Showing posts with label Lincoln Woods Trail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lincoln Woods Trail. Show all posts

Owl's Head

Date of Hike: 1/27/13
Lincoln Woods Trail: 2.6 miles
Black Pond Trail: 0.8 miles
Bushwhack: 1.6 miles
Lincoln Brook Trail: 2.2 miles
Brutus Bushwhack / Owl's Head Path: 2.6 miles
Lincoln Brook Trail: 2.2 miles
Bushwhack: 1.6 miles
Black Pond Trail: 0.8 miles
Lincoln Woods Trail: 2.6 miles
Total Mils:  Around 17.0 
3,250 feet elevation gain

Trip Report:
- Sunday was much warmer...as it was at least five degrees at the Lincoln Woods Trailhead whenI arrived at 9 a.m.! I was shocked to see only four cars at the trailhead, I thought with the frigid temperatures and high wind there would be lots of activity at Lincoln Woods with hikers heading to Owl's Head.
- Owl's Head has become one of my favorite mountains because it's the most remote 4,000 footer and is always an adventure.  I enjoy the summer approach more because I get to stay on the trails, which have a lot of history, gnarly water crossings, and a slide.  In the winter the most commonly used route wisely avoids the gnarly water crossings and the slide by bushwhacking from black pond and bushwhacking again well before reaching the slide.
- I hiked a fast clip on the Lincoln Woods and the Black Pond Trails to stay warm.  As I hiked all we heard was creaking of trees and fast wind gusts high above us.
- The bushwhack from Black Pond was well broken out and beaten down so the snowshoes stayed on our packs.  The 'Black Pond Bushwhack' is always broken out differently every time I hike it, this time it went uphill more than it has the previous three times I have been on it.  It's a nice hike through mostly open woods and only got thick as we descended a moderately steep hill to intersect the Lincoln Brook Trail.
- The two or so miles from the Black Pond Bushwhack to the Brutus Bushwhack was the coldest part of our day so I kept up a brisk hiking pace to not get too chilled. 
- Within minutes I went from chilled to sweating as I went strait up a steep embankment and hooked a right onto an old skidder road where the hiking became gradual through some Birch trees up a well broken out path and more importantly completely out of the wind.
- When I reached a gully I banged a left and over the next few tenths of a mile I ascended steeply angling diagonally to the left through pine trees kicking in steps and grabbing branches through a chute-like smooth path left from the previous day's glissaders.
- Eventually the bushwhack becomes much easier and hooks onto the Owl's Head Path above the slide where unfortunately it again becomes very steep until it gains the ridge.  I didn't hang around long on top, it was too cold and I was back in a spot where wind gusts were present so I booked it back down to lower elevations and temperatures above zero.
- I ran into the only two hikers I saw all day as I made my way down the Brutus Bushwhack.  It was nice to see I wasn't the only fool coo-coo enough to think hiking the most remote 4,000 footer on a zero degree day equals fun!
- The hike out went quickly, I stayed relatively warm and made sure to keep hydrating and eating snacks.  When I reached The Lincoln Woods Trail there was quite a few x-country skiers out and about.  I also saw the WMNF service driving snow mobiles and an ATV loaded with hey for horses who were spending the night before moving out the junk left behind from the Black Brook bridge when it was removed in 2009.
- I made it back to the car at 2:50 p.m. and quickly changed into comfortable clothes before heading south.  Eventhough it was cold, it was well worth the trip to see 'Owlie'!!

East Branch Suspension Bridge at Lincoln Woods

 Black Pond

 Owl's Head from Black Pond

 
Black Pond Bushwhack

 Birch Glades on Owl's Head

 Almost frozen over Lincoln Brook

 Lincoln Woods Trail

Barebooting Bondcliff, Bond, and West Bond...In December!!

