With drizzle before we arrived in the area, bushwhacker and I first scouted Lyon's other sub-peak. We were looking for one of the club members to grant permission to access the woods road. Given the conditions, neither of us was in the mood to go looking for members and instead drove over to the Averill Mt trailhead. The drizzle turned to steady rain with the temps hovering in the 30's. While we we not soaked, the rain was giving our clothes a pretty good wetting.
Climbing higher we smiled as the rain turned into snow, both feeling we'd rather get snowed on than rained on. The precip was still mixed with rain but as we gained some height it let off a little before we jumped into the woods from the ATV track.
The woods were nice and open and as we neared the summit it looked like the weather gods were going to smile on us. One of the reasons we drove north was because the cold front was coming in from Canada and felt it would clear more quickly up there.
We had to do a double take as we neared the summit. Coming out of the open woods, the top had waist high grass with a few small trees and bushes. More like one of the grassy Cat100 hundred instead of an ADK3k peak.
We were treated to the wind tearing the mist off of nearby Averill and Lyon Mtns and the sky was blue with large cumulus clouds and long distance views to the SW. The small trees blocks views in some directions and we were already discussing getting back up here on a winter day.
Its not that you might not have better views from one of this small mountain's higher neighbors, but unusual summit really caught us by surprise.
The drive back to Lake Placid wasn't too shabby. The storm had dumped snow on the higher elevations and Whiteface was attracting photographers and gawkers. The striking snowcovered summit hovering above the lower elevation trees was stunning from any angle.
I'll get some pictures up later.
Climbing higher we smiled as the rain turned into snow, both feeling we'd rather get snowed on than rained on. The precip was still mixed with rain but as we gained some height it let off a little before we jumped into the woods from the ATV track.
The woods were nice and open and as we neared the summit it looked like the weather gods were going to smile on us. One of the reasons we drove north was because the cold front was coming in from Canada and felt it would clear more quickly up there.
We had to do a double take as we neared the summit. Coming out of the open woods, the top had waist high grass with a few small trees and bushes. More like one of the grassy Cat100 hundred instead of an ADK3k peak.
We were treated to the wind tearing the mist off of nearby Averill and Lyon Mtns and the sky was blue with large cumulus clouds and long distance views to the SW. The small trees blocks views in some directions and we were already discussing getting back up here on a winter day.
Its not that you might not have better views from one of this small mountain's higher neighbors, but unusual summit really caught us by surprise.
The drive back to Lake Placid wasn't too shabby. The storm had dumped snow on the higher elevations and Whiteface was attracting photographers and gawkers. The striking snowcovered summit hovering above the lower elevation trees was stunning from any angle.
I'll get some pictures up later.