Sandwich Dome/Jennings peak

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bikehikeskifish

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December 6, 2008

It was a cold 6 degrees in Campton when I got off the highway at 7:30am. The rest of the gang, Fat Tuesday, MindlessMariachi and Juniper, had called to say they were running behind due to "you can't get there from here" carpool meet-up problems. I drove to the Waterville Nordic Center, one of my favorite places, which coincidentally opened today. I poked my head into the touring center and said hello to the staff which I've know now for 12 seasons. Unfortunately, I let them down when they learned I hadn't come to sample their 15Km opening day treat. I always enjoy the view of Tecumseh and the Osceolas from Corcoran Pond. I enjoy it even more than before I had climbed these peaks.

I headed back to the trailhead for 8:30 and got geared up. Fat Tuesday, Juniper and MindlessMariachi pulled in shortly thereafter and we were off by 9am. There was 3-6" of snow, combined with bare and/or wet spots, down low. The crossing of Drake's Brook was fairly straightforward -- use caution to avoid icy rocks. I stepped on rocks just under the surface and make it across right between the blazes. The trail goes up pretty quickly and within 10 minutes we paused to adjust layers.

The first views were from the outlook above Noon Peak, to the north / northwest, including Tecumseh, Osceola, Tripyramids, and way off Washington and the northern Presidentials.



Beyond this point the number of boot prints diminished somewhat, and the snow depth increased to 6-9" and continued with a light Styrofoam texture. At the junction with Drake's Brook, we bumped into one the groups that had departed while I was waiting. They were debating heading down (which, based on the tracks on our way back, they did.) Shortly beyond this junction is the spur for Jennings Peak - 0.2 miles each way. This trail was a bit steeper and icier than anything so far. I was able to kick steps in most of the way up, but debating our descent from the top, the microspikes came out (I managed to bareboot it without incident thanks to a few rocks poking through and using the surrounding trees.)

The views from Jennings Peak include Sandwich Dome itself, along with the Squam Range, Tenney, Ragged, and Cardigan. The filtered sun was right in the camera so the photos from here aren't very good.



Having made it safely back to the Sandwich Mountain Trail, we turned right and continued on to Sandwich Dome itself. Along this stretch the idea of snowshoes first became attractive, as the depths increased to 12"+ with an occasional knee-deep (or high on the calf for the taller folks) drift. We had passed 4 of the 5 people I knew had left before us, and met the 5th on his way down. The junction with Smart's Brook passed and right before the Algonguin Trail junction, we stopped to eat, and put on warmer layers. While it was breezy on Noon and Jennings, it was almost dead still on Sandwich Dome.


MindlessMariachi, Fat Tuesday, Juniper, BikeHikeSkiFish

The panorama from the summit begins at Moosilauke and goes all the way around to Chocorua (this shot stops at Whiteface.)


Having already eaten, we spent only a few minutes on top before heading down. At the junction with Drake's Brook we turned right and immediately gave up a good chunk of elevation (800' in half a mile.) After the steep section though the trail is wide and feels nearly flat. Following its namesake brook, there are numerous feeder creeks to step over. One of the larger ones had a bog bridge which has snapped in the middle and sits in the brook. Somewhere in this stretch, we came across a kill site (on top of a large rock in fact), which had been lightly covered with snow, eliminating any tracks. The bits of black in the photo are fur, which on the skin side were nearly white, progressing to a charcoal gray, and finally a rusty brown at the tips. The blood spot in the middle was about the size of a powder basket on the hiking pole. Anyone care to opine on what ate what?



After the trip the three Bostonians went to the Common Man, but I had to bail.

Thanks to Fat Tuesday for organizing this trip. It was a good time and a good group.

All photos

Tim
 
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Nice TR, Tim. Especially loved your panorama photo.

And, regarding the “kill-site” photo, it sort of looks like a dinner party that turned nasty for one of the involved parties.
(Gotta be careful when you’re invited “for dinner”!)
 
hey!

as the junior-most member of this website, i thought i was assigned to write the trip report? harumph! does this mean i don't get my 'greenie'? anyway, your trip report was comprehensive and excellent, and far more professional and relevant than mine would have been. i probably would've dwelt at length at how Juniper, Fat Tuesday and I drove around aimlessly in separate cars in the pre-dawn darkness of Medford, Mass., looking for the Meadow Glen Mall, (site of a car consolidation) which is bigger than an ocean liner but strangely hard to find from 93N. (there were also a weirdly large number of people/cars hanging around at Kohl's at 6 a.m.

other notable details:
- all parties seemed to agree that if you're going to fall on your head in an icy stream in the Whites in winter, Drake's Brook (a 2 minute walk from the car) is the perfect spot to bust your head;
- one of the things that made the "kill site" sort of mysterious was that there were no tracks leading to or away from the site;
- there was some disagreement on whether or not there might really be a Bigfoot out there ... somewhere;
- the second "kill site" (the Common Man) has $2 beers and really cheap food from 3 to 5;
- Fat Tuesday brought a ziploc baggie of smoked salmon, which was pretty neat;
- after a few less-than-stellar hikes through certain other websites, I was pleased to hike with a really good crew yesterday.
 
Tim- amazingly detailed report- thank you! The carpool intrigue did not at all end with the first meeting in the Alternate Dimension/Vortex of the Meadow Glen Mall whose parking lot has no mode of egress. Let's just say that the two bookends were a near collision with an MBTA bus and me driving the wrong way into oncoming traffic on route 16. Oh Yes.

My other favorite moment was a very quotable conversation about "context" in which my take away thought was that I will never try to explain to my parents that me and another woman that I kind of know met two married men on the internet and decided to meet up in a dark parking lot and drive two hours north to spend the day together in the woods. On the phone last night I simply told them that I went hiking with some friends.

It was a lovely day with lovely companions. Tom, I think you'll still get your greenies;)
 
Nice TR, Tim. Especially loved your panorama photo.

Ditto. That panorama shot is gorgeous.

Interesting mystery about that kill site! Someone who hiked with us off an on yesterday mentioned he saw a baby moose just after birth...there was a bit of blood on the ground where the animal had been born....guess that's not what you saw though. Would probably be difficult to give birth on top of a rock, not to mention there was a presence of black fur.
 
Ditto. That panorama shot is gorgeous.

Interesting mystery about that kill site! Someone who hiked with us off an on yesterday mentioned he saw a baby moose just after birth...there was a bit of blood on the ground where the animal had been born....guess that's not what you saw though. Would probably be difficult to give birth on top of a rock, not to mention there was a presence of black fur.

Cervids (deer, moose, etc.) usually birth young in the Spring. Mating season is timed so that young are reared when food and cover (trees, bushes, etc.) are at their best so as to give the young the highest chance of survival as possible.

From the description of the hair color you gave, Tim, I would say the closest I can think of might be gray fox.

Brian
 
My camera batteries were not happy with the cold temps so I didn't take that many pictures. I don't have a close-up of the fur. Here's a zoom from the embedded photo above:



Tim
p.s. Fat Tuesday - What do you think we told our wives??? Hmm?
 
Nice report. This sounds like a hike that, even though it's not a 4K, is probably more fun than some of the actual 4K hikes.

Funny comments about near-strangers hiking together. Is there some kind of sociology lesson in the fact that married men and single women are looking to get outdoors? Hmmmm, probably not.....;)
 
Wow, thats a pretty gruesome picture. I wonder if a Great Horned owl went in for an attack. I remember doing a report back in school, and they pretty much anything, including other owls. That kind of freaked out my 10 year old mind. :rolleyes:

http://www.owlpages.com/owls.php?genus=Bubo&species=virginianus whoa...

Back to the report, nice pictures on an otherwise increasingly overcast day. And I agree, if you're going to bust open you head, it might as well be there.

grouseking
 
An owl is certainly within the range of possible diners. That would definitely jive with the lack of tracks. There was scat here and there on the trail but I can't ID it. Could have been fox - seemed smaller than coyote scat. There was also a few instances of a longer, thinner scat, which IIRC, was U-shaped, almost about the size of a decent night crawler.

I can picture a squirrel sitting up on the rock top and an owl swooping down and grabbing a meal. The fur tufts went down the slope of the rock for a ways, but that could easily have been from a breeze. A very thin 1/4" or so layer of snow had fallen since the event, covering up additional evidence.

There were a lot of rabbit / hare tracks higher up, didn't see any down low, but they are surely around - and if not completely white yet perhaps could match up with the fur?

(I got a set of fresh lithiums on Sunday so I should have better photo capacity for the rest of the winter...)

Tim
 
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Nice stuff!

Nice TR and pics, Tim! Good company to have along with you, too!

My uneducated guess would be short tailed weasel and since there were no tracks to or from the kill site I go along with the owl theory, though it could have been a hawk as well.

KDT
 
Super panorama and great TR, thanks.

I second the thought of Great Horned Owl (no tracks), and was going to guess "snowshoe hare" or maybe mink as the entree -- sounds like the fur might being changing to winter phase, maybe? I don't think they shed it all, so that might be plausible.
 
Cervids (deer, moose, etc.) usually birth young in the Spring. Mating season is timed so that young are reared when food and cover (trees, bushes, etc.) are at their best so as to give the young the highest chance of survival as possible.


{From the description of the hair color you gave, Tim, I would say the closest I can think of might be gray fox. }

Brian

Well..at least it wasn't a silverfox :)

nice report and photos..headed up that way tomorrow..tecumseh..and thinking conditions will be similar...what's 10 feet between friends......
 
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