Showing posts with label Backpacker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Backpacker. Show all posts

North Twin, South Twin, and Galehead Loop

Date of Hike: 3/8/15

Little River Herd Path: 1.0 miles  /  North Twin Trail: 4.3 miles  /  North Twin Spur:  1.2 miles  /  Twinway:  0.8 miles  /  Frost Trail:  0.8 miles  /  Garfield Ridge Trail: 0.6 miles  /  Gale River Trail: 3.8 miles  /  Corridor 11 & Corridor 11 Bypass: 5.0 miles
Total Miles 17.5  (4,624 feet elevation gained)

Trip Report ... In Pictures :)

7 a.m. at the end of Little River Road I jump on the herd path and head over to Haystack Road 
 I head along the North Twin Trail, bypassing the first two water crossings and hook onto a well used herd path.  Notice the ski tracks heading across the river, that's where the trail actually goes, I took a left at this spot onto the herd path.
 The Little River is just filled with snow
 With this much snow depth the route heads directly over the river!
 Back onto the North Twin Trail, then making the water crossing over the Little River
 Heading up to North Twin through the woods.  Lot of action in the trees down low, lots of snow up high
 View to the north down to the Sugarloafs
 To the west the sun is in a battle with the clouds!
 The trail corridor up to North Twin is fill to the tops of the trees
 North Twin summit.  The sun still trying to break through
 Hooked onto the North Twin Spur
 View from the North and South Twin col.  North Twin (left), South Twin (right)
 South Twin in the clear as I approach its summit cone
 Cool snow formations on the way to South Twin (top).  Looking back to North Twin (bottom)
 The final stretch to South Twin
 South Twin Summit
 Views over to Guyot and the Bonds (top).  Zealand (bottom)
South Twin Summit 
 Looking to the west across to the Franconia Ridge
 Heading down the Twinway. So much snow!!
 Dropping down back into the woods
 Galehead Hut and Galehead Mountain
 Frost Trail to the summit
 Nice view of South Twin and the hut from the Frost Trail outlook
 The summit of Galehead is still in the woods even with the high snow pack.  Nice view of South Twin near the summit of Galehead
 The descent back down the car via the Gale River Trail
 Trail reroute.  The Gale River Trail was rerouted to avoid two water crossings, this winter the old trail has been broken out
 Old Trail is in yellow, reroute is in red
 The mostly flat walk back to Gale River Loop Road
 I hook onto Gale River Loop Road, 'Corridor 11' and share the road with snowmobilers
 Signs spied along the way!
 Corridor 11 leads back to Haystack Road, I jump on that using the Corridor 11 bypass back to Little River Road
 An old fireplace and cobblestone cellar, the trailhead, and my Jeep :)
  Route for the day, Blue X's form left to right: North Twin, South Twin, Galehead.  Lower right red dot is where I hooked onto Gale River Loop Road, then Corridor 11 and Corridor 11 bypass back to the lower left red dot at the end of Little River Road. Click here for more details

White Friday : North and South Kinsman

Date of Hike: 11/28/14

Basin-Cascade Trail: 1.0 miles /  Cascade Brook Trail:  0.5 miles  /  Kinsman Pond Trail:  2.5 miles  /  Kinsman Ridge Trail: 3.0 miles  /  Fishin' Jimmy Trail: 2.0 miles  /  Lonesome Lake Trail: 1.5 miles  /  Pemi Bike Path: 2.0 miles
Total Miles: 12.5 (3,475 feet elevation gained) Garmin GPS Forerunner 910XT

Trip Report:
- Every four season hiker was especially happy this Thanksgiving as a storm dumped up to and over a foot of the white stuff on Wednesday in the White Mountain.  Initially, I was hoping to break out the Bonds, but the weather called for in the clouds, and if I was going to break trail to the Bonds I wanted views.  Luckily, my friends Kyle and Denise were heading to the Kinsman Ridge via a lighter used route for this time of year
- We started around 7:45 a.m. from the Basin and hooked onto the Basin-Cascades Trail to the Cascade Brook Trail and eventually onto the Kinsman Pond Trail.  The snow made the woods look like a winter wonderland and the cascades were half frozen making for a very picturesque hike for the first mile or so.  The snow depth made it tricky to figure out the best traction to wear.  We wore our snowshoes but there were places where it hindered our speed since the rocks and roots were hiding underneath the snow.  If we had put on micro-spikes we still would have had issues, just different ones like ankle twisting/slipping.  It made for a very tedious ascent up to the ridge, especially the middle and upper section of the Kinsman Pond Trail which travels through a sluggish brook in spots.
-  Other than that the hike was great, it was snowing lightly during the ascent up to the ridge and we were shielded from the wind except when we paralleled the Kinsman Pond, which looked ghostly.  At the shelter Kyle and I took a break to change into dry layers, refuel, and wait for Denise.  When Denise reached us she decided it would be best to head down, she was red-lining (hiking all the trails in the White Mountain Guide) and didn't need to tag the summits.  I suggested the Fn' Jimmy to Lonesome Lake to the Pemi Trail or bike path.  Kyle and I then charged up North Kinsman where we caught up to three happy hikers who had come up from Lafayette Place.  We zoomed past them and broke trail to North Kinsman, where Kyle had to turn around so he could make it to work on time.  I continued on, the snow was the deepest here but the trail breaking was easy as it was light and covered most of the annoying rocks or roots enough that I didn't stumbled over them.  It felt good to break trail and I hope to do this a lot this upcoming winter.
- For the descent I headed down Fn' Jimmy to the hut, Lonesome Lake to the campground, and walked the bike path.  On the descent I changed out of my snowshoes at Kinsman Junction which was a mixed bag, my spikes kept balling up with snow and I couldn't get into a good grove with the rocks and roots not buried yet.  I still made good time down to the campground, though, and most importantly stayed warm.
- The walk back along the bike path was nice as the snow fell and the sun tried to come out.  Along the way I heard my name yelled across the river, it was Denise, she was on the Pemi Trail!  Another red-line that she needed, so she hooked onto that instead of the bike path.  I continued back to the Basin and made a U-Turn onto the Pemi Trail and met Denise and we hiked out together.
-  I haven't been on the Kinsmans since April of 2013, so it was nice to get back up there even if there were no views.  Needless to say winter is here to stay in the Whites so bundle up!
FYI, I scratched up my camera lens so I'm taking pics with my Apple phone.  They have an auto-enhance feature which sharpens the image, also some pictures came out B&W by hitting a button accidently, I have no idea why a few came out looking blue and gloomy but whatever, enjoy!
 Route for the day, click here for details
 Hiking along the Basin-Cascades Trail
 Cascade Brook
 Rocky Glen Falls, the Box Canyon, and Cascade Brook
 Denise hiking through a winter wonderland
Rime and snow blasted Christmas Tree!
 Kinsman Pond
 Kyle navigates around a snow drift near Kinsman Pond on the way to the shelter
Heading up to North Kinsman
   Breaking trail to South Kinsman
 South Kinsman Summit (right - A.T. North / left - A.T. South)
 Lonesome Lake Hut
Walking around Lonesome Lake
Lonesome Lake and the hut with light flurries falling about!
Pemi Bike Path 
Cascade above the Basin