DayTrip
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- May 13, 2013
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I'm curious to know which trails in the Whites get broken out the fastest after a snow storm. I drive up from CT for my hikes so having an idea of where most foot traffic goes after a big storm is helpful to my planning. I'm not at the stage yet where I can break trail on any kind of significant hike and still get the summits I planned, especially with 7-8 hours of driving and possible shoveling to park. I monitor NETC but the reports often lag a bit and many people don't post reports (and many reports have little useful information other than knowing humans were there). I have some ideas on which trails they would be based on summer hiking but winter I suppose can be different with weather, effort, etc.
1) If you had to rank the top 3 to 5 trails likely to have tracks laid down soon after a storm what would they be?
2) Which 3 to 5 lots tend to get plowed the fastest?
Any "local knowledge" on these topics would be appreciated. Thanks.
1) If you had to rank the top 3 to 5 trails likely to have tracks laid down soon after a storm what would they be?
2) Which 3 to 5 lots tend to get plowed the fastest?
Any "local knowledge" on these topics would be appreciated. Thanks.