dr_wu002
Well-known member
Eric Barbarossa and I met at the M-M trailhead at 6am on Saturday. I wasn't late. Then again, it's a 20 minute ride for me from Easthampton, MA. We had a map and some water bottles and a cell phone in case we got lost or stuck or couldn't find a trail and needed rescuing. We planned to chuck the water bottles and map and compass into the woods once the rescuers came so that they wouldn't think we came prepared and they'd empathize with us and hug us to dry our tears.
So, it didn't take all that long to get to the summit house area. I'd been here before but I don't think Mr. Eric has. And for those of you who don't know, there's a few decent ledges along the way... nice views out to Pioneer Valley, Mt. Tom and some hills beyond. We kept walking past the summit house, down to Taylor Notch and walked across all the 7 Sisters. Past Taylor Notch is where things get really interesting. The trail gets a lot less use, the woods have a more wild feel and there's a lot of interesting ups and downs (like, 100 of them!) If you're the type of person who hates going up and down like that in 200' spurts I wouldn't go on this trail. But I like them, and I hope Eric did, and it was a freakin' beautiful day and all.
Past the "Low Area" and up Mt. Hitchcock and finally Bare Mountain (nice views!) we figured that we'd take this "Robert Frost Trail" down the mountain. The Robert Frost Trail, as it turns out, is more like a bushwhack that someone blazed. Every now and then you see a foot bed, and once I saw steps, but for the most part you follow a orange blazed path through open woods. We were searching for this "Lithia Springs" trail as it's called which would take us to the Dry Brook Trail and back to our cars. At first we weren't sure where the hell we were. The trail opened up to a jeep road but the blazing went away. We were looking for yellow blazes for the Lithia Springs trail but eventually we ended up bushwhacking for a while, heading in some direction, Eric got his off-trail fix, and we found another jeep road and this took us to the Lithia Spring Trail.
Then it was kinda like, WTF? At least the Lithia Spring Trail was blazed yellow (the previous "trails" that we were on had a lot of "left or right" decisions to make) but eventually it turns into a maze of unmarked trails, jeep roads and whatnot. Plus, it was pretty swampy down low and we got swarmed by 'skeeters. That kept us moving. Mind you though that I had 2 maps -- both showed different trails in this area so we just kept walkin' figgerin' that we'd get somewhere. After a while we ended up on something called "Lithia Spring Cutoff" -- not on the map but we saw a ranger driving his dune-buggy on it. Once back on the trail we got into a drier, slightly more breezy area which kept the 'skeeters away and we got to slow down and admire the beautiful woods that we were walking through. After that the Dry Brook Trail (wicked nice) and the car.
The views are ok, and sometimes you get car sounds, but when you stop hearing the cars you're usually in a nice area of the trails. The M-M trail past the Holyoke Summit house is gorgeous and some of those trails down low were just as lovely. Not much in terms of wild life today but I think we had a nice 7 hour hike with something like, 3000' elevation gain. Not bad. I really like hiking in this area.
-Dr. Wu
So, it didn't take all that long to get to the summit house area. I'd been here before but I don't think Mr. Eric has. And for those of you who don't know, there's a few decent ledges along the way... nice views out to Pioneer Valley, Mt. Tom and some hills beyond. We kept walking past the summit house, down to Taylor Notch and walked across all the 7 Sisters. Past Taylor Notch is where things get really interesting. The trail gets a lot less use, the woods have a more wild feel and there's a lot of interesting ups and downs (like, 100 of them!) If you're the type of person who hates going up and down like that in 200' spurts I wouldn't go on this trail. But I like them, and I hope Eric did, and it was a freakin' beautiful day and all.
Past the "Low Area" and up Mt. Hitchcock and finally Bare Mountain (nice views!) we figured that we'd take this "Robert Frost Trail" down the mountain. The Robert Frost Trail, as it turns out, is more like a bushwhack that someone blazed. Every now and then you see a foot bed, and once I saw steps, but for the most part you follow a orange blazed path through open woods. We were searching for this "Lithia Springs" trail as it's called which would take us to the Dry Brook Trail and back to our cars. At first we weren't sure where the hell we were. The trail opened up to a jeep road but the blazing went away. We were looking for yellow blazes for the Lithia Springs trail but eventually we ended up bushwhacking for a while, heading in some direction, Eric got his off-trail fix, and we found another jeep road and this took us to the Lithia Spring Trail.
Then it was kinda like, WTF? At least the Lithia Spring Trail was blazed yellow (the previous "trails" that we were on had a lot of "left or right" decisions to make) but eventually it turns into a maze of unmarked trails, jeep roads and whatnot. Plus, it was pretty swampy down low and we got swarmed by 'skeeters. That kept us moving. Mind you though that I had 2 maps -- both showed different trails in this area so we just kept walkin' figgerin' that we'd get somewhere. After a while we ended up on something called "Lithia Spring Cutoff" -- not on the map but we saw a ranger driving his dune-buggy on it. Once back on the trail we got into a drier, slightly more breezy area which kept the 'skeeters away and we got to slow down and admire the beautiful woods that we were walking through. After that the Dry Brook Trail (wicked nice) and the car.
The views are ok, and sometimes you get car sounds, but when you stop hearing the cars you're usually in a nice area of the trails. The M-M trail past the Holyoke Summit house is gorgeous and some of those trails down low were just as lovely. Not much in terms of wild life today but I think we had a nice 7 hour hike with something like, 3000' elevation gain. Not bad. I really like hiking in this area.
-Dr. Wu