Showing posts with label Glencliff Trail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glencliff Trail. Show all posts

Windy Winter Single-Season Finish : Mount Moosilauke

Date of Hike: 3/13/15

Glencliff Trail: 3.1 miles  /  Moosilauke Carriage Road: 1.8 miles  /  Glencliff Trail: 3.1 miles
Total Miles: 8.0 miles (3,275 feet elevation gained)

Trip Report:
- Mount Moosilauke was the final peak to climb to accomplish a Single-Season Winter 48 - 4,000 Footers of New Hampshire.  It's a great peak with several trails leading in all directions to and from its bald and expansive summit.  At 4,802 feet it is the tenth highest in elevation of the 48 peaks and is known for big time views and big time wind, both of which did not disappoint on Friday morning.
- Whitney and I got an early start just after 7:30 a.m. as we headed up the Glencliff Trail.  It's a relatively easy climb over moderate grades through the woods for the first 2.5 miles before it becomes steep as it gains the ridge at the Moosilauke Carriage Road Junction a mile south of the summit.
- We wore microspikes until the steep section where the minor drifts started.  Whitney lead the way through the drifts as I followed behind with one broken snowshoe.  For the past three weeks I have been using one old Tubbs Flex Alp and one newer one.  Amazingly, the newer one broke in the same spot as the other newer one, what are the odds of that??!!  Anyway, the snowshoe worked just well enough to get me up and down the drifted spots.
- As we made our way out of the protection of the trees we were both blasted by 40 mph winds with 50 mph gusts, not enough to knock us around but enough to steer us in the direction it was blowing.
- We made it to the summit around 9:30 a.m. and quickly took a few photos.  The cold wind was whipping so hard it made my iPhone shut down from getting too cold.  Luckily, I snapped some decent pictures before it bonked.
- From the summit we descended as fast as we could back into the trees to get out of the wind where we warmed up as we dropped in elevation.  On the way down the Glencliff Trail we saw two other hikers heading up the Moose to take in the views while tackling the wind.
- We made it back to the trailhead at 11 a.m. under a sunny sky, a very moderate winter temperature, and a windless parking lot.
- It felt great to accomplish a single-season winter round of the 48 - 4,000 footers.  It's been a wild winter for all of New England and especially in the White Mountains.  There were plenty of sub-zero hiking days filled with cold rides to and from the trailhead, so much so we nicknamed the Jeep the 'Ice Box' since it doesn't heat up that well, hey it's a Jeep!  Along the way there was plenty of snow, some fierce wind gusts, a decent amount of trail breaking with almost all hikes were done in snowshoes, all while having phenomenal views for a majority of the hikes.
-  I couldn't have asked for better company to do half the peaks with than Whitney.  She's been supportive, appreciative, and accommodating.  I'm very lucky to have a girlfriend who likes to see me happy/proud of the mountains I hike and goals I set and accomplish :).  It doesn't get any better than that!

 Early morning on the lower section of the Glencliff Trail

 Whitney makes her way up the steeps, while I look back and take a picture!

 Gaining the ridge just below South Peak we hook onto the Carriage Road and soon the summit comes into view

 Breaking above treeline on our way to Mount Moosilauke

 The snow is wind packed down for the most part as we battle the winds over the final half mile

 Summit of Mount Moosilauke

 Time to head back south along the Moosilauke Carriage Road

 The Glencliff Trail passes through and open field a few tenths of a mile from the trailhead

Trailside junk!

 Signs spied along the way

My broken snowshoes. Not a real good place for it to break.  This happened on both of my newer models in the exact same spot.  My original Tubbs Flex Alp were from December 2009 and only had minor issues with the lower rivets popping out.  This newer model was from December 2013, no rivet issue but this is a major fail!
route for the day, click here for details

Along the Appalachian Trail with Whitney and Kenny

Date of Hikes:  8/17  &  8/18

Mount Cube Trail: 7.4 miles  /  Road Walk & Town Line Trail 1.5  /  Wachipauka Trail:  4.6 miles  /  Road Walk & Town Line Trail 1.5
Total Miles:  15.0 (3,350 feet elevation gained)

Glencliff Trail:  3.0  miles  /  Moosilauke Carriage Road: 0.8 miles  /  Beaver Brook Trail: 3.8 miles
Total Miles:  7.6 (3,575 feet elevation gained)

