The problem as I see it is that it may be easier to cross higher up the North Fork but that gives you a longer bushwhack down to the old trail at the bridge site. At one time, the plan to remove the suspension bridge was coupled with a Pemi bridge just outside the Wilderness but Molly seems to have deleted that.
I agree. But both crossings I have identified are pretty low on the North Fork so the bushwhacking total length is about the shortest it's going to get.
A route intersecting one or both trails higher up is desirable but maybe the most useful priority right now is to establish the shortest Molly Route, a low route connecting the lower Thoreau Falls Trail just upstream of its bridge, with the Bondcliff low Trailhead.
This would undo much of the damage the suspension bridge destruction has caused.
Here's my thinking right now: some givens (moving from the Thoreau Falls to the Bondcliff Trails).
1. The wide, existing old road/dry streambed/whatever going S/SW from the North Fork crossings I described will pretty much remain open without maintenance.
2. The "beach" and low bank portions of the route I have described, through the early and middle section of the Route, are easy walking for most hikers (I'll have to see what issues Spring high water brings to the table). The animal paths or whatever on the low banks will be there, without maintenance, moving forward. The trees here are mostly not big, blowdowns will be mostly step-overs.
3. The path from the rock slabs on the river shore up to the N top of the destroyed bridge will become even more beaten because the tourists are taking advantage of the new illegal campsite there and will keep the way down to the river open. (I don't like it any better than you do, but you play the cards you're dealt, even if they're from the bottom of the NFS deck).
4. The portion of the Wilderness trail between the illegal campsite and the lower Bondcliff Trail trailhead will be a viable trail moving forward. They can't hide it. They may think we're stupid and have no memory, but the trail is there. Sure no maintenance, no blowdown removal or trimming; and sure they'll continue to throw junk on it, but the terrain will allow us to get by.
So the issues remaining are these (again moving from the Thoreau Falls to the Bondcliff Trails).
1. We need a beaten path from the N side of the Thoreau Falls Trail bridge to the North Fork crossing. For the most part this is just firming up an existing path.
2. We need a beaten path slabbing along the hillside, mostly following animal paths/lines of least resistance above the East Branch early when the shore walking runs out. Several hundred yards.
3. We need a beaten path slabbing along the hillside, mostly following animal paths/lines of least resistance above the East Branch towards the end when the shore walking runs out after that extended great walking through the middle section. Up to the beginning of the shore rock slabs. Maybe only 100-200 yards.
So.
After we talk about it for awhile here among those who have tried it, we agree on plotted GPS tracks for these relatively short sections. We publish the tracks here (or elsewhere if there is NFS pressure or honest objection from the forum owner). They will be rough for years, but passable. Over time the paths will become easier for those who follow. I'm not talking about establishing trails in any way we can be prosecuted or fined for. No saws, no blazing, no maintenance of any kind. We just choose to walk on our land, but with guidance along a particular course and obviously pushing impediments out of our way as we walk, as is natural.
It won't take more than a few of us to agree upon and establish the GPS tracks. Once we publish the finals here (or elsewhere if there is NFS pressure or honest objection from the forum owner), boots take over the task. Hey, this is no miracle; I'm talking years. This is legacy responsibility as I see it.
My premise (and I'm willing to listen to other opinion) is that a horrible mistake has been made and this Route is needed. Rather than many hundreds of trips over the upcoming years being made randomly all over the hillside I'm suggesting we all start walking the same way, to make it easier for our kids to eventually enjoy what we enjoyed before the NFS took it away.
I'll probably be making another trip before heavy snow and a trip or two in the Spring, and I'll publish some tracks. If others do the same I'll attempt to put together some consensus tracks as time goes on.
So?