TopOfGothics
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- Jun 4, 2005
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Boy, did I like to think I was a little bit of something. The last dozen years have found me making increasingly more frequent trips inside the Blue Line, the High Peaks for the most part. I’d hiked here and there, up and down, at times cruising along and passing many. ‘You need to slow down’ was a common enough refrain from some of my hiking partners. ‘I don’t know about you, but I need a rest break and some food’ was another. I thought I was a badass. So what.
It had been seven months since my trusty surgeon took a piece of my tendon and turned it into a brand spanking new ACL. While he was down there, he also scoped out that meniscus thingy and sewed together some cartilage stuff, most of that damage caused a few years back as the result of a skiing accident.
So the fires were burning furious inside, and this prompted a call to one of the last remaining legends of my high hills, PinPin Junior (or his alter-ego, Alain), to accompany me on my glorious return. What, you say you’ve never heard of this person? Anyone who visits certain mountaineering forums on the Internet has had the chance to follow his exploits with an amusing slant as the indomitable French-Canadian treads along our trails with an alacrity that can at times stupefy. Silly me, I was sure I could at least keep within a rocks throw of The Man.
Sure enough, when a message was sent in reply to one of his witty postings, he responded post whit. He laid out his itinerary for the upcoming week:
Probably Santanoni tomorrow (Friday)
May be Colvin-Blake-Nippletop-Dial (Saturday)
Dix Range (Sunday)
A short hike Monday probably Giant & Gothics.
What would I like to join him on? My first thought was to hike in along the trail to Dix and meet him in the morning at the Slide Brook lean-to. When all was said and done, he sent me his ‘base camp’ phone number with a message of when to contact him. After settling in on Saturday and enjoying short warm up with Snow Mountain, the phone call was made.
“Do you need Haystack, Basin, Saddleback?” It takes a moment at times to translate the phrase ‘do you need aystak, baysen, saddleba’ to something more recognizable.
“I’m wide open, whatever you like.”
“You have ice-axe, crampons, no?”
“Yeah, sure, no problem.” Had an ice axe, never came across an occasion to use it though. I appreciated his concern for getting me more of my ‘winter 46ers’, but I was just happy to share the trail with the man who all but owns these majestic beauties. My regular Forty-Sixer checkmarks were all in place, fourteen of them even in the ‘Winter’ column.
“Call me six in the morning and we see what the weather is.”
The next morning, ready for bear, I rang again. “If all goes well, do you need Gothix, Sawteet’ also?” Yikes! “We park one vehicle at the Ausable lot and then go to The Garden.”
“Sure, why the hell not.” I was invincible, wasn’t I?
Before seven we were on the way to the trailhead. Asking him during the drive how long he has been traversing this wilderness, his reply sent me for a loop. Cascade and Porter on September 21st, 1996 was his first Adirondack experience. It had been a Saturday in September of 96 I first marched up to Marcy with two friends. Could we have been leaving our initial footfalls at the same time Alain was starting his manic obsession? The thought so engrossed me, the obvious left turn to the Garden was missed.
At seven-fifteen we had signed in. ‘David and PinPin JR’ (with a rabbit head caricature) Alain had written. “You know, most of the time it’s me they tell to slow down, I got a funny feeling things won’t be that way today.”
“We see, no need to run, we set a good pace and go.”
And go we did. The track was so hard and the snow was so minimal to the Johns Brook Lodge that snowshoes were not necessary. From the first footfall until we stopped to put on our snow treaders at JBL, not a singe word was spoken. As open and gregarious a man he is, when he gets down to his passion, he is all business. Sixty-six minutes and three and a half miles later there I was just steps behind him.
“Good job.”
It was high praise. I looked to Topo, my companion and a gift (along with a great winter rucksack as an incentive to do more cold weather hiking) from a dear friend, who was attached to the front of my pack. “See, I told you I would not let you down.”
His expression said it all. “Yeah, that was the easy part, you still have over five miles to go before you’ve summited your first mountain today, and you think you’ll make three, even five. Good luck.”
The next leg of the journey would bring us to the lean-to at Bushnell Falls. This time there was just a hint of ‘up’ in this one point eight mile stretch, and yet Junior never broke stride nor said a word. It was amazing to watch the fluidity as he flicked broken stray braches off the trail with his hiking pole and swatted any upcoming overhanging nuisances to free them of snow before he passed without breaking stride. I arrived at the shelter, five miles in and a minute or three behind the Jazz Rabbit.
“Good work.” More words of encouragement. There hadn’t been real hard-pressed times on that leg, but the need for a moment or rest was there. Which makes all the sense of why I did not take it. Without breaking stride I plowed through.
“You need water?” the rabbit asked. My body sure did, but it would not show it.
“No, Ill be fine for a while.”
“You lead, take your own pace.”