Trip Report:
- On Wednesday, March 26th, my friend Whitney started a 2,180 mile journey from Springer Mountain, Georgia to Mount Katahdin, Maine.  Over the past four months I have followed her and her boyfriend Kenny as they hiked through Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont and currently her home state of New Hampshire.
- Fortunately, on this weekend as she approached the heart of the White Mountains I was able to join along for a couple of miles with her on trail.
- Friday morning my friend Matt and I met up at the Glencliff parking lot and headed to the Mount Cube Trail to hopefully run into them on our hike up to Mount Cube in the morning.  Followed by trying to run into them again later in the afternoon to hike with them to the Jefferson Brook Shelter, where they would be spending the night.
- We ran into Whitney (trail name Tip-Toe) and Kenny (trail name Kenny, yup it's his name!) about a mile or so below the summit of Mount Cube.  It was a great little reunion on the trail.  Neither of us have seen Whitney since the winter and she looked in incredible shape and you could just tell instantly she was having the adventure of a life time!  We chatted for about a half hour and gave them some trail magic before heading up to Mount Cube and enjoying the views from both summits before descending back down to Route 25A
- From here we drove back to Glencliff and hiked the Town Line and Wachipauka Trail  to the Webster Slide Trail junction where we surprised them again.  We took a break here and ate cookies and chocolate covered pretzels.  Another thru-hiker, Sprout, from Virginia, came through and stopped to enjoy some cookies and pretzels, too.  I gave Sprout a few of my granola bars before Matt, Kenny, Whintey, and myself hiked to the Jefferson Brook Shelter. 
- The Shelter is located off a dirt road just a few tenths of a mile from High Street in Glencliff.  It's a nice area and there are plenty of spots to pitch a tent and there is a privy and a very good water source close by.  Matt handed the rest of his cookies out to other thru-hikers before we took off to the Common Man for dinner and a drink.  Operation 'Tip-Toe' as coined by Matt, was a success!
 - The next morning I was meeting Denise, Tim, and his dog Gryffin at the Beaver Brook Trailhead at 7am so I drove over to Kinsman Notch and crashed in the back of the Jeep.
- In the morning we spotted a car at the Beaver Brook Trailhead, left some trail magic, and headed over to Glencliff to hike up and over Moosilauke with Kenny and Whitney.
- The thru-hikers have been hiking for 1,800 miles once they start up Moosilauke, and it's their first introduction to the ruggedness and the wind of the White Mountains.  The 'Moose' is one of the most popular hikes in the Whites, it's open summit provides beautiful views in all directions.  Unfortunately , on this day it was in the clouds with rain showers on and off and everything was soaked and slippery.
- Whitney and Kenny, both carrying 33-37 pounds on there back hammered it up the mountain, it was very impressive to watch.  Whitney, has always been a strong hiker and now she's added speed to the strength, awesome stuff! 
- When we gained the ridge we took a break before throwing on the rain wind-breakers for the final push to the summit.  Luckily the wind wasn't too strong and the temps were in the 50's but we were a little chilled so we didn't stay long on the summit before heading down the notoriously steep and now wet Beaver Brook Trail.  We took our time descending making sure not to slip, fall, and get injured as we made our way past the cascades and eventually out to the trailhead in Kinsman Notch.
- We were all soaked from the wet conditions but it was warmer at the trailhead so it was a pleasant end to the hike.  Gryffin the Golden Retriever is just like Teddy (my dad's Golden back in the day).  He wants to run up ahead and run back down, and has a non-ending supply of energy.  He is lean for a Golden and is already a great hiking dog having completed 17 of the 48 - 4,000 footers of New Hampshire.
- After the hike we went into Lincoln to the Black Mountain Burger for a lunch.  Whitney and Kenny were taking a zero day on Monday to resupply and relax with Denise before a big mile hike on Monday.
- It was a great two days to spend hiking again with my trail buddy.  Next weekend I will miss out on them through the Presidential Range as I'll be in the Adirondacks but I hopefully will catch them in Maine as I hike Maine's 4,000 footers and I'll definitely be there for their finish no matter if it's sunny, rainy, snowy, windy or all of the above...it's going to be Epic!
 Matt, hiking along the A.T. up to Mount Cube
 View to the north east down to Upper Baker Pond and to Mount Moosilauke
 Wachipauka Pond
 Hiking along the A.T. between Mount Cube and Mount Moosilauke
 On the Town Line Trail to the Jefferson Brook Shelter
 Gryffin entertains the thru-hikers in the morning
 A short road walk then hiking up the Glencliff Trail
 Gryffin heads up the Moose!
 Whitney and Kenny, the summit sign, and a summit shot with Denise!
 Typical day on the Moose!
 Navigating the Beaver Brook Trail
 Beaver Brook Falls / Cascades
 Great picture!
 The last re-bar section, Gryffin ran down this!
 Gryffin!
  Route on Saturday, click here for details

