first and stopped to observe me. Then I heard the crashing of the bull trotting away, but I did see antlers through the trees. The cow allowed one shot then trotted off in the same direction.

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Descending west toward the Bolles Trail, I found little old slide with views of Mt. Paugus to the west and views to the north toward Mt. Carrigain and Crawford Notch. There are even some glacial potholes that formed during the last global warming period.

nov109aaa10.jpg


I like to sit and imagine the massive glacier that was parked there and what it looked like. Since this is high in the the pass between Chocorua and Paugus, I imagined that the glacier was in the valley to the north and the southern edge of it was directly over my head, with great waterfalls pouring off the top, pounding down and forming these holes in the granite.

The view to the cliffs of Mt. Paugus are nice and close...

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View north toward Mt. Carragain and Crawford Notch

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continued...
 
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Reluctantly, after a nice nap in the warm sun, I descended toward the Bolles Trail through thick beech. Here's a pretty mushroom crowd growing on a beech log.

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I emerged on the Bolles snowmobile Trail and decided to take that down, allowing the bushwack to sort-of continue. This end of trail almost never sees snowmobiles. I've never seen a track and it doesn't appear to get any maintenance off-season. So, it's a wonderful guided bushwack through beech, then a stretch through a nice hemlock-dominated stand.

This one recently caught a lightning strike...

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Toward the bottom, the forest goes back to beech/maple. Here's one last look into the November forest, back up the snowmobile trail just before it merges with the hiking trail...

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a precious season for hiking...

happy trails :)
 
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pasted wrong picture of the mushroom

Hi FG .... I always enjoy your reports. I visited the ledge off Champney falls trail. If it's the one I'm thinking of don't you head north to get to it? I mix up cardinal directions all the time ... It's a form of dyslexia I suppose. Thanks for inspiring me to explore region further. Could be a good objective for me this weekend.

The mushroom picture didn't show up. Instead you posted the pot hole picture again. OOOPs I must of caught you in process of posting. I see you fixed it. Wow that's amazing!!!!

Did you happen to observe how the hemlocks are doing? Any dead ones from the wooly algelid??
 
Hi FG .... I always enjoy your reports. I visited the ledge off Champney falls trail. If it's the one I'm thinking of don't you head north to get to it? I mix up cardinal directions all the time ... It's a form of dyslexia I suppose. Thanks for inspiring me to explore region further. Could be a good objective for me this weekend.

The mushroom picture didn't show up. Instead you posted the pot hole picture again. OOOPs I must of caught you in process of posting. I see you fixed it. Wow that's amazing!!!!

Did you happen to observe how the hemlocks are doing? Any dead ones from the wooly algelid??

D'oh! Got it...thanks..

What do you look for on the hemlocks? I've heard about the wooly...what signs tell the tale?
 
I really enjoyed your report and, and those are spectacular pictures. It's so good to just spend time in the woods without some peak or goal which you must obtain. Not many can visualize the prehistoric conditions in this region, but the remains of all that glacial activity are everywhere. When you get off the path, you can start to imagine the history of the area.
I have spent time following moose and deer paths during this season of the year and found it to be as beautiful as your report and pictures show.
Thank you for sharing.
 
forestgnome said:
I like to sit and imagine the massive glacier that was parked there and what it looked like.
It's good to hear that others like to do this as well!

And what else can I say? You've posted another wonderful report with awesome photos. I especially like the close-up of the mushrooms. I don't recall ever seeing any quite like those.
 
I'm pretty sure the bright-orange stripes on the mushrooms are a separate species that has parasitized the shelf brackets. Hypomyces lactifluorum usually colonizes Russula or Lactarius, and usually covers the whole surface, but that's still my best guess.

The shelf brackets can be pretty colorful to begin with:


Loved the shot with the beech leaf in mid-air, btw.
 
Thanks

Awesome photos and report. Makes we want to get back out there now and just try to get some pics as beautiful as you have here. Thank you for sharing.

Wowser
 
Fabulous shots. Thank you for sharing a bit of fall that takes us back when we're away. As always, I enjoy your special perspective.
 
Thank you for all the nice feedback..very encouraging :)

Hey Jazzbo, you are right about heading north...I changed that as well. Like most days in the woods, I never pulled out the compass. The sun was out watching me the whole day and the cliffs of Paugus were visible from time to time. I know my TRs aren't much for reference for pinpoint acurate bushwacking routes, etc. It's useless for me to use a compass. And those lines that I see superimposed on a map by a GPS that a hiker took along on a hike would look ridiculous if I knew how to use mine and post such a report. It would look like I was on a frenzied search for a lost person. I do always know which way is out, and I do have a compass in case it's cloudy.

I would like to know about the wooly algelid.

Nartreb, thanks for the ID and commentary :)
 
What a pleasure to look through those photos! I don't know about the Bicknell's, though. The eye ring looks too prominent, like a Swainson's.

When someone mentions Paugus, I always perk up. The late Daniel Doan called it an "unsung treasure."
 
We have gotten woolly adelgid on the hemlocks in our yard. They look like tiny white bits of fluff on the underside of the needles. The local arborist keeps it in check with a not-too-toxic spray, and I didn't actually see any signs this past year.
 
Wooly Algelid

We lost a couple of hemlocks in our yard to them here in Waltham MA. I'd never heard of them at the time. They just got less green and needles dropped off. Here's short thumbnail discussion from Froest Service web page on it.

"The hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) Adelges tsugae was first described in western North America in 1924 and first reported in the eastern United States in 1951 near Richmond, VA.

Research scientists using molecular genetics have recently determined that several distinct populations of HWA occur in Asia and western North America and we now know that HWA populations found in the East originated from southern Japan. In their native range, these populations of HWA cause little damage to the hemlock trees they feed on as natural enemies and possible tree resistance has evolved with this insect pest.

In the absence of these natural control elements in eastern North America, this introduced insect pest attacks both eastern (Canadian) and Carolina hemlock which are often damaged and killed within a few years of becoming infested. HWA is now established from northeastern Georgia to southeastern Maine and as far west as eastern Kentucky and Tennessee."

Actual link to this page is here:

http://www.na.fs.fed.us/fhp/hwa/

Here's a link to Eastern Native Tree Society web site regarding a Tsuga Search project they are involved with. One of the hopes is to find disease resistant trees.

http://www.nativetreesociety.org/tsuga/index_hwa.htm
 
Thanks!

Have been interested in this whole area for quite some time, especially since reading, "Our Mountain Trips". I'll have to find the time to get over there. It's always good to read of your adventures in places like this, thanks!

KDT
 
a precious season for hiking

As always your beautiful photos take us all right there by your side. I am still waiting for my moose encounter in the fall (I'll take any season!)woods. We heard some mooing one day off in the distance on a low spot near Paugus but I know we were not patient enough. Thanks for sharing your special times with us.
 
What a pleasure to look through those photos! I don't know about the Bicknell's, though. The eye ring looks too prominent, like a Swainson's.

When someone mentions Paugus, I always perk up. The late Daniel Doan called it an "unsung treasure."

Thanks, Audrey! By next spring I need to get a handle on the differences in the thrushes of these mountains. They're so similar to me at this point :eek:
 
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