odds and ends in NH

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buckyball1

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thought i'd do a brief trip report and impressions (YMMV; it surely will) on the chance a few people find something of interest in this group of peaks....Hayes/Success/Iron/Blueberry (Glencliff)/Black (Benton)/Potash

After spending the year finishing off the NEHH and 50Finest lists (almost) and with a two day weather window, I decided to do some trailed peaks I've neglected

Thursday Oct 25th
Hayes -near Gorham and reached by Centennial Trail (AT); enjoyed the hike and saw completely different perspective on familiar surrounding peaks-the trail was totally covered by leaves and the lack of or old blazing (a common thread on these hikes) made route finding in a few spots more difficult than easy bushwacks-- the trail is moderate, but the footing a bit tenuous with lots of smallish rocks hidden by the leaves-as you begin to ascend there are excellent views of the Androscoggin River; then some nice views from ledges/openings as you climb and the top/ ridge provides interesting looks at the Carters/Moriah along with the N Prezzies, Mahoosuc and Kilkenny Ranges-when you reach the ridge, Hayes is a few tenths of a mile south on the Mahoussuc Trail which would make a nice loop with a short car spot

Success-Success Pond Rd in great shape-the Success Trail is in super condition until you hit the ridge which leads to the AT--the ridge is a nice flat walk, but much of it was under water (and appears as if it would be much of the year)-the AT to the summit is "typical" and I enjoyed the large, flat top with an alpine meadow and excellent views in every direction

Iron -(near Jackson)-a short , steep hike on a badly eroded trail with almost no views from the top since the fire tower is gone and the trees have grown up-the superior views of the S Prezzies are from the trailhead parking area-nothing here to recommend unless you "must" hike it-another, "why is this still on the 52WAV list?"

One of the highlights of my little trip was seeing the full moon rise over mountains when I pulled off at the last overlook headed up the Kanc from Conway--nothing short of spectacular--then saw the sun set as I crested the highway and headed down toward Lincoln. I spent a cold night at Elbow Pond and wandered around at 2AM in the dazzling moonlight. It was in the 20s as I headed off to Blueberry on Friday morning.

Friday 26th

Blueberry-near Glencliff--if you go, the Sanatorium Rd is now High St and the North/South Rd is Long Pond Road-I found this the most enjoyable of the hikes with a trail of moderate slope and excellent footing. There were numerous long stretches of easy walking on smooth ledges and nice views of Moosilauke and the surrounding lowlands. A blanket of ground fog around a 1000' with small peaks poking through the soup like islands in the sea made for a surreal landscape-a nice open top awaits you.

Black (Benton)-with thanks to rocks/n/rolls-the parking area for the Chippewa Trail is about 3.1 miles from Rt 25 on the Lime Kiln Rd. There is serious beaver activity down low and you will need to walk upstream a piece from the trail to dance across a beaver dam. After an easy start, the trail is moderately steep with the middle section in the red pines sorely lacking in visible blazes. There are numerous excellent view spots on the last 1/3 of the hike and the summit itself is one of the nicest "small" summits in the area--worth it for this alone

Potash-maybe I was just getting worn down, but this was a smidge harder than the cakewalk I expected. Again the middle section of the trail really lacked for current blazes; you had to look for the trail depression, "eroded" roots sticking up from the forest floor's uniform leaf cover, and initilas carved in the trees. This wasn't a major problem, but I would think it might cause problems on what I assume to be a "tourist" trail. I hated the circumnavigation of the summit cone with rocky/rooty sidehilling, but the views from the top were truly spectacular.

As I neared the trailhead on my return from Potash a feline about 2-3 times the size of a house cat with a short tail and a grey brown color raced across the trail-I am clueless here.

a slightly punishing, fun two days

jim
 
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From what I gather, the reason for the trip is that you are trying to do the 52 Peaks with a View. Alluded to in the Iron Mt. write-up. How many more of those do you need? I am working on that list and am about half-way thru. Next year the only peak on the list, I hope to check off is Wolf. You really turned me off from Iron Mt., but I will still go for it, like some of those tedious bushwacks up trailless peaks in the Catskills. I have found several of the "52 Peaks with a View" to be superb and worth doing and even repeating (Percy Peak, Sugarloaf, Chocorua), then Hayes I went on a dismal day and saw nothing, same holds true for Paugus. But you can't have excellent weather all the time.
 
buckyball1 said:
Black (Benton)-with thanks to rocks/n/rolls-the parking area for the Chippewa Trail is about 3.1 miles from Rt 25 on the Lime Kiln Rd.
Did you meet ME, you guys seemed to find the trailhead OK
Potash-...I hated the circumnavigation of the summit cone with rocky/rooty sidehilling, but the views from the top were truly spectacular.
Your tax $$ at work, the trail used to go straighter up but was moved for unknown reasons
 
Hi Roy--i am a bit lost by your message, not sure what "ME" refers to??