Mount Moosilauke (#33)

Date of Hike: 1/3/11

Glencliff Trail: 3.0 miles
Moosilauke Carriage Road: 1.8 miles
Glencliff Trail: 3.0 miles
Total Miles: 7.8 miles (3,300 feet)
click here for trail descriptions

Trip Report:
- After a few days of unseasonably warm weather making for spring-like hiking conditions temperatures dropped sharply freezing trails overnight resulting in the return of winter as I headed to the western most White Mountain 4,000 footer, Mount Moosilauke.
- On trail 7:55am, Moosilauke summit 9:55am, finished 11:15pm. Temps at trailhead low 20's, low teens above 4,000 feet, 50 plus mph wind above treeline with gusts above 60mph, summit clouded in but good views to the south and west below summit mass.
- I was pretty pumped up that the temps plummeted and the trails froze up turning all the slush and heavy snow on trails into ice and frozen snow and I was able to hike in microspikes the whole day as the snowshoes stayed on my pack.
- The Glencliff Trail has moderate grades and only gets semi steep before gaining the ridge just below Moosilauke's south summit where the trail ends at the Moosilauke Carriage Road Trail.
- Before heading up the final 0.9 miles to the summit I put on dry layers and my winter windbreaker in preparation for the last section of above treeline hiking where the wind would be waiting for me.
- Once I left the protection of the scrub filled trail the wind came at me with full force out of the west constantly knocking me off the trail to my right, I had to hike with my body angled into the wind so I wouldn't be lead by the wind away from the trail.  At one point I crouched down until the wind let up and toughed it out to the summit.  I took some pics and shielded myself from the wind behind the stone foundation left from the old summit house.  My original plan was to relax at the summit until the skies cleared but after about five minutes I got out of dodge as the wind and the cold temps made it pretty unforgiving to stay around.
- As I descended the Carriage Road I was going to hike up to the South summit but there was a big cloud hanging around up there and just didn't want to leave so I decided not to take the spur path and just head back down to the car.
- On the way down I ran into two hikers who were happy that winter had returned for their hike up the "Moose."  It looked as if the skies might be clearing enough for them to enjoy better views from the summit than I did.
- Back at the car I packed up and headed back to RI after a pretty interesting and fun three days in the White's!

Pictures: Click here for all pictures

Mount Moosilauke Summit
 Looking to Moosilauke's South Summit

 Moosilauke Carriage Road (A.T.)


Mount Moosilauke

Date of Hike: 11/29/09

Gorge Brook Trail: 3.7 miles
Glencliff Trail: .9 miles
Moosilauke Carriage Trail: 1.2 miles
Snapper Trail: 1.1.miles
Gorge Brook trail: .6 miles
Total Miles: 7.5 (elevation gain 2,600)

Trip Report:

- Left RI at 5am, trailhead at 8am, on trail at 8:30am, finished at 12:15pm
- Weather was great below 4,000 feet, no wind and great visibility.  Once above treeline it was a different world, fifty feet visibility, wind gusts up to 40 MPH, blowing surface snow, and thigh deep snow drifts in spots
- My camelbak leaked all over my backpack on the ride up, somehow I didn't close it properly and lost half my water soaking the back of my backpack.  To not soak myself and freeze to death I had to wear my winter rain/wind pullover, which worked...to well, I began to heat up and sweat so I couldn't stop that much or I'd run the chance of getting chilled, So I went up and down the mountain quickly considering the conditions during the morning
- Gorge Brook trail had been tracked out the day before by one brave soul so I was able to place my boots in everyone of their steps until above treeline.  This saved me about an hour of hiking and having to break trail!
- I ran into people doing the loop in the opposite way on my way down so the trail past Glencliff Trail (AT) was broken out very nicely
- Summit sign had frozen packed snow hanging three feet sideways off of it (see pic below), I tried to break it off but I could only get within a half foot of packed snow and the rest wouldn't budge
- Dartmouth Outing Club does a great job maintaining the trails and all the signs, however the road wasn't plowed to get to the trailhead which if you didn't have four wheel drive would be dicey
- Should have started hiking later in the day, the summit cleared off around 1pm, I would have been in clear skies with light wind above treeline with some great views all around

Footbridge crossing the Gorge Brook

Gorge Brook Trail

Approaching treeline

Mount Moosilauke Summit

Views from Moosilauke Carriage Road

Snapper Trail