Date of Hike: 12/3/11

Lincoln Woods / Wilderness Trail: 4.7 miles
Bondcliff / West Bond Spur Trail: 12.2 miles
Lincoln Woods / wilderness Trail: 4.7 miles
Total Miles: 22.6 (4,700 Elevation Gain)
Click here for trail descriptions

 A hiker on Bondcliff
 Mount Garfield (right) to Mount Lafayette (left) and the Franconia Brook in the Pemigewasset Wilderness
 Whitewall Mountain, Mount Tom, Field, Willey, and the Presidential Range 
 The Bondcliff Trail and Mount Bond in December with no snow or ice!
 Owl''s Head and most of the Franconia Ridge
 Black Brook Railroad Trestle
Old but very secure structure!
 The Pemigewasset Wilderness Boundary

"Strength in Numbers" (Owl's Head #36)

Date of Hike: 1/22/11

Lincoln Woods Trail: 2.6 miles
Black Pond Trail / Bushwhack: 2.4 miles
Lincoln Brook Trail (backtrack/retrack!): 3.5 miles
Brutus Bushwhack / Owl's Head Path: 3.0 miles
Lincoln Brook Trail: 2.0 miles
Black Pond Trail / Bushwhack: 2.4 miles
Lincoln Woods Trail: 2.6 miles
Total miles: around 18.5 (3,310 elevation gain)

Trip Report:
- With frigid temps forecast for Saturday I thought I'd play it safe and stay below treeline and out of the wind and hike everyone's favorite mountain Owl's Head!
- I was excited to get back to Owl's Head, having only been there once before in the summer and this time I'd get to hike the Black Pond Bushwhack and Brutus "Brutie" Bushwhack (named after a newfie dog! (Click here for more about Brutus) to the summit of "Owlie."
- On Trail at 7:30am, ditched hike 11ish, unditched hike 11:30ish, summited no idea!  Finished 7:15pm. Temps in low single digits maybe even zero or below at 4,000 feet. No wind in the woods lots and lots of new snow.
- The first 2.6 miles along the Lincoln Woods Trail wasn't as smooth as I had hoped for, there was a XC ski track but no snowshoe track, so eventhough I really wanted to walk on the ski tracks I broke some minor snow of about 6 inches or snow in the middle of the trail until I had had enough and walked on the ski tracks for the last few hundred feet to the Black Pond Trail junction.
- Luckily the black Pond Trail and the bushwhack were easy to follow and it was broken out pretty good. The Black Pond Bushwhack was more annoying and went a little higher than I thought it would be but I was happy because it was broken out.
- When I reached the Lincoln Brook Trail things got interesting, within ten minutes the snowshoe tracks came to an abrupt end. Ahead of me lay an unbroken faint trail (except for the moose who post-holed for a half mile). It was very very slow going but I continued along the banks of the Lincoln Brook for a while and crossing it twice over snow-bridges that made for and amazing site hiking across a river six feet above it on snow!
- Once past the last crossing it was time to start the Brutus Bushwhack...this ended badly as wherever I went it was just to steep and the snow was brutal as I kept sliding back and falling up to my waist in drifts. I made it about twenty-five feet up and realized I had no idea where I was supposed to go and that this was a stupid idea.
- Next I went back to the Lincoln Brook Trail and tried to head to the Owl's head Path to try my luck up the slide (another brain-dead idea). I made it about one hundred feet before snow-depths increased to 3 feet and I decided I had to turn around and go home.
- I started hiking back out for a half hour or so and I kept looking up at the bright "Bluebird" skies and started cursing myself..."Look up at the blue sky, what the hell were you thinking? Who the hell hikes this stupid no-views mountain when you have a clear 100 miles of visibility, I don't care how cold it is you could have hiked up Garfield or Jackson in no time and got kick ass views BUT NO you're here freezing your ass off in the middle of nowhere...way to go IDIOT!"...I could also hear my dad saying "You're a sh!thead"
- So I was bummed out beaten up and pretty upset when out of nowhere a miracle in the form of eight strong hikers came heading my way to salvage the day!  Among them were Bob & Gerri who I had hiked with this past summer! So to the end of the line I went and joined in with them to knock off Owl's Head no matter how exhausted I was.
- With nine people packing down the trail to the Brutus Bushwhack it made things much smoother until it was time to head up the steep western slopes off Owl's Head. Eventhough there were nine of us it still was a slog to break trail up to the top and I was in rough shape from my earlier hiking but I was warm so I knew I could make it.
- Two other hikers caught up to us and we now had eleven breaking trail as we gained the ridge and made our way past the old summit and over to the new summit. We stoped to refuel and warm up for a couple of minutes, I put on some dry clothes but froze my fingers up worse than I ever had before.
- Luckily about twenty minutes into our descent I was in the clear and knew my fingers would be fine, but what a strange and unpleasant feeling especially in my pinky's, it felt as if they weren't there for ten minutes!
- The hike back down to the Lincoln Brook Trail was fast as we all slipped and slided our way back down taking some gnarly falls in the snow enjoying the quick descent.
- We ran into one of the friendliest dogs ever (Thor) who was running up and down the trail and jumping into snow drifts and having a blast!
- Once back on the Lincoln Brook Trail it was time to start the long hike out over pretty boring terrain, night was quickly falling upon us as we donned headlamps for the Black Pond Bushwhack and the Black Pond Trail, the mile along the Black Pond Trail was the worst stretch for me, I had just had it and was out of gas.
- Now came time for the 2.6 miles Lincoln WoodsTrail sufferfest. It was the same as it ever was but the good news is when you're with eight others sharing in the misery it makes it go a little better and faster!
- Back at the car I changed out of my frozen clothes and started the long drive back to RI finally warming up 100% when I hit Boston!
- It was such a wild day and I was thankful that I ran into everyone when I did, they saved the day for me and made this a hike I'll never forget, thanks everyone!