I parked right at "3.1 miles from Rt 25" in a small area on the Mt side of Lime Kiln Rd--The area near the trailhead seemed to have been really trashed by a storm. The trail went down a dip, across a tiny brook and then at a second 'brook" i hit a large beaver pond which was impassable. Not seeing any obvious way across the "pond", I headed upstream and then into a field edge which lead me to the beaver dam where i crossed. I immediately hit the old road which leads to the kilns, backtracked downstream and found the signed trail toward Black.

I met a fellow scouting the trail for a possible "youth campers" hike and two gentlemen meandering up the trail?

and yes, i was mightily disappointed in the layout of the current Potash Trail--straight up usually works for me

(Aaron--16)

jim
 
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What a great way to spend a couple of nice days - collecting a half dozen of the 52WAV (which I've enjoyed working on too)! However -

buckyball1 said:
Iron -(near Jackson)-a short , steep hike on a badly eroded trail with almost no views from the top since the fire tower is gone and the trees have grown up-the superior views of the S Prezzies are from the trailhead parking area-nothing here to recommend unless you "must" hike it-another, "why is this still on the 52WAV list?"

The Iron Mt.Trail deserves its place among the 52WAV, in my view, even though its summit does not. The Trail continues south past the summit for another .8 mile, to open cliffs with great views west and south.

Incidentally, Potash is one of the summits added to the 2d Ed. of Scudder's White Mt. View Guide. With his charts, you can identify every other peak you can see.
 
askus3 said:
It is obvious ME stands for Maine!!!

Not this time. Roy can speak for himself, but I'm sure he meant Mohammed Ellozy, who by happenstance hiked to Black Mt. by the Chippewa Trail on Thursday, [not] same as jim (who didn't meet him [because jim climbed it on Fri., as we now know]). ME posted his own brief TR, which is how I know.

jim: Your dates [were] wrong [until you fixed them]. Thursday was the 25th.
 
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Amicus said:
The Iron Mt.Trail deserves its place among the 52WAV, in my view, even though its summit does not. The Trail continues south past the summit for another .8 mile, to open cliffs with great views west and south.

I didn't make it to this view point when I was on Iron Mountain, but it should also be noted that there are two nice view points on the trail - one maybe halfway up the woods ascent (on the right going uphill) and another one on the left on top of a big rock maybe 3-4 minutes before the summit.

The views from near the trailhead are awesome too.
 
buckyball1 said:
Hi Roy--i am a bit lost by your message, not sure what "ME" refers to??
Sorry BB1, longtime readers know I am in the habit of abbreviating names due to my slow typing and so I won't offend people by bad spelling. According to your original post, you were there the same date as one of the luminaries of this file.

Somebody in another note apparently couldn't even find the trailhead for the Chippewa. The obscurity at the brook/beaver pond is several years old, a well-known outdoor columnist wrote about getting lost there.

A friend of mine has done 3 of the hikes you did, but it took her 3 days of steady hiking not all in one :)
 
Going to Hayes is a great hike. we used to take the side trail over to Mascot Pond and tool around Mascot Pond. If you look carefully in the poplar and birch stands near the pond you can still find nails from the old boardinghouse that supported the lead mine. So once we determined to keep going and check out Hayes,and we really enjoyed it.
 
Since you were bagging views, Jim, I hope you took the very short side trip to "the outlook" just off the Success Trail. The view from the ledges there across to the Bald Caps is outstanding. Woulda been the best of your trip.
Enough to make you forget about the Success Trail's quarter-mile long quagmire reminiscent of the Adirondacks' Bradley Pond area.
 
jt----yes, went to the Outlook--had "seen" it driving in Success Pond Rd and knew it'd be spectacular-- also hit the Stowe Pinnacle when doing Worcester Ridge a few weeks ago--also super, but populated as opposed to the "Outlook" which was just me (and you know how i like "no people" when i climb :) )--but i did really like the top of Success itself--if not too cold/wet(never been a winter guy), i'm headed over to NH to do "odds and ends 2" later this week--not sure what that might be yet, but...and i'm thinking really hard about seeing that new Baker canister in summer 2008

jim
 
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