Hank
New member
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2003
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Just under 2.5 hours drive from NYC this morning in light traffic. Left trailhead register 7:47 am solo, pack-less but with essentials in short pockets. I wore my Flyer vest as it was in the mid 40s but to have it just in case the weather would turn, not predicted to happen. As it turned out, I ended up carrying the vest for almost the whole passage. I also carried a space blanket, one water bottle, gels, compass, 2 maps, etc.
The Neversink was easily crossed on rocks. Taking the red trail to and over the peaks for the virtue of a direct route, as opposed to the scenic Curtis-Ormsbee Trail. I ran it as a trail run but was surprised at how slow my average speed panned out.
Did I blow it, or were there no views from the top of Slide? I passed an opportunity on the left before the summit to northwestern views as the AMC Catskill & Hudson Valley Day Hikes claimed 360 views were to be had at the top. After descending to the Burroughs plaque I re-ascended past the footing of the old fire tower in a search for a trail to some view. Every path had brush laid across it, as sign in the Adirondacks that the trail is not for use. No views. BTW, this was my first Catskill hike.
On to Cornell. The spring just east of Slide summit was the first and last water I took. [Yes, I am a camel] Water was running profusely. Cornell was also a disappointment on views but I knew a guide book mentioned Wittenberg had an open ledge. I did not carry a guide book but I did take pictures of both the Wittenberg Cornell Slide Trail and the Phoenicia East Branch Trail descriptions with my camera so I could access them in the camera display if needed, however awkward it might be. But this was a trail run and I wanted to keep moving and did not try to read on the camera. The cliff faces on Cornell, which had been a question mark to me as I was solo act turned out to be no problem. This was different hiking than the ADKs and Whites. You hit the same cliff bands on different mountains, or so it seemed to me. The rocks were different and summits had hardwoods.
The southern and eastern views from Wittenberg were worthy. However, a haze robbed me of clear distant detail.
Eschewing bug dope, I was only bitten by mosquitoes in Woodland Valley. For me, it was just in and out of the valley and on to the impressive stone steps.
At the trail intersection for Giant Ledge, I left the yellow marked Phoenicia East Branch Trail and took the unmarked easement through the Winnisook Club, saving distance and vertical. I had my only food, a gel and put the hammer down on this unmarked trail/abandoned road. As the trail ends on CR 47 just north of Winnisook Lake, I ran the eastern shoulder of the road, uphill to just above the lake, then downhill to the car park, getting to the register 4:47 after leaving it at the start. I had expected to run it in less than 4 hours. How will this compare with the Escarpment Trail Run on the 26th? I am hoping the ability to run with no weight on the supported run will make a difference. Also, I will not be backtracking looking for views and taking pictures.
My Polar S710 said I had 4260' vertical gain.
Back in Greenwich Village by 3:30 pm. Only stumbled on roots/rocks twice but never went down. Thanks to all who gave advise on putting this trip together.
The Neversink was easily crossed on rocks. Taking the red trail to and over the peaks for the virtue of a direct route, as opposed to the scenic Curtis-Ormsbee Trail. I ran it as a trail run but was surprised at how slow my average speed panned out.
Did I blow it, or were there no views from the top of Slide? I passed an opportunity on the left before the summit to northwestern views as the AMC Catskill & Hudson Valley Day Hikes claimed 360 views were to be had at the top. After descending to the Burroughs plaque I re-ascended past the footing of the old fire tower in a search for a trail to some view. Every path had brush laid across it, as sign in the Adirondacks that the trail is not for use. No views. BTW, this was my first Catskill hike.
On to Cornell. The spring just east of Slide summit was the first and last water I took. [Yes, I am a camel] Water was running profusely. Cornell was also a disappointment on views but I knew a guide book mentioned Wittenberg had an open ledge. I did not carry a guide book but I did take pictures of both the Wittenberg Cornell Slide Trail and the Phoenicia East Branch Trail descriptions with my camera so I could access them in the camera display if needed, however awkward it might be. But this was a trail run and I wanted to keep moving and did not try to read on the camera. The cliff faces on Cornell, which had been a question mark to me as I was solo act turned out to be no problem. This was different hiking than the ADKs and Whites. You hit the same cliff bands on different mountains, or so it seemed to me. The rocks were different and summits had hardwoods.
The southern and eastern views from Wittenberg were worthy. However, a haze robbed me of clear distant detail.
Eschewing bug dope, I was only bitten by mosquitoes in Woodland Valley. For me, it was just in and out of the valley and on to the impressive stone steps.
At the trail intersection for Giant Ledge, I left the yellow marked Phoenicia East Branch Trail and took the unmarked easement through the Winnisook Club, saving distance and vertical. I had my only food, a gel and put the hammer down on this unmarked trail/abandoned road. As the trail ends on CR 47 just north of Winnisook Lake, I ran the eastern shoulder of the road, uphill to just above the lake, then downhill to the car park, getting to the register 4:47 after leaving it at the start. I had expected to run it in less than 4 hours. How will this compare with the Escarpment Trail Run on the 26th? I am hoping the ability to run with no weight on the supported run will make a difference. Also, I will not be backtracking looking for views and taking pictures.
My Polar S710 said I had 4260' vertical gain.
Back in Greenwich Village by 3:30 pm. Only stumbled on roots/rocks twice but never went down. Thanks to all who gave advise on putting this trip together.