Showing posts with label Gorham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gorham. Show all posts

White Mountain Deluge : October 30th

While I was working on posting my report about a fun hike to Hawthorne Falls with my friend Todd (click here for report & pics), a "little rain" storm came passing on through the White Mountains.  Heavy rain and high winds devastated the area with downed trees, flash floods, undermined roads, and loss of power.  Living on the Peabody River, it was quite nerve wracking throughout the middle of the night.

The heavy rain and high sustained winds started after midnight, we lost power around 2AM, even heavier rain followed this.  The Peabody River rose quickly, rising several feet within a couple of hours, almost breaching the retaining wall along our property.  The river sounded like being in a jet plane surrounded by constant thunder, only the thunder in this instance were the boulders being pushed/thrown through the extremely fast rapid current of the river, it made the house rattle and in the middle of the night this was quite terrifying.

Mercifully, daylight came at 7AM.  Soon after, the fire department said it was best we leave for the morning.  Whitney, Sarge, and I headed to North Conway, along the way we stopped at the Dolly Copp entrance where the water was flowing over the road.  After grabbing breakfast in NoCo, we drove the Kanc, stopped by Lower Falls and Lincoln Woods.  From here we made our way back to Gorham, but got side tracked through Bethlehem as crews were working ferociously to make sure the Little River didn't undermine the bridge on Route 3 in Twin Mountain.   Routes 302, 115, and 2 had numerous trees hanging on power lines or just smashed through them.

When we arrived home we were very happy to only have two inches of water in our basement, which we used a generator to pump the water out.  Around 10:30PM the power came back on.

What a crazy way to spend my two year anniversary of the closing on my dream home in the mountains!!

Here are pics that Whitney took throughout the day, and also a video on YouTube, but not great quality (click here for video)

USGS River Gauge for the Peabody River where it's measured a couple of miles away.

 Our backyard at 7AM, usually you can see a retaining wall made out of boulders which you can walk down to the river, as you can see here it's just at the top of the wall

Looking south up the Peabody River

Fire department out closely monitoring the retaining wall 

 Across the street Stony Brook Road was closed

The water ran over the road and undermined it, wrecking it

Stony Brook Road

The usually small Stony Brook Stream going crazy!

Entrance to Dolly Copp along Route 16

Lower Falls on the Kanc

Lower Falls 

Swift River looking east 

Lincoln Woods suspension bridge 

East Branch Pemigewasset River from the suspension bridge

 East Branch Pemigewasset River from 112

Suspension bridge over the East Branch Pemi River!

 Driving home we had to turn around just before hitting the residential area of Twin Mountain as crews were out trying to make sure the Little River didn't damage the bridge and road

there were blowdowns everywhere, this one was along Route 2 in Jefferson 

Back home we head across the street and walk the damaged Stony Brook Road

Both sides of the road were gone and the middle buckled in several spots 

 Big washout at the edge of this property

It's good to have a sense of humor when this stuff happens!

Looking up Mount Carter Drive

Crews came out and pushed the rubble out of the way and then laid dirt down.  Road was back open by nightfall and today they are working on it again to fix it.

Peabody River at 2PM 

 Looking south at 2PM, now you can see the retaining wall!

Tuesday 9AM, there is the lower end of the wall looking down river

Looking up river, levels are still a foot or two feet higher than normal but most of the wall is visible!

Spring is about to . . . Sprung : Mount Moriah

Date of Hike: 4/15/16

Road Walk & Abandoned Stony Brook Trail: 1.1 miles  /  Stony Brook Trail: 2.4 miles  / Carter-Moriah Trail: 2.7 miles  /  Stony Brook Trail: 2.4 miles  /  Abandoned Stony Brook Trail & Road Walk: 1.1 miles
Total Miles: 9.75 miles (3,181 feet elevation gained)

Trip Report:
-  March is the month that has the moniker of, "In like a lion, out like a lamb."  However, it seems as if April has fit this description better, at least for this year.  After a frigid cold start to the month, the weather has finally broken and there is a warm up on the way for the weekend helping melt and break up some of the ice flows that have a stronghold on the trails above 3,000 feet.
-  On Friday I started hiking around 7:45AM and within about ten minutes I realized I wouldn't be needing my mittens as the temperatures were already around freezing and on their way up to just shy of sixty by early afternoon in Gorham.
- It was a really quiet hike up to the Carter-Moriah Ridge, all there was to hear was the pleasant sound of the Stony Brook below me to my left and a Woodpecker or two hammering away at a few trees up to my right.
-  At the last water crossing is where the ice started overtaking the trail, I was fine in my microspikes up to the ridge, and from there it was a mix of ice and bare rock on the ascent up to the summit.  There are beautiful ledges that the Carter-Moriah trail travels over the last mile where I took in the views of the Wild River Wilderness, Presidential, Carter, and Mahoosuc ranges.
-  Once I hit the summit I took a short break to refuel before backtracking.  There was no wind on the summit so I could have stayed for a long time but I had to get back down the mountain so I could get to work.
-   For my hike back down I made sure to be cautious descending the icy parts, it really wasn't too bad, some spots my spikes bit in well but other spots they didn't, luckily there was always a tree around to lend a helping hand.
-  The highlight of my hike was running into Schorman and Lady Di just below the Carter-Moriah / Stony Brook Trail junction.  It was really great to see them and catch up.  They both have completed the Grid (Click here and here for more info on their Grid).  Always a pleasure to run into them out on the trails. :)
-  As I made my way out via the Stony Brook neighborhood I stopped and checked out one of the previous starts to the trail.  Fun fact, pre 1960 the Stony Brook Trail was actually the western section of the Moriah-Brook Trail, which started at the Wild River and went up and  over the ridge and down to US 16, and the trail came out on an old road called the Moriah Brook Road.  In 1960 the part of the trail on the western side of the mountain was changed to Stony Brook Trail.  Then some time in the late 60's the trail had it's first relocation due to logging and it was relocated close to where it's located now.  Then in the 90's a nice parking lot was built and the start was moved again a few hundred yards closer to US 16.  Anyway, in one of the old guidebooks it mentions the trail passing through a camp.  With a little effort, old decrepit buildings from that camp can been seen from the road, they pretty much have caved in on themselves and cannot be explored as they are really unsafe, still, you can walk around them and take pictures and wonder what they might have looked liked back in the day.  Always keep an eye out off trails and roads, you'll never know what little piece of forgotten history is right under your nose!

 As I make my way up the road to the cul-de-sac I spot and old blue blaze

 The Strony Brook Trail travels over a nice old logging road between mile 1 and 3

After the three mile mark and just below 3,000 feet ice flows start to take up the trail

One of the great views from the ledges south of Mount Moriah's summit

Ice flow Monster!  I had to whack around this one in the woods

Carter Range with the Presidential Range behind it

Site of the old camp, the building has caved in on itself.

Pretty interesting to see what still stands and what has fallen over

It's a crapper!

Another building from the old camp

It's a brick patterned panel shingle for that not-so authentic brick outside look!  I wonder if it had wood paneling inside the house for that not-so authentic wood cabin look!!

The shutter still works!