Wrestling the Osceolas. January 16, 2011

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TrishandAlex

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White Mountains, NH
Copied from http://trishandalex.blogspot.com
Accompanying pictures can be found there.
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Greeley Ponds Trail, Mt. Osceola Trail. 7.6 miles, 3100 foot elevation gain.

The Upper Summit Forecast called for wind chills of 30-40 below zero today, so Alex and I naturally decided to stay below treeline. The Osceolas seemed like a good, sheltered choice; we knew the trails were broken and somewhat packed, so off we went.

An inch or two of dry powder covered a nicely packed trail. 'Twas a splendid sight.

The 1.3 miles along Greeley Pond Trail was flat and easy; it didn't take us long to arrive at the Mt. Osceola Trail.

The first mile up East Osceola was relatively moderate, and neither of us found it difficult. That last half mile before the summit, on the other hand...well, let's just say that the picture below aptly describes our ascent up the steeps.

Two steps up, one sliding step down...it was a frustrating ordeal.

The day called for fog, so the view from the top of the slide was better than I expected...

Weeks later (or so it seemed), we reached the summit of East Osceola.

To my pleasant surprise, HappyHiker appeared during our snack break. We exchanged greetings, then she went on her way while I stuck a body warmer between Alex's layers (it was chilly up there and Alex looked cold).

At this point, Alex wasn't sure she wanted to continue; she had spent the entire previous day skiing with Hugh and now felt rather worn out. I told her I had no problem heading back to the car, but I did need her to understand that if she wanted to get Mt. Osceola for the winter 4K list and we didn't get it now, then we'd have to go over the East Osceola summit all over again on a different hike. There was the possibility of approaching Osceola later from the traditional summer trailhead, but that would mean a long road walk through deep snow along a very rarely used route. As I explained all this, the food and body warmer began to do their jobs, and Alex perked up and became her usual energetic self. After a few minutes of thinking it through, she decided she felt strong enough to go ahead and get the second peak.

We continued onward, Mt. Osceola beckoning us forward.

The ascent up Osceola wasn't nearly as difficult as the ascent up East Osceola. The only troublesome spot was the chimney bypass, a very steep scramble up a little narrow ledge. Alex scampered to the top without a problem, but I couldn't get up. The slippery snow prevented my hands from getting a good grip on the rocks, and my feet kept sliding out from under me. Luckily, a nice fellow named Ben came to my aid; he found us while he was descending and offered to pull me up by my hiking poles. I happily accepted his offer, and Alex and I were able to continue our ascent (thanks again, Ben!).

Osceola!

HappyHiker was waiting for us when we arrived. We quickly ate a snack and began the descent; though we were out of the wind, it was still too cold to linger.

The trek back to East Osceola was uneventful, except for...the chimney bypass (of course). This time, it was Alex who had the problem. She couldn't get herself down without potentially sliding uncontrollably and smashing against a few rocks or falling over the ledge and impaling herself on some trees. We figured it out eventually...I anchored myself in a position where she could slide into me hard without knocking me over. Then we kind of half slid, half jumped the rest of the way down.

The rest of the hike went smoothly. We dragged ourselves back up East Osceola, then had a blast all the way back down to the car. There were some very steep bits (the same stretches we had cursed on the way up) that required some very controlled butt-sliding, but on the whole, the descent was easy. We had fun playing leapfrog with HappyHiker until we reached Greeley Ponds Trail, then the three of us walked out together, reaching the parking lot just as the sun disappeared.

Two more winter 4Ks down, twenty-two left to go.
 
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Great report.

As for this --
the possibility of approaching Osceola later from the traditional summer trailhead, but that would mean a long road walk through deep snow along a very rarely used route
-- I've always wondered about the feasibility of skiing that approach. It's such a nicely laid-out trail, and seemingly brushed out pretty wide. May have to try it someday ...

And this --
I anchored myself in a position where she could slide into me hard without knocking me over. Then we kind of half-slid, half jumped the rest of the way down.
-- sounds like familiar ground. Oh, the improvisations this sort of business can entail!
 
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I've always wondered about the feasibility of skiing that approach. It's such a nicely laid-out trail, and seemingly brushed out pretty wide. May have to try it someday ...

I know it's been done by members of this forum, but I can't remember who.

Thanks for the kind words -- it was a tough day. Those couple inches of powder were slippery -- microspikes weren't doing it and since I wasn't postholing, I didn't want to wear my 'shoes for fear of cramping up immediately and having to turn back. Alex doesn't like to wear the 'shoes on the steeps because they interefere with her sense of balance and overall footing. The two of us need to start wearing crampons.

The descent was much easier -- the great number of barebooters throughout the day packed those couple of slippery inches down into the firm base, making the trail much more user friendly.

One of our toughest hikes, to be sure.
 
I went up there on Saturday and this hike kicked my butt. It had to be one of the most difficult 7.6 miles I have ever done. It was still fun.
 
I went up there on Saturday and this hike kicked my butt. It had to be one of the most difficult 7.6 miles I have ever done. It was still fun.

Then we have you to thank for the nice solid base underneath the fresh powder! That base was a wonderful thing. If it wasn't there, then I would have postholed...which would have meant having to put on the snowshoes, which would have meant cramping up before reaching the top of the slide...which would have meant having to bail before tagging East Osceola. So again, many thanks!

Glad you had a good, though tiring, day. Hope to see you out there sometime. :)
 
We wore snowshoes up the trail. The snow had no substance and was just awful. We used microspike from East Osceola down. The car was wonderful to see.

The col by the chimney was very tough.

The trip reports for this hike this weekend could be copied and just change the names.
 
Wonderful trip report, as usual. I agree with Jimmy and Donna...it's great that you were able to convince her to keep trekking on. Congrats on #25 & #26!
 
Hi Trish,

Congrats on a very challenging winter hike!!

Tim and I did Mt Osceola last year from Tripoli Rd, and I think Kevin/Judy/Emma did too. It's not a bad approach if you're the kind of person that is OK with a longer road walk rather than a freakishly-steep-luge-run-of-a-trail. Ha Ha.

Val
 
Thanks for the support, everyone. I think we're both glad to have those two peaks out of the way!

Val, I'm a giant wuss when it comes to road walks. I hate them. With a gargantuan passion. Alex, on the other hand, doesn't mind them as much as I do. Who knows, she might have been fine with the road walk at a later date. I, on the other hand, would have shamelessly whined every step of the way. So I guess it's good we carried on and tagged them when we did. :D
 
The road is a groomed ski trail in the winter so it's pretty easy, although kinda boring. The trail isn't bad but like you said it doesn't get a lot of traffic and was a lot of work for 2 people to break trail on after a heavy snowfall, but it was still easy to follow where the trail went. I think it took us 5 hours to get to the top. But the one nice thing about the road is that you can follow it in the dark without headlamps and it's wide enough that if it's a clear night (like we had) you can see pretty much all the stars. Not that it matters in this case, but in case you ever feel like going that way in the future.
 
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