Pictures: Click here for all pictures

Lincoln Brook Snowbridge
 Brutus Bushwhack
 Breaking out the Brutus Bushwhack
 Black Pond Trail


Bondcliff, Bond, & West Bond

Date of Hike: 8/1/10

Lincoln Woods/Wilderness Trail: 4.7 miles
Bondcliff/West Bond Spur Trail: 13.2 miles
Wilderness Trail: 1.8 miles
Pemi East Side beyond boring Trail: 3.0 miles
Total Miles: 22.9 miles (4,750 elevation gain)

Trip Report:
- I was pretty drained and exhausted but the weather forecast for Sunday called for another great day that I couldn't pass up so I headed deep into the Pemigewasset Wilderness to hike one of the most secluded and greatest stretch of mountains in all the White's...the Bonds.
- On Trail at 8am, cursing out loud on a trail even more annoying than the LW/Wilderness Trail at 5:30pm, Finished at 6pm. Temps above 60 degrees all day, no wind, terrific views!
- So what do you do after hiking over 28 miles and 12,000 feet of elevation gain in two days...hike another 20 plus miles and close to 5,000 more feet of elevation gain in a day!
- The hike between Cliff of the Bonds and Mount Bond is one of my favorite stretches in all of the White Mountains, HOWEVER, the hike to get there is one of the most annoying and boring in all of the White's thanks to the Lincoln Woods/Wilderness Trail!
- I was in rough shape by the time I got to the Bondcliff Trail and for the first part of the Bondlcliff Trail I was thinking maybe this wasn't such a great idea, maybe I should have just done the easier classic Franconia Ridge - Little Haystack / Lincoln / Lafayette Loop.
- However once crossing the dried out brook bed and the climbing really started I finally got in a grove and actually made better time than I thought up to the ledges of Bondcliff where the views no matter how many times you've been there are always beyond amazing!
- I started to run into lots of people and chatted it up with a nice lady working on her second round of the 48-4,000 footers and a group of three guys on vacation hiking to Guyot for the day, then doing a Zealand, Hale, Twins, Galhead, and maybe Garfield traverse to 13 Falls campsite on Monday and an Owl's Head hike back out to Lincoln Woods on Tuesday.
- One of the hikers has been hiking in the White Mountains since the early 1960's, I asked him if he hiked the Adams Slide Trail before it was abandoned and said he did and called it the steepest and most dangerous hiking he's ever done in the Whites!
- The views all day were simply amazing and I had the summits of Bond and West Bond all to myself and I'm starting to think the view from West Bond could be the best in all the White Mountains.
- Now it was time for the long descent which isn't to bad until you get back to treeline and have to slog it another 9 miles or so with no views.
- Back on the Wildeness trail I went a little slower and checked out some of the old railroad parts off trail hoping to find something interesting to take home but mostly it was just old pieces of rusted railroad parts, cans, buckets, and junk.
- When I reached the end of the Pemi Wilderness I decided to cross the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River and hike back along the Pemi East Side Trail hoping it would be less mind numbing than the LW/Wilderness Trail.
- The Pemi East Side Trail does not have Rail Road ties!!! HOWEVER other than that it's actually worse than the LW/W Trail, it's a dirt road with a couple of tiny hills, and it doesn't follow close by the river at all times, making it even more boring, and of course it never ends....I started to swear by the end of it "this trail is F**&%$! pointless, those campsites suck, this road sucks, that tree sucks, get out of my way chipmunk you suck, wthe frig this trail sucks!!!!!
- Back at the car I was just about dead but happy to be finished and very happy to have caught a third strait day with killer views and even more thrilled to be out of the woods!

