TCD
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We did our (8th? 9th?) annual Great Range traverse on Saturday. We always go Rooster Comb parking through to the Garden, as it's more aesthetic to finish on the highest peak.
We hit the trail about 5:30 AM. Conditions were quite good, with almost no bugs and just enough light to make good time without headlamps.
We stuck with our usual water plan, about 1/2 liter each to start, and carry a filter. While it's unglamorous, the biggest single climb on the Range trip is the first one, from the parking lot, past Rooster Comb and up Hedgehog. It pays to travel light there. My wife also had some 50/50 water/gatorade in a separate bladder, which was beneficial as the day went on.
The trail up RC is really solid, having been newly built, and properly routed and drained. We made good time up RC and Hedgehog. The Hedgehog trail is very discouraging at the start, being basically a streambed that needs to be rerouted, but if it's not actively raining, it's not too bad, and after a couple hundred yards it improves. Most of Hedgehog is soft pine woods trail, and very pleasant.
We filtered water at Deer Brook, just past the W. A. White trail.
LWJ/UWJ were fun, as usual, with many rock scrambles adding to the hike. We met our first people in the WJ Notch, a group of lads with a couple leaders, who must have gotten a nice early start; they were headed to LWJ, and then across UWJ, Armstrong and Gothics.
After UWJ, the trail just got muddier and muddier, with many undrained bogs that have seen no maintenance at all. It's a remote area, and volunteer crews can only do so much.
Armstrong was fun as always. The big ladder is still solid. (Still can't believe Cav Dog jumped that wall.) We successfully negotiated my favorite obstacle, the Potato Shaped Rock, which looks very innocent but especially bedevils shorter hikers. The herd paths around it are a testament to its annoying nature.
From Armstrong down to the Beaver Meadow trail col was very slow, with extensive swamps in the trail. Gothics was easy as it always seems to be from this direction. Met a nice group of folks on the summit of Gothics. After the summit of Gothics, the trail became fairly crowded, and we met all sorts of nice people.
Much of the trail from this point on was heavily grown in, and has seen no sidecutting. Some sections were so grown in it was hard to see your feet.
Down the cable trail was the slipperiest its ever been. I had trail runners, and I usually stick quite well with those. I was actually slipping in some spots (and it hadn't even started raining yet). Folks with hard sole hiking boots were just struggling, dragging themselves up hand over hand
We rolled over little Saddleback and had a nice run down the rocks, whcih went very quickly this year. The paint blazes have really faded, and unless you know the trail, you really have to look for them to go the best way.
The first showers of the day started when we were in the Saddleback Basin col, which is my favorite spot. It's a fairy land of flowers and grasses, and no marked trail comes up into it, so it has a nice remote feel.
Basin is huge, but my wife got her second wind and we rolled over it fairly quickly. Again I ran ahead to filter water at the old Snowbird Lean to site, and then we pushed for the last couple climbs. Met a big family with a bunch of nice kids, pushing over Haystack, Basin and Saddleback. (Ran into them again at JBL later. Good job by the young people doing some tough peaks!)
Views of Haystack from the ridge were great. The trail down the ridge was a river (no waterbars at all, just a couple waterbars would divert that).
No views at all from Marcy around 3:45 PM, as the weather had begun to close up. We tagged the summit and headed down immediately. Chatted with the Ranger, who was helping out a young man with a couple pulled muscles right at the base of the rock cone. Long walk out; I hope it wasn't too uncomfortable!
The trail from Marcy down to Slant Rock was really a mess. Rotted out bridges, rivers running wholesale in the trail, chunks of blowdown thrown in for steps. It didn't improve until we got down to the series of rock staircases near Slant Rock.
At which point, the skies opened. The last few hours from Slant Rock out were mostly in a torrrential downpour and thunderstorm. It was raining extremely hard and lightning was less than 1/2 mile away when we got to Bushnell Falls. We stopped for a couple minutes, and considered whether we should pull out the space blankets and just stay there for the night, but then the lightning abated, and we decided to march out. On the way from Slant Rock to Bushnell, we said hello to a gentleman with two fairly small kids, who were good naturedly hiking INTO the wilderness in a lightning storm at 6 PM. Smiling! Those kids are going to grow up tough.
The rain was only light when we got to JBL, but on the way out to the Garden a second storm rolled through, and we just gave up trying to stay clean or dry.
We didn't catch a ride down from the Garden, so our car to car trip was about 25.5 miles, 9K of vertical.
We have a place in Keene, and it was a real pleasure to take hot showers and make it to Baxter Mtn. Tavern in time for some food!
Overall, it was a great, scenic trip, as it always is. Definitely the toughest and wettest Range trip we've done.
Commentary: The first time I hiked the range in a day was 1992. The condition of the trails has really gone downhill tremendously, even with usage being down. The only trail that's improved is the new RoosterComb trail, vs. the old one from the Garden road. (And of course, the replacement cables on Gothics.) Partly, it's these two most recent very wet years. But also, the amount of maintenance is really down. I do volunteer trail maintenance, but volunteer crews can only do so much. I would like to see the State allocate a little more money to professional trail crews. I'd also like to see the professional crews authorized to use power tools. It's crazy for a professional maintenance crew to be chopping blowdown with axes. I know it's a Wilderness, but we have to make up our minds whether we want trails or not. I also know trail maintenance doesn't buy a lot of votes, but it's a shame to see these trails deteriorate the way they have.
Still love the Range Traverse! One of my favorite hikes.
TCD
We hit the trail about 5:30 AM. Conditions were quite good, with almost no bugs and just enough light to make good time without headlamps.
We stuck with our usual water plan, about 1/2 liter each to start, and carry a filter. While it's unglamorous, the biggest single climb on the Range trip is the first one, from the parking lot, past Rooster Comb and up Hedgehog. It pays to travel light there. My wife also had some 50/50 water/gatorade in a separate bladder, which was beneficial as the day went on.
The trail up RC is really solid, having been newly built, and properly routed and drained. We made good time up RC and Hedgehog. The Hedgehog trail is very discouraging at the start, being basically a streambed that needs to be rerouted, but if it's not actively raining, it's not too bad, and after a couple hundred yards it improves. Most of Hedgehog is soft pine woods trail, and very pleasant.
We filtered water at Deer Brook, just past the W. A. White trail.
LWJ/UWJ were fun, as usual, with many rock scrambles adding to the hike. We met our first people in the WJ Notch, a group of lads with a couple leaders, who must have gotten a nice early start; they were headed to LWJ, and then across UWJ, Armstrong and Gothics.
After UWJ, the trail just got muddier and muddier, with many undrained bogs that have seen no maintenance at all. It's a remote area, and volunteer crews can only do so much.
Armstrong was fun as always. The big ladder is still solid. (Still can't believe Cav Dog jumped that wall.) We successfully negotiated my favorite obstacle, the Potato Shaped Rock, which looks very innocent but especially bedevils shorter hikers. The herd paths around it are a testament to its annoying nature.
From Armstrong down to the Beaver Meadow trail col was very slow, with extensive swamps in the trail. Gothics was easy as it always seems to be from this direction. Met a nice group of folks on the summit of Gothics. After the summit of Gothics, the trail became fairly crowded, and we met all sorts of nice people.
Much of the trail from this point on was heavily grown in, and has seen no sidecutting. Some sections were so grown in it was hard to see your feet.
Down the cable trail was the slipperiest its ever been. I had trail runners, and I usually stick quite well with those. I was actually slipping in some spots (and it hadn't even started raining yet). Folks with hard sole hiking boots were just struggling, dragging themselves up hand over hand
We rolled over little Saddleback and had a nice run down the rocks, whcih went very quickly this year. The paint blazes have really faded, and unless you know the trail, you really have to look for them to go the best way.
The first showers of the day started when we were in the Saddleback Basin col, which is my favorite spot. It's a fairy land of flowers and grasses, and no marked trail comes up into it, so it has a nice remote feel.
Basin is huge, but my wife got her second wind and we rolled over it fairly quickly. Again I ran ahead to filter water at the old Snowbird Lean to site, and then we pushed for the last couple climbs. Met a big family with a bunch of nice kids, pushing over Haystack, Basin and Saddleback. (Ran into them again at JBL later. Good job by the young people doing some tough peaks!)
Views of Haystack from the ridge were great. The trail down the ridge was a river (no waterbars at all, just a couple waterbars would divert that).
No views at all from Marcy around 3:45 PM, as the weather had begun to close up. We tagged the summit and headed down immediately. Chatted with the Ranger, who was helping out a young man with a couple pulled muscles right at the base of the rock cone. Long walk out; I hope it wasn't too uncomfortable!
The trail from Marcy down to Slant Rock was really a mess. Rotted out bridges, rivers running wholesale in the trail, chunks of blowdown thrown in for steps. It didn't improve until we got down to the series of rock staircases near Slant Rock.
At which point, the skies opened. The last few hours from Slant Rock out were mostly in a torrrential downpour and thunderstorm. It was raining extremely hard and lightning was less than 1/2 mile away when we got to Bushnell Falls. We stopped for a couple minutes, and considered whether we should pull out the space blankets and just stay there for the night, but then the lightning abated, and we decided to march out. On the way from Slant Rock to Bushnell, we said hello to a gentleman with two fairly small kids, who were good naturedly hiking INTO the wilderness in a lightning storm at 6 PM. Smiling! Those kids are going to grow up tough.
The rain was only light when we got to JBL, but on the way out to the Garden a second storm rolled through, and we just gave up trying to stay clean or dry.
We didn't catch a ride down from the Garden, so our car to car trip was about 25.5 miles, 9K of vertical.
We have a place in Keene, and it was a real pleasure to take hot showers and make it to Baxter Mtn. Tavern in time for some food!
Overall, it was a great, scenic trip, as it always is. Definitely the toughest and wettest Range trip we've done.
Commentary: The first time I hiked the range in a day was 1992. The condition of the trails has really gone downhill tremendously, even with usage being down. The only trail that's improved is the new RoosterComb trail, vs. the old one from the Garden road. (And of course, the replacement cables on Gothics.) Partly, it's these two most recent very wet years. But also, the amount of maintenance is really down. I do volunteer trail maintenance, but volunteer crews can only do so much. I would like to see the State allocate a little more money to professional trail crews. I'd also like to see the professional crews authorized to use power tools. It's crazy for a professional maintenance crew to be chopping blowdown with axes. I know it's a Wilderness, but we have to make up our minds whether we want trails or not. I also know trail maintenance doesn't buy a lot of votes, but it's a shame to see these trails deteriorate the way they have.
Still love the Range Traverse! One of my favorite hikes.
TCD