RoySwkr
New member
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2003
- Messages
- 4,467
- Reaction score
- 285
Yes, I actually paid the $3 to park instead of walking in from Rte.302, the site does have all 6 amenities although since I only used parking the Circuit Court says I needn't pay. It was the first fee paid in several years and I can afford it.
The beavers have raised the water level again and the N approach to the zigzag bridge is under water with some floating timbers to walk on. One was starting to drift off and I retrieved it with my ski pole - I'm surprised the hut caretaker hasn't nailed them together as it's him that with have to deal with irate people arriving with wet feet. Hopefully the bridge will be extended this summer. The water is starting to rise over the S approach too.
I thought that with a few days of sun and rain the little ice found higher up by B&E would be gone, but apparently it snowed up high instead and all the ice was now hidden by snow. Previously dry trail was now bare, but in wet sections the snow had frozen on leaving hard-to-see thin ice. Yes, the ladder shown in the photo was still bare, but to get the bottom there was an ice cascade that I chose to bushwhack around. I tried to scuff some waterbars but the debris was frozen solid.
I had expected to meet half a zillion grid hikers (the other half-zillion having been up on Saturday) but actually met only a couple groups on the ridge, maybe everybody walked through to Lincoln Woods.
The beavers have raised the water level again and the N approach to the zigzag bridge is under water with some floating timbers to walk on. One was starting to drift off and I retrieved it with my ski pole - I'm surprised the hut caretaker hasn't nailed them together as it's him that with have to deal with irate people arriving with wet feet. Hopefully the bridge will be extended this summer. The water is starting to rise over the S approach too.
I thought that with a few days of sun and rain the little ice found higher up by B&E would be gone, but apparently it snowed up high instead and all the ice was now hidden by snow. Previously dry trail was now bare, but in wet sections the snow had frozen on leaving hard-to-see thin ice. Yes, the ladder shown in the photo was still bare, but to get the bottom there was an ice cascade that I chose to bushwhack around. I tried to scuff some waterbars but the debris was frozen solid.
I had expected to meet half a zillion grid hikers (the other half-zillion having been up on Saturday) but actually met only a couple groups on the ridge, maybe everybody walked through to Lincoln Woods.