Bob Kittredge
Active member
I've been interested in doing the Nelson Crag trail up Mount Washington for some time, and I was hoping to have a crack at it yesterday. After breakfast at Pinkham I checked the weather: 50mph winds, temps in the 30s, 10-20 degree windchill, but no mention of rain. What the heck, I'll give it a try and be prepared to turn back if it gets too gnarly. Made sure I had a sufficient number of layers in the pack.
Off on Old Jackson Road at 7:15, nary a soul in sight. By the start of Nelson Crag Trail, the sun was poking through occasionally. Nice trail: narrow and well-maintained. Doesn't get a whole lot of use, but I did see some relatively fresh footprints now and then. Moderately steep with some nice scrambles in the lower section. By 4300' it started to break out of the trees and I stopped to layer up. The trail soon passes right next to the Auto Road and I saw a few tourists stopping at a turnout to take in the views. These were the only people I was to see between Pinkham and the summit.
Now I was getting up into the clouds and was glad to see there were lots and lots of cairns. Thank you trail crews! Winds stronger now, and occasionally a gust would push me to my left. The upper section of the trail approaches the summit from the northeast, so you're very exposed to the prevailing northwesterlies. I put on my leather-palmed gloves both to keep my hands warm and to protect them from the rough rocks. Got to the junction with Huntington Ravine Trail without too much trouble, but the wind gusts were still getting stronger, and the blowing fog was getting both the rocks and my glasses wet. I strongly considered ducking down into Alpine Garden to get out of the wind, but decided I would be warm enough and able to follow the trail.
Up on Ball Crag things got fairly hairy at one point. I was really being knocked around; how do people manage to get around when winds are at 70 and above? And I was having trouble finding the next cairn. I ducked down out of the wind and adjusted my gear. My gloves were getting wet and my hands cold. Just last month I had pulled the handwarmer out of my belly bag and said, "Hell, it's summer; I don't need no stinkin' handwarmer". Fortunately I did have a second pair of dry gloves. I also tucked my wet glasses away and found I could see the trail much better. Oh yes, and by now I was encountering the remnants of the previous day's rime ice on cairns and outcrops; not enough to make it slippery underfoot though. I soldiered on.
I'd been hearing the cog railway for a while now, and soon I crossed the auto road and then the cog tracks. I considered waiting around to moon the cog, but thought better of it. I was maybe 100 feet away from the summit before I could make out the building looming over me. 11:40.
Man, that bowl of chili tasted good! A check of the displays showed temps in the 30s and peak gusts around 60.
Met lots of people coming up Tux as I descended. Much less windy on this sheltered side of the mountain. Nice waterfalls and wildflowers in the ravine. A half mile from Pinkham a moose grazed in the woods about 30 feet from the trail.
I highly recommend Nelson Crag Trail, especially if you like to avoid the crowds. You might want to do it on a calmer day though.
Off on Old Jackson Road at 7:15, nary a soul in sight. By the start of Nelson Crag Trail, the sun was poking through occasionally. Nice trail: narrow and well-maintained. Doesn't get a whole lot of use, but I did see some relatively fresh footprints now and then. Moderately steep with some nice scrambles in the lower section. By 4300' it started to break out of the trees and I stopped to layer up. The trail soon passes right next to the Auto Road and I saw a few tourists stopping at a turnout to take in the views. These were the only people I was to see between Pinkham and the summit.
Now I was getting up into the clouds and was glad to see there were lots and lots of cairns. Thank you trail crews! Winds stronger now, and occasionally a gust would push me to my left. The upper section of the trail approaches the summit from the northeast, so you're very exposed to the prevailing northwesterlies. I put on my leather-palmed gloves both to keep my hands warm and to protect them from the rough rocks. Got to the junction with Huntington Ravine Trail without too much trouble, but the wind gusts were still getting stronger, and the blowing fog was getting both the rocks and my glasses wet. I strongly considered ducking down into Alpine Garden to get out of the wind, but decided I would be warm enough and able to follow the trail.
Up on Ball Crag things got fairly hairy at one point. I was really being knocked around; how do people manage to get around when winds are at 70 and above? And I was having trouble finding the next cairn. I ducked down out of the wind and adjusted my gear. My gloves were getting wet and my hands cold. Just last month I had pulled the handwarmer out of my belly bag and said, "Hell, it's summer; I don't need no stinkin' handwarmer". Fortunately I did have a second pair of dry gloves. I also tucked my wet glasses away and found I could see the trail much better. Oh yes, and by now I was encountering the remnants of the previous day's rime ice on cairns and outcrops; not enough to make it slippery underfoot though. I soldiered on.
I'd been hearing the cog railway for a while now, and soon I crossed the auto road and then the cog tracks. I considered waiting around to moon the cog, but thought better of it. I was maybe 100 feet away from the summit before I could make out the building looming over me. 11:40.
Man, that bowl of chili tasted good! A check of the displays showed temps in the 30s and peak gusts around 60.
Met lots of people coming up Tux as I descended. Much less windy on this sheltered side of the mountain. Nice waterfalls and wildflowers in the ravine. A half mile from Pinkham a moose grazed in the woods about 30 feet from the trail.
I highly recommend Nelson Crag Trail, especially if you like to avoid the crowds. You might want to do it on a calmer day though.