nietzschescat
New member
We took the trail from Spruceton Road to Diamond Notch Falls and then took the Devils Path to the Devil's Acre lean-to. The trail was packed powder and we didn't need to use our snowshoes. There were only a few icy spots on the trail.
We had our maps, our compasses, our ADK guide book telling us where the "well defined herd path" was, but with all the snow it just wasn't that simple. We got our hopes up after signing in and saw that several people had listed SW Hunter as there destination over the weekend, but when we followed their tracks into the woods (including someone on skis), they all thought better of the situation and turned around after a few hundred yards.
We were more stubborn, but we still didn't find the canister. Once we realized that we weren't going to stroll up a rail bed or a bark road, we took a compass bearing from the lean-to, put on our snow shoes and spent 1 1/2 hours wandering around in the spruce twilight zone. I was doing ok because I'm little, but my husband was turning into the abominable snow crab. Each step he took dumped a pile of snow on his head, down his back,etc. Then because there was about 6 inches between each tree, our snowshoes kept getting pinned down by little spruce spikes. At some point we decided that getting down the trail or at least back to the trail before dark was more important than finding the canister, so we followed our tracks (very winding) back to the trail.
I've actually been up this mountain before and found the canister, but everything looked different with the snow. We did a lot of wandering around and getting frustrated that day too.
The best part of the day, besides the sparkling snow flakes and the cobalt blue sky, was that my husband got to see a snow shoe hare. I missed it, but saw the tracks.
We made it down to Diamond Notch just before dark. We heard a barred owl on the way down. We used our headlamps for the walk on the Diamond Notch trail back to the van where it was 17 degrees. We stopped at the Phonecia diner and drank a pot of coffee, some pea soup and cheese burgers, fries & onion rings.
So, the plan is to wait until the snow is gone and try again, maybe this time from the Diamond Notch lean-to.
We had our maps, our compasses, our ADK guide book telling us where the "well defined herd path" was, but with all the snow it just wasn't that simple. We got our hopes up after signing in and saw that several people had listed SW Hunter as there destination over the weekend, but when we followed their tracks into the woods (including someone on skis), they all thought better of the situation and turned around after a few hundred yards.
We were more stubborn, but we still didn't find the canister. Once we realized that we weren't going to stroll up a rail bed or a bark road, we took a compass bearing from the lean-to, put on our snow shoes and spent 1 1/2 hours wandering around in the spruce twilight zone. I was doing ok because I'm little, but my husband was turning into the abominable snow crab. Each step he took dumped a pile of snow on his head, down his back,etc. Then because there was about 6 inches between each tree, our snowshoes kept getting pinned down by little spruce spikes. At some point we decided that getting down the trail or at least back to the trail before dark was more important than finding the canister, so we followed our tracks (very winding) back to the trail.
I've actually been up this mountain before and found the canister, but everything looked different with the snow. We did a lot of wandering around and getting frustrated that day too.
The best part of the day, besides the sparkling snow flakes and the cobalt blue sky, was that my husband got to see a snow shoe hare. I missed it, but saw the tracks.
We made it down to Diamond Notch just before dark. We heard a barred owl on the way down. We used our headlamps for the walk on the Diamond Notch trail back to the van where it was 17 degrees. We stopped at the Phonecia diner and drank a pot of coffee, some pea soup and cheese burgers, fries & onion rings.
So, the plan is to wait until the snow is gone and try again, maybe this time from the Diamond Notch lean-to.