As so we were off. From here to Slant Rock is a mile and a half, with noticeably more gain. Whenever the call for a breather was warranted, my speed may have slowed, but never did it stop. Invariably Alain kept the pace of a metronome, PinPin Junior swinging in front of him while my hiking buddy Topo egged me on. Topo still had visions of keeping up with his newfound pal (they had rubbed noses on Giant Of The Valley last March) all the way to the top. At the perfect natural little shelter called Slant Rock I did take time for a quick drink, not to mention putting some jerky into an accessible pocket in an attempt to supply me with additional energy. From here the dynamic duo once again led the way.
From Slant Rock to the Marcy/Haystack col is one single simple mile. In the best of times it is merely extremely steep. In the winter it was a swift kick with the snowshoes to make sure none of the altitude you were fighting for was lost. I watched them go, kicking and sticking and moving with machine precision. At first I tried to keep a close pace, but the air was becoming precariously thin, even at just under four thousand feet. At least for me it was. As the last vestiges of his black clad self was lost through the trees, I had to stop every dozen strides or so and count to ten, regaining a pitiful amount of energy.
“Hey,” came the question from my little green partner, “why are you falling behind? You don’t even have the straining job of compacting the trail. Are you trying to make me look bad in front, or should I say in back of Junior.”
Not wanting to waste a single extra breath, I gave him as dirty of a look as I could summon and carried on. You can see the col coming into view, and you know that each step brings you closer to one of the most wild places left untouched in the northeast, Panther Gorge.
With the last of my first tank, I hauled myself to the junction were Alain stood with a smile, and not a bead of sweat visible. “Good work David, only a mile more to go.”
Such depressing words. I slugged a mouthful of water, a little dripping onto my amphibian friend. Junior’s demeanor showed that he was surely ready for more. “Now we have to summit that damn hill before Little Haystack. If we just bulldozed the damn thing level, we’d save well over two hundred feet of extra climbing!”
“Yes, yes, we go, no?”
Again the A-team slipped up, up, and away and out of my vision. Then again, with all my panting and head hanging, I might not have noticed if they were five feet in front of me. Coming down the first hill, I almost felt that the day might be a success. Noticing the bag left at the junction, mine was dropped also and we started up and over Lesser Haystack with Topo now swinging from my jacket. In barely two minutes my spare tank was straining for every ounce that it could spare. I felt for sure Alain would pass me coming back before I even crested this penultimate hill.
To my surprise, the bump succumbed and after another hundred foot plus drop, there was one last ascent to reach the high point of the day, a football field short of a mile tall.
Two hundred yards from the summit they sat waiting, having already touched top. “Good, good, I go again up with you.”
CONTINUED WITH PART II
It had been seven months since my trusty surgeon took a piece of my tendon and turned it into a brand spanking new ACL. While he was down there, he also scoped out that meniscus thingy and sewed together some cartilage stuff, most of that damage caused a few years back as the result of a skiing accident.
So the fires were burning furious inside, and this prompted a call to one of the last remaining legends of my high hills, PinPin Junior (or his alter-ego, Alain), to accompany me on my glorious return. What, you say you’ve never heard of this person? Anyone who visits certain mountaineering forums on the Internet has had the chance to follow his exploits with an amusing slant as the indomitable French-Canadian treads along our trails with an alacrity that can at times stupefy. Silly me, I was sure I could at least keep within a rocks throw of The Man.
Sure enough, when a message was sent in reply to one of his witty postings, he responded post whit. He laid out his itinerary for the upcoming week:
Probably Santanoni tomorrow (Friday)
May be Colvin-Blake-Nippletop-Dial (Saturday)
Dix Range (Sunday)
A short hike Monday probably Giant & Gothics.
What would I like to join him on? My first thought was to hike in along the trail to Dix and meet him in the morning at the Slide Brook lean-to. When all was said and done, he sent me his ‘base camp’ phone number with a message of when to contact him. After settling in on Saturday and enjoying short warm up with Snow Mountain, the phone call was made.
“Do you need Haystack, Basin, Saddleback?” It takes a moment at times to translate the phrase ‘do you need aystak, baysen, saddleba’ to something more recognizable.
“I’m wide open, whatever you like.”
“You have ice-axe, crampons, no?”
“Yeah, sure, no problem.” Had an ice axe, never came across an occasion to use it though. I appreciated his concern for getting me more of my ‘winter 46ers’, but I was just happy to share the trail with the man who all but owns these majestic beauties. My regular Forty-Sixer checkmarks were all in place, fourteen of them even in the ‘Winter’ column.
“Call me six in the morning and we see what the weather is.”
The next morning, ready for bear, I rang again. “If all goes well, do you need Gothix, Sawteet’ also?” Yikes! “We park one vehicle at the Ausable lot and then go to The Garden.”
“Sure, why the hell not.” I was invincible, wasn’t I?
Before seven we were on the way to the trailhead. Asking him during the drive how long he has been traversing this wilderness, his reply sent me for a loop. Cascade and Porter on September 21st, 1996 was his first Adirondack experience. It had been a Saturday in September of 96 I first marched up to Marcy with two friends. Could we have been leaving our initial footfalls at the same time Alain was starting his manic obsession? The thought so engrossed me, the obvious left turn to the Garden was missed.
At seven-fifteen we had signed in. ‘David and PinPin JR’ (with a rabbit head caricature) Alain had written. “You know, most of the time it’s me they tell to slow down, I got a funny feeling things won’t be that way today.”
“We see, no need to run, we set a good pace and go.”
And go we did. The track was so hard and the snow was so minimal to the Johns Brook Lodge that snowshoes were not necessary. From the first footfall until we stopped to put on our snow treaders at JBL, not a singe word was spoken. As open and gregarious a man he is, when he gets down to his passion, he is all business. Sixty-six minutes and three and a half miles later there I was just steps behind him.
“Good job.”
It was high praise. I looked to Topo, my companion and a gift (along with a great winter rucksack as an incentive to do more cold weather hiking) from a dear friend, who was attached to the front of my pack. “See, I told you I would not let you down.”
His expression said it all. “Yeah, that was the easy part, you still have over five miles to go before you’ve summited your first mountain today, and you think you’ll make three, even five. Good luck.”
The next leg of the journey would bring us to the lean-to at Bushnell Falls. This time there was just a hint of ‘up’ in this one point eight mile stretch, and yet Junior never broke stride nor said a word. It was amazing to watch the fluidity as he flicked broken stray braches off the trail with his hiking pole and swatted any upcoming overhanging nuisances to free them of snow before he passed without breaking stride. I arrived at the shelter, five miles in and a minute or three behind the Jazz Rabbit.
“Good work.” More words of encouragement. There hadn’t been real hard-pressed times on that leg, but the need for a moment or rest was there. Which makes all the sense of why I did not take it. Without breaking stride I plowed through.
“You need water?” the rabbit asked. My body sure did, but it would not show it.
“No, Ill be fine for a while.”
“You lead, take your own pace.”
As so we were off. From here to Slant Rock is a mile and a half, with noticeably more gain. Whenever the call for a breather was warranted, my speed may have slowed, but never did it stop. Invariably Alain kept the pace of a metronome, PinPin Junior swinging in front of him while my hiking buddy Topo egged me on. Topo still had visions of keeping up with his newfound pal (they had rubbed noses on Giant Of The Valley last March) all the way to the top. At the perfect natural little shelter called Slant Rock I did take time for a quick drink, not to mention putting some jerky into an accessible pocket in an attempt to supply me with additional energy. From here the dynamic duo once again led the way.
From Slant Rock to the Marcy/Haystack col is one single simple mile. In the best of times it is merely extremely steep. In the winter it was a swift kick with the snowshoes to make sure none of the altitude you were fighting for was lost. I watched them go, kicking and sticking and moving with machine precision. At first I tried to keep a close pace, but the air was becoming precariously thin, even at just under four thousand feet. At least for me it was. As the last vestiges of his black clad self was lost through the trees, I had to stop every dozen strides or so and count to ten, regaining a pitiful amount of energy.
“Hey,” came the question from my little green partner, “why are you falling behind? You don’t even have the straining job of compacting the trail. Are you trying to make me look bad in front, or should I say in back of Junior.”
Not wanting to waste a single extra breath, I gave him as dirty of a look as I could summon and carried on. You can see the col coming into view, and you know that each step brings you closer to one of the most wild places left untouched in the northeast, Panther Gorge.
With the last of my first tank, I hauled myself to the junction were Alain stood with a smile, and not a bead of sweat visible. “Good work David, only a mile more to go.”
Such depressing words. I slugged a mouthful of water, a little dripping onto my amphibian friend. Junior’s demeanor showed that he was surely ready for more. “Now we have to summit that damn hill before Little Haystack. If we just bulldozed the damn thing level, we’d save well over two hundred feet of extra climbing!”
“Yes, yes, we go, no?”
Again the A-team slipped up, up, and away and out of my vision. Then again, with all my panting and head hanging, I might not have noticed if they were five feet in front of me. Coming down the first hill, I almost felt that the day might be a success. Noticing the bag left at the junction, mine was dropped also and we started up and over Lesser Haystack with Topo now swinging from my jacket. In barely two minutes my spare tank was straining for every ounce that it could spare. I felt for sure Alain would pass me coming back before I even crested this penultimate hill.
To my surprise, the bump succumbed and after another hundred foot plus drop, there was one last ascent to reach the high point of the day, a football field short of a mile tall.
Two hundred yards from the summit they sat waiting, having already touched top. “Good, good, I go again up with you.”
CONTINUED WITH PART II