Amicus
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2005
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Plug "Mendon" into the VFTT search engine, scroll back, and you'll get a plethora of good info on the various approaches to the one Vermont bushwhack on the NEHH. Marchowes, Docross, Poison Ivy, Michael J, Papa Bear, Bob&Geri and others have deposited a trove of useful beta.
Today was a convenient day for me to get back on the NE100 track with Mendon, and Dugan and rocksnrolls kindly joined me, despite the uncertainty of the forecast and the certainty of clouds of blackflies. Dugan especially had done a great job tracking down and collating all those reports.
I would have been on time for our rendezvous at the Inn at the Long Trail in Killington, despite wasting 10 minutes looking for a greater-Cambridge gas station open at 5 am and another 10 minutes trying to get my Navigator to accept "709 Route 4" as a legitimate destination (she's a real lady, but we're still getting to know each other, and I knew the way anyway), but for the Route 4 bridge in Woodstock being closed, starting just today no less, necessitating an interminable detour by way of Bethel (it seemed like Maine), Pittsfield and other villages that looked a lot better to me on my way home.
We followed what seems to be the most common route these days, from the trailhead on Wheelersville Road (a dirt road south from 4) at Brewers Corner (c. 1,725 feet) for the Bucklin Trail - the backdoor route to and from Killington summit. Just to the right (S) is one of many gated old logging roads, and this one leads ESE to a point .5 mile east of the Mendon summit.
Most accounts state or imply that you can't lose this logging road, which is indeed quite prominent for its age, but we did. At about .85 mile, there is a fork with a tree in the middle, blazed dark red to show a boundary, and the three of us will swear that the L fork is a tad more prominent and accords well with the map. Alas, that road kept coming to further junctions, becoming less prominent all the time, and when we found ourselves headed due north up the west flank of Killington, we conceded our mistake. A very old logging road led us due S to the real road pretty quckly, however, with the benefit of eliminating the first two crossings of Eddy Brook - the most difficult ones.
We started a little south of our compass bearing for the Mendon summit from the second (and smaller, complete with Marchowes's old can) cairn, at about 3,450 feet, having the impression that would allow us to skirt the thick spruce and blowdowns described by some. It did, sort of, but we had to edge gingerly north about half-way to the summit (which is .5 crowflight mile from the 2nd cairn). We picked up what must be the main herdpath a little east of the east peak, which is 75% of the way to the main peak, due west on that major herdpath.
We saw no one else all day and neither did the blackflies, I gather, as they swarmed us, worst of all around the summit cannister, negating any inclination we might have had to enjoy the moment. Albee was among the last to sign in, on May 13. He took a "wrong" road too, he said.
Descending, we followed the main herd path (lower parts may have been just open woods) pretty much east, making great time with no spruce or serious blowdowns. We hit the logging road about 225 feet north of (before, if you're ascending from the west, as we had) the second cairn.
We had talked of doing a traverse including the summits of Killington, Pico or both, but the bugs, the thunder, the hazy humidity and our desire to discover where we'd gone off-track (which we did), induced us to follow that prominent logging road all the way back to rocksnroll's car.
At the car, Dugan regaled us with the remaining slices of her pumpkin pecan praline cheesecake, which made its spectacular debut on a Holyoke Range hike last month, Moral: hike with Dugan. Absolutely worth washing my hands for!
I am bite-free, and consider this to have been about the optimal way to spend June 2. Thanks, Dugan and rocksnrolls!
My two summit pix are here.
Today was a convenient day for me to get back on the NE100 track with Mendon, and Dugan and rocksnrolls kindly joined me, despite the uncertainty of the forecast and the certainty of clouds of blackflies. Dugan especially had done a great job tracking down and collating all those reports.
I would have been on time for our rendezvous at the Inn at the Long Trail in Killington, despite wasting 10 minutes looking for a greater-Cambridge gas station open at 5 am and another 10 minutes trying to get my Navigator to accept "709 Route 4" as a legitimate destination (she's a real lady, but we're still getting to know each other, and I knew the way anyway), but for the Route 4 bridge in Woodstock being closed, starting just today no less, necessitating an interminable detour by way of Bethel (it seemed like Maine), Pittsfield and other villages that looked a lot better to me on my way home.
We followed what seems to be the most common route these days, from the trailhead on Wheelersville Road (a dirt road south from 4) at Brewers Corner (c. 1,725 feet) for the Bucklin Trail - the backdoor route to and from Killington summit. Just to the right (S) is one of many gated old logging roads, and this one leads ESE to a point .5 mile east of the Mendon summit.
Most accounts state or imply that you can't lose this logging road, which is indeed quite prominent for its age, but we did. At about .85 mile, there is a fork with a tree in the middle, blazed dark red to show a boundary, and the three of us will swear that the L fork is a tad more prominent and accords well with the map. Alas, that road kept coming to further junctions, becoming less prominent all the time, and when we found ourselves headed due north up the west flank of Killington, we conceded our mistake. A very old logging road led us due S to the real road pretty quckly, however, with the benefit of eliminating the first two crossings of Eddy Brook - the most difficult ones.
We started a little south of our compass bearing for the Mendon summit from the second (and smaller, complete with Marchowes's old can) cairn, at about 3,450 feet, having the impression that would allow us to skirt the thick spruce and blowdowns described by some. It did, sort of, but we had to edge gingerly north about half-way to the summit (which is .5 crowflight mile from the 2nd cairn). We picked up what must be the main herdpath a little east of the east peak, which is 75% of the way to the main peak, due west on that major herdpath.
We saw no one else all day and neither did the blackflies, I gather, as they swarmed us, worst of all around the summit cannister, negating any inclination we might have had to enjoy the moment. Albee was among the last to sign in, on May 13. He took a "wrong" road too, he said.
Descending, we followed the main herd path (lower parts may have been just open woods) pretty much east, making great time with no spruce or serious blowdowns. We hit the logging road about 225 feet north of (before, if you're ascending from the west, as we had) the second cairn.
We had talked of doing a traverse including the summits of Killington, Pico or both, but the bugs, the thunder, the hazy humidity and our desire to discover where we'd gone off-track (which we did), induced us to follow that prominent logging road all the way back to rocksnroll's car.
At the car, Dugan regaled us with the remaining slices of her pumpkin pecan praline cheesecake, which made its spectacular debut on a Holyoke Range hike last month, Moral: hike with Dugan. Absolutely worth washing my hands for!
I am bite-free, and consider this to have been about the optimal way to spend June 2. Thanks, Dugan and rocksnrolls!
My two summit pix are here.
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