woodstrider
New member
The trail to this summit appears to be unmaintained or maintained in very poor shape, but that does not stop Woodstrider from giving it the old school try.
I saw the trail on the USGS map and it starts right at Long Lake and follows the south side of a lively stream for about half the trail distance until it crosses a number of feeder streams and and finally crosses one last stream at about 2200'. To this point the footpath was not hard to follow and except for several trees down across the trail easy to see, even with the freshly fallen leaves. Above this last stream crossing (the other side marked with a blue plastic disc which I think someone relocated from the NLP trail) it becomes very sketchy in places.
From the last stream crossing to the summit it is over a thousand feet of vertical gain all along a trail that has at some spots been wiped out by fallen trees. Go-arounds have developed at these spots that have become the trail and there is a certain amount of zig-zagging. This is the sketchiest section of the the trail. If you try it I would advise you go slow and always keep an eye to where the true trail used to lay so you do not go astray- unless you like an unexpected bushwhack through the dog-hair spruce.
As you near the summit the trail becomes a wider tunnel through the trees experience and you will pass a spring (this may be an old well to supple water for the fire warden or the out house pit- I am not sure. Have to find a map of the summit from when it had a look-out tower and cabin- maybe some one knows and will post the info).
The cabin, look-out tower and any other buildings that once were have been razed, removed or otherwise destroyed. There are no open views. I saw no one the entire time. I went because it's what I like to do and I was looking for the DS and two DRs on top. I enjoyed the experience.
To climb this mountain you should be experienced and comfortable with wilderness paths and even off-trail travel through thick forest growth. I noticed only 5 round tail blazes the entire way- and two were on fallen trees lying on the ground. Carry a compass and USGS map. I take two- one is a hard copy and one is stored in my camera ( I take a picture of the map).
I would return there again, and I would bring a small saw to help clear the trail at the worst of the snags.
I saw the trail on the USGS map and it starts right at Long Lake and follows the south side of a lively stream for about half the trail distance until it crosses a number of feeder streams and and finally crosses one last stream at about 2200'. To this point the footpath was not hard to follow and except for several trees down across the trail easy to see, even with the freshly fallen leaves. Above this last stream crossing (the other side marked with a blue plastic disc which I think someone relocated from the NLP trail) it becomes very sketchy in places.
From the last stream crossing to the summit it is over a thousand feet of vertical gain all along a trail that has at some spots been wiped out by fallen trees. Go-arounds have developed at these spots that have become the trail and there is a certain amount of zig-zagging. This is the sketchiest section of the the trail. If you try it I would advise you go slow and always keep an eye to where the true trail used to lay so you do not go astray- unless you like an unexpected bushwhack through the dog-hair spruce.
As you near the summit the trail becomes a wider tunnel through the trees experience and you will pass a spring (this may be an old well to supple water for the fire warden or the out house pit- I am not sure. Have to find a map of the summit from when it had a look-out tower and cabin- maybe some one knows and will post the info).
The cabin, look-out tower and any other buildings that once were have been razed, removed or otherwise destroyed. There are no open views. I saw no one the entire time. I went because it's what I like to do and I was looking for the DS and two DRs on top. I enjoyed the experience.
To climb this mountain you should be experienced and comfortable with wilderness paths and even off-trail travel through thick forest growth. I noticed only 5 round tail blazes the entire way- and two were on fallen trees lying on the ground. Carry a compass and USGS map. I take two- one is a hard copy and one is stored in my camera ( I take a picture of the map).
I would return there again, and I would bring a small saw to help clear the trail at the worst of the snags.
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