Hey everyone. I'm one of Randy's hiking companions on this quest, and while I haven't posted to VFTT in a Really Long Time, this might be a good chance to get re-involved with the community here.
RollingRock, we saw you on Monroe! I didn't know you were a poster here, but glad to have "met" you. I was the gal with the sage-green hat. Carrie, the hiking leader for this trip, was the one guiding Randy up and down Monroe. Adventure Dawg was resting at Lakes after a long day of work.
A lot of our group's thoughts about the Mount Washington hike (and others) are written down on our blog, here:
http://www.2020visionquest.org/Blog/
chipc, you wondered about the routes we use. I can talk more about that if you'd like. The short answer is, we pick the easiest routes.
Randy and Quinn hike slowly, and we need to make the best possible use of our time and energy. The more complicated answer involves terrain analysis. Our speed over different kinds of terrain is *extremely* variable, far more so than most hikers. When the trail footing is excellent (like logging roads), we can move very fast. Staircases are easier than one might expect, too, like the section of the Ammo by Gem Pool. And we rocked the summit cone to Washington, much to my surprise!
But steep slabs, uneven boulders, water crossings, bridges (natural or otherwise), loose small rocks -- these all slow us down tremendously. Quinn has to pick routes and "tell" Randy about them, and Randy has to tell Quinn what needs to be done -- and though most of that communication is nonverbal (and stunningly accurate), it takes a lot of time. Also, some sections can only be safely negotiated with human leaders, and switching off between dog and human takes time too.
One of the ideas our group is pondering is how to get detailed trail info from other hikers in the NE community. The AMC guide, good as it is, just isn't detailed enough for our purposes. We can't formulate an accurate schedule or plan from those descriptions. So... we may come back to you guys for help.