To take a contrary viewpoint that is hopefully not too unpleasant, I backpacked for years without tent or sleeping bag -- just a reflective space blanket tarp. Unusual? I guess, but it let me get deeper in the woods for cheap. I'm not sure what gear I'd leave behind if I knew there was a shelter -- maybe the tent, but what if the shelter is full?
To summarize what I would have said in the many "shelter ettiquette" threads, I have never stayed in a shelter with anyone other than one hiking partner; if someone else is there, I will definitely motor on. No one has ever showed up at a shelter in which I'm camping, but if they did, I would leave. I am a solitary creature, especially when it comes to the woods.
Those shelters (we're talking about Perkins, Blue Brook, and Spruce Brook) are right on the trail. If I was camping in the valley, I wouldn't want folks like me passing right through *my front yard at dawn and dusk (*yes, it's not "mine", it's shared by all; I mean that it's in front of me). I like privacy when camping. Likewise, when hiking through, I like the experience more when I don't walk through anyone's camp.
To respond directly to MichaelJ's point:
MichaelJ said:
I opposed the Wilderness designation exactly because of situations like this. Suddenly the Wild River Trail, a wide, flat, former railroad grade as it passes Spruce Brook Shelter, is a "wilderness experience"? Please.
Michael, I respectfully disagree with your logic here. The same logic could be used to oppose nearly any conservation project. The "Wilderness Trail", a potential analogue to the Wild River Trail, may not be the most remote wilderness, but to say that it's not worth conserving as Wilderness because trains once rolled through sparking wildfires in the slash piles is dangerous precedent. Much of Northern Maine's working forests were once clearcut and farmed. Now they're woods again. Sure, they aren't virgin forests, but I'm glad for the conservation projects. They make paddling through much more enjoyable than if they were still in non-timber cultivation.
Then again, I'm a radical. I'd love to see Pinkham Notch closed to motor vehicles above Glen and Gorham.
I would say to leave them in place until they rot to pieces. Use at your own risk, the way the shelters in the Sandwich Range were managed. (I helped carry out the remains of Camps Rich and Shehadi.)
By the way, the dog shown in the photo to which McRat links looks sort of like an Australian Cattle Dog. This one is particularly beautiful -- looks sort of like a coyote. Worth a look, dog lovers. Any other ideas on breed?
And Jason, I'll carry a load for you any day. Just let me know where and when, and I'll help you get there. I know of a few plant sites in the upper Wild River valley that you would love.