Showing posts with label White Mountains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label White Mountains. Show all posts

Big Dailey Brewing Loop

Elevation over Distance Profile (Strava Link)

7/5/25

Road Walk: 0.5 miles / Carter Moriah Trail: 13.8 miles / Nineteen-Mile Brook Trail: 0.4 miles / Wildcat Ridge Trail: 2.7 miles / Wildcat Ski Trails: 2.1 miles / NH 16: 0.7 miles / Tuckerman Ravine Trail: 4.2 miles / Gulfside Trail: 1.1 miles / Mount Clay Loop: 1.2 miles / Gulfside Trail: 0.7 miles / Mount Jefferson Loop: 0.7 miles / Gulfside Trail: 1.2 miles / Lowe's Path: 0.3 miles / Airline: 0.6 miles / Gulfside Trail: 0.3 miles: Osgood Trail: 0.5 miles / Watson Path: 0.3 miles / Pine Link: 3.5 miles / Pine Mountain Trail: 4.2 miles / Coos Trails: 1.1 miles
Total Miles: 40.0 (16,125' elevation gained)

Trip Report:
- 4th of July weekend, I was able to get in a physically demanding day looping the Moriah-Carter-Cats range and the Northern Presidential range (Washington, Clay, Jefferson, Adams, Madison), starting and finishing at Big Day Brewing in Gorham, NH, which is 1.5 miles up NH16 from my home.
- I started at first light, 4:37AM, and walked a few of the side streets from the brewery to the Carter Moriah trailhead on Banger Road.

Dawn at Big Day Brewing

- First ascent of the day was up to Mount Moriah's summit. The trail follows an old logging road before becoming more rugged as it climbs. There are great views from Mount Surprise, a nondescript summit about 2.5 miles in. After Surprise, the trail meanders its way toward Mount Moriah, with a few short level sections, moderate grades, and steep bursts. I arrived at the summit at 6:22 AM, and was greeted with great views.

View from Mount Surprise looking towards the Northern Presi's

Looking at the Carter Range from the summit of Mount Moriah

- From the summit of Moriah, I hooked onto the Appalachian Trail and started the rollercoaster ride through the Carter Range. First, I dropped down about a thousand feet and then made my way around Imp Mountain before the brutal, but thankfully, short-lived, steep and rugged ascent up to North Carter. 

Along the A.T. between Moriah and Imp

Looking back Imp Mountain and Moriah from North Carter

- Once topping out at North Carter, I cruised through the next few miles over Middle and South Carter before reaching Zeta Pass. From Zeta Pass, I soon made the short and steep ascent up to Mount Hight, and its tremendous 360-degree views.
- Levaing Hight, I quickly made my way to Carter Dome before steeply dropping down to Carter Notch Hut, arriving at 9:15 to refill on water and take a ten-minute break before continuing on. During my stop at the hut, I bumped into fellow endurance enthusiast, Tim L., whom I follow on Strava, attempting an unsupported White Mountain 100 (A.T. from Shelburne to Glencliff)

A nice little alpine meadow between Middle and South Carter

Zeta Pass

Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Madison as seen from Mount Hight

South and Middle Carter

Carter Notch Hut

- Ahead of me was another steep climb, 0.7 miles and 1000 + feet up to Wildcat A Peak. I conserved my energy up to the summit before running at an easy pace over B, C, & D peaks before quickly dropping down the Wildcat Ski Area trails and NH16 over to Pinkham Notch. As I descended from 4000' to 2000', the rising temperature and sun quickly made me throttle down as I still had a long way to go. At Pinkham, I grabbed some lemonade and ate my Uncrustable before starting the second half of the loop at 11AM.

Carter Notch Lake

Carter Notch and Carter Dome from Wildcat A Peak

Wildcat Ski Area just below Wildcat D Peak

- The second half of the loop started with the Tuckerman Ravine Trail as the midday heat and humidity kept ramping up. At "First Bridge", I came upon a family with a Golden Retriever. The dad was trying to coerce the dog out of the water below the bridge. I had planned on dousing myself in the cold water before coming upon the family, and I didn't stop my stride as I charged down into the water and cooled myself off, the dog happily sharing the space with me. The family thought I was a little strange, par for the course, but the dog loved me!
- Feeling refreshed, I continued onto HoJo's, running into JP, who I often see at Friday Night Vert, and has participated in a few of my AVD and MMD trail runs.
- Saturdays on Mount Washington are usually a zoo, but I got lucky as I didn't hit any bottlenecks heading up through the ravine and over the headwall. Along the way, I ran into Pat, AMC hut maintenance man during the summers, doing a double Washington and looking strong. 
- Once I hit Tuckerman Junction, I finally caught up to the crowds. Thankfully, there was plenty of room to easily maneuver around everyone, summiting just before 1PM.
- I took a quick break at the top to refill my water, scarf down a summit hot dog, chug a Powerade, and take a coffee cake for the road.


Hermit Lake Ranger's Cabin / Tuckerman Ravine Headwall waterfall. The remaining snow would melt by the middle of the following week


Tuckerman Ravine and Wildcat Ridge


Views from the top! Jefferson, Adams, Madison

- After escaping the crowds on the summit cone, I made my way north, tagging Clay, Jefferson, Adams, and Madison along the way. