Showing posts with label Mount Zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mount Zealand. Show all posts

Zealand Mountain

Date of Hike: 1/28/12

Route 302 / Zealand Road: 6.1 miles
Zealand Trail / Twinway / Zealand Spur Trail: 6.4 miles
Route 302 / Zealand Road: 6.1 miles
Total Miles: 18.6 (2,850 elevation gain)
Click here for trail descriptions

Trip Report:
- Saturday's forecast was for high winds above treeline so I thought it would be fun to go for a long road walk along Zealand Road on my way to Zealand Mountain.  Unfortunately the out-of-whack winter weather made for some exhausting snow conditions.
- Zealand Road had a single snowmobile track all the way to the end of the paved section, then there was an old ski track, and two bare boot tracks that were sinking into the newer snow.  I put on my snowshoes and plodded my way past the Hale Brook Trail on my way to Zealand Trail and over to Zealand Falls Hut which took up more energy than I was expecting with some crusty snow and powder underneath.
- I took a quick break in the hut before I followed a broken out track to the Zeacliff Outlook on the Twinway were I ran into a group of five guys who had stayed at the hut the night before and were trying to make it to Guyot before coming back down.
- Once past them it was time to break 1.6 miles to the summit of Zealand.  The snow was a real pain to deal with.  The top inch to two inches was a crusted over, beneath that was powder, sometimes a couple of inches, sometimes a half foot, other times a foot and every so often I'd punch through to my knees.  It was exhausting and I re-aggravated a muscle strain in my leg from two weeks ago.  Still it was a lot of fun breaking trail and the clouds had lifted making for some awesome views.
- The descent was slow going as well, I expected to pick up lost time after I ran into the group of five again on my way down but the trail was still choppy and I now had a "hitch in my giddy up"
- I took a break at the Zeacliff Outlook on the Twinway to take in the views and felt better on my way to the hut.
- From the hut to Zealand Road I passed by about two dozen hikers heading in to spend the night at the hut.  It was a boring hike back to the road but not as boring and excruciating as what was to come.
- I was hoping to see snowmobile tracks on the road so I could ditch the snowshoes but there were none and the snow on the road was in worse shape than in the morning.  Conditions were a mix between ski tracks and bare boot tracks which chewed up the snow, no solid snowshoe track so each step was awkward and the pain in my leg became really annoying, so much so that every couple of minutes I would just sit in the snow for a break.
- When I reached the Hale Brook Trail a big group of ten had just finished hiking Mount Hale and were heading out, they seemed about as thrilled as me to have the road walk ahead of them, one of them was cursing the road.  Most of the group were pulling sleds with their gear on them, I wondered if they had originally planned to head to Zealand Falls Hut after their Hale hike and just said the hell with it.
- I caught a second wind and speeded ahead of them until I almost broke down on the side of the road, now both legs were in pain so I stopped to refuel again and take a break and gather myself.
- Finally I was able to take off my snowshoes when I reached the snowmobile tracks where the paved section comes in, the conditions were still subpar but I couldn't hike any longer with the snowshoes on.  I put on my microspikes, picked up the pace and went by the sled cavalry again and limped my way to Route 302 and back to the car.
- It was one hell of a hike, I really beat the crap out of myself and enjoyed the 9.5 hours on the trails!

Pictures: Click here for all Pictures

 Zealand Falls Hut
 Unbroken Twinway
 Twinway
 Blue sky and high clouds over Zealand Moutain
 Presidential Range
Carrigain Notch and Mountain Range

From Dawn till Dusk (Mount Zealand and Hale from the Kanc)

Date of hike: 10/17/09

Hancock Notch Trail: 1.8 miles  /  Cedar Brook Trail: 6.1 miles  /  East Side Trail: .9 miles  /  Thoreau Falls Trail: 5.1 miles  /  Ethan Pond Trail: .8 miles  /  Zeacliff Trail: 1.4 miles  /  Twinway: 4.7 miles  /  Lend-A-Hand Trail: 2.7 miles  /  Hale Brook Trail: 2.3 miles
Total Miles: 25.7 (5,300 elevation gain)

Trip Report:
- Left RI at 4am with Dad and my dog Mr. Smackers.  They dropped me off at the Hancock Notch trailhead on the Kanc at 6:45am and picked me up at the Hale Brook trailhead on Zealand Road at 5:30pm
- Temps were in the low 20's to high 30's, no wind, clear skies, few inches of snow on trail above 3,000 feet, and ice in places. Some mud, and wet spots hidden by snow cover and leaves, no traction required on any trails
- First 15 miles were relatively flat with not many views, very cold and my fingers didn't warm up until about 10 miles in
- Walked over to the old site of the suspension bridge connecting the East Side trail to the Wilderness trail, the cable is on the ground and the wood from the bridge is under tarps off to the side of the trail. 
- Thoreau Falls Bridge is cool as it was last time I was here and looking and kind of crooked with a good view of one of the Bonds
- Got lost on Thoreau Falls trail, about 2.5 miles in the trail is not blazed at all and care needs to be taken to not get lost when the trail narrows and starts climbing the short steep section along the river. I ended up a tenth of a mile to the west in a small flooded beaver pond and then to a river bank.  I then backtracked and headed east and stumbled upon the trail in a few minutes.  This didn't seem to phase me last time on this trail, maybe cause I was hiking from the other direction!
- Ethan Pond Trail always has beautiful views and is nice and level from Thoreau Falls to Zeacliff trail junctions
- Zeacliff trail is wild, steep, and has great views of Mount Bond and Carrigain Notch
- Only saw two hikers all the way until the Twinway, then I ran into a bunch, a few people were wearing microspikes on the Twinway although they weren't needed
- Views from twinway of Washington and the Presidential Ranger were crystal clear and awesome!
- Stopped in at Zealand Hut and the falls for the first time since I was a kid.
- Lend-A-Hand trail has some very well placed bogs and with all the snow it made for a soft cushiony walk for a few tenths of a mile
- The snow was a constant from Zeacliff all the way until the last 1.5 miles of Hale Brook trail. It was well packed down but made for some slippery spots. Had two falls, a face first on the Twinway and a minor fall on Lend-A-Hand where there is an outlook
- My dad and Smackers were walking up Hale Brook as I descended.  Ran into them a little over a half mile from the trailhead. 
- Ice cold Yuengling's I won from a bet with Johnny 5 waiting in the car!
- This hike kicked my A$$, should have been done the opposite way to get all the elevation gain out of the way early in the day when fresh. Early in the morning at the Cedar Brook/Hancock Loop junction I really contemplated running up and doing the Hancock loop thank god I didn't!

Pictures: Click here to view all pictures

East Side Trail
Thoreau Falls Bridge
Looking north on the Twinway
Presidential Range
Mount Washington
Twinway
Zealand Notch to Carrigain Notch
Mr. Smackers!