Picures: Click here for all Pictures
 
Bondcliff and West Bond Mountain
Owl's Head and the Franconia Range
Twin Range
Pemigewasset Wilderness
Bondcliff

Bondcliff, Bond, West Bond (#15, #16, #17)

Date of Hike: 2/6/10

Lincoln Woods/Wilderness Trail: 4.7 miles
Bondcliff Trail: 6.1 miles
West Bond Spur: 1.0 miles
Bondcliff Trail: 6.1 miles
Lincoln Woods/Wilderness Trail: 4.7 miles
Total Miles: 22.8 (4,700 elevation gain)

Trip Report:

- Left RI at 3:30am, on trail at 6:30am, Bondcliff summit 10:30am, Bond summit 11:25am, West Bond summit 12pm, finished 5:15pm
- Weather was in the high single digits to low teens, no wind until descending when it started picking up to about 25-30 mph.  Clear skies 100 plus miles visibility
- Bare-booted until Bondcliff Trail, then switched to micro-spikes until Mount Bond summit and used snowshoes to West Bond summit
- Didn't warm up until Bondcliff trail, the flat Lincoln Woods/Wilderness trail makes it tough to get warmed up resulting in my eye-lids trying to freeze shut every time I blinked
- Ran into a group of three hikers on Bondcliff trail just below the rock scramble doing a Bond-Zealand Traverse.  Ran into another group of eight in-between Bondcliff and Bond coming over from Guyot Campsite.  They hiked in the previous night fighting through 70 MPH wind!
- Views from Bondcliff, Bond, and West Bond were phenomenal! Bondcliff Ridge is almost bear without any snow from high winds and lack of a significant snowfall for the previous month
-  Hike down from Bondcliff back to Lincoln Woods/Wilderness trail was boring but fast, Hike back to parking lot once back on Wilderness trail was beyond awful,  exhausting, and those awesome old railroad parts were buried under the snow meaning there would be no rusted trash to look at!  Only highlight was running into the group of eight from Guyot, two guys hiking into Bondcliff pulling a sled to camp out, and a lady (Miriam) with her hyper giant poodle dog who was sporting doggy boots (and a sweater!) as they hiked in to meet up with her husband who was doing a Pemi Loop!

- Winds started to whip up pretty fast and steady above at higher elevations as I neared the parking lot
- First hike this year at 100%, after battling two colds and being sluggish on a past few hikes at about 70-90% it felt good to go 20 plus miles and be able to kick it into another gear without sucking wind

Pictures:
Click here for all pictures

West Bond, with Mount Garfield, Lafayette,
and Lincoln in the background
Mount Washington
Mount Liberty, Flume, and Moosilauke
Whitewall Mountain, Mount Tom, Field, Willey
 and the Presidential Range
Bondcliff Trail
Owl's Head and the Franconia Ridge
Mount Garfield
Bondcliff and Mount Bond