darren
Poobah Emeritus
With all the recent threads about the dangers of hiking, I figured it was time to post an old story once again. The only bad lesson is one that isn't learned. I learned, hopefully someone else can too.
I'm an engineer and can't write to save my butt, but here it is anyway. It was orignially on this site about 10 years ago.
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The phone rang. It was late in the day on Thursday and I was just about to leave work, so I didn't feel like answering it, but I did.
"Hello?"
"Roy is out." was the reply from the other end.
"Damn" I thought. I was looking forward to hiking with two of my old college friends that weekend. Dave, the one on the phone, had found me on the Internet. I hadn't seen Dave in about five years and I hadn't seen Roy in about seven. It turned out that our separate paths in life had all led to winter hiking in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. After several emails and phone calls, we had planned a Presidential traverse for that weekend. What better way to get reacquainted?
Dave was explaining how Roy couldn't make it and I was half listening, already wondering to myself if Dave and I should attempt the traverse without Roy. Three is a lot safer than two.
"Are you still in?" was the next group of words I heard and I responded "Ah, yeah, of course." I had been sick all week, but I was starting to feel better and I hoped that it would go away by the time we started hiking.
So it was set, Dave and I would head up in separate cars on Friday night, leave my car at the Randolf lot on Route 2, and use Dave's car to get us to the starting point - Crawford Notch. The plan was to hike down the Mt. Clinton Road, up Edmonds Path to the Crawford Path and on to the Lake of the Clouds hut where we would camp on Saturday. Sunday would take us down the ridge, grabbing peaks on the way, to the Madison Hut for another nice camping spot, and then hike out to my waiting car on Monday. The weather called for occasional light snow on Saturday, with clearing on Saturday night and fair conditions on Sunday and Monday. Perfect we thought.
Saturday morning came and I was still feeling a little under the weather. I figured a good sweat would work the bug out of me, so off we went. The Mt. Clinton Road, although still closed, had just been plowed and it was easy going for the couple of miles to the Edmonds Path trail head. It had been snowing all morning and at a rate that was neither occasional nor light as the weather forecast had predicted.
As we got on the trail and began our ascent, I noticed that I was feeling pretty tired. A week of being sick with no time on the stair master had really kicked my butt. I also noticed that I was sweating more than usual. It was still snowing pretty hard and then I figured out why I was sweating so much. The outer layer of my Gore-tex jacket was getting wet from the falling snow. The spray on coating that makes water bead up and roll off was not working. The Gore-tex was still waterproof, but since it was getting and staying wet, the fabric was clinging tightly to me and it wasn't breathing properly. I was getting hot under it and sweating quite a bit under the strain of my full winter pack. I felt horrible and I kept telling Dave, "sorry I'm so slow, I'm usually a lot better than this. I must have been sicker than I thought."
The snow on the trail started getting deep and we had to put our snowshoes on at about 3500'. As we got to treeline, the trail disappeared in the deep snow. Only the tops of pine trees stuck out of the seemingly endless drifts of snow. We tried a few times to locate the trail, but our efforts were fruitless. We were both familiar with the trail having each climbed it several times before, so we knew that it ran along a ledge on the north side of Eisenhower's summit cone. We found a lip that ran along the ridge on the north side of the summit cone, so we figured that this was about as close to the trail as we were going to get. We headed out on the lip, intending to traverse it to the northeast side of the summit cone so we could try to find the Crawford Path which would take us to the Lake of the Clouds Hut.
I'm an engineer and can't write to save my butt, but here it is anyway. It was orignially on this site about 10 years ago.
------------------
The phone rang. It was late in the day on Thursday and I was just about to leave work, so I didn't feel like answering it, but I did.
"Hello?"
"Roy is out." was the reply from the other end.
"Damn" I thought. I was looking forward to hiking with two of my old college friends that weekend. Dave, the one on the phone, had found me on the Internet. I hadn't seen Dave in about five years and I hadn't seen Roy in about seven. It turned out that our separate paths in life had all led to winter hiking in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. After several emails and phone calls, we had planned a Presidential traverse for that weekend. What better way to get reacquainted?
Dave was explaining how Roy couldn't make it and I was half listening, already wondering to myself if Dave and I should attempt the traverse without Roy. Three is a lot safer than two.
"Are you still in?" was the next group of words I heard and I responded "Ah, yeah, of course." I had been sick all week, but I was starting to feel better and I hoped that it would go away by the time we started hiking.
So it was set, Dave and I would head up in separate cars on Friday night, leave my car at the Randolf lot on Route 2, and use Dave's car to get us to the starting point - Crawford Notch. The plan was to hike down the Mt. Clinton Road, up Edmonds Path to the Crawford Path and on to the Lake of the Clouds hut where we would camp on Saturday. Sunday would take us down the ridge, grabbing peaks on the way, to the Madison Hut for another nice camping spot, and then hike out to my waiting car on Monday. The weather called for occasional light snow on Saturday, with clearing on Saturday night and fair conditions on Sunday and Monday. Perfect we thought.
Saturday morning came and I was still feeling a little under the weather. I figured a good sweat would work the bug out of me, so off we went. The Mt. Clinton Road, although still closed, had just been plowed and it was easy going for the couple of miles to the Edmonds Path trail head. It had been snowing all morning and at a rate that was neither occasional nor light as the weather forecast had predicted.
As we got on the trail and began our ascent, I noticed that I was feeling pretty tired. A week of being sick with no time on the stair master had really kicked my butt. I also noticed that I was sweating more than usual. It was still snowing pretty hard and then I figured out why I was sweating so much. The outer layer of my Gore-tex jacket was getting wet from the falling snow. The spray on coating that makes water bead up and roll off was not working. The Gore-tex was still waterproof, but since it was getting and staying wet, the fabric was clinging tightly to me and it wasn't breathing properly. I was getting hot under it and sweating quite a bit under the strain of my full winter pack. I felt horrible and I kept telling Dave, "sorry I'm so slow, I'm usually a lot better than this. I must have been sicker than I thought."
The snow on the trail started getting deep and we had to put our snowshoes on at about 3500'. As we got to treeline, the trail disappeared in the deep snow. Only the tops of pine trees stuck out of the seemingly endless drifts of snow. We tried a few times to locate the trail, but our efforts were fruitless. We were both familiar with the trail having each climbed it several times before, so we knew that it ran along a ledge on the north side of Eisenhower's summit cone. We found a lip that ran along the ridge on the north side of the summit cone, so we figured that this was about as close to the trail as we were going to get. We headed out on the lip, intending to traverse it to the northeast side of the summit cone so we could try to find the Crawford Path which would take us to the Lake of the Clouds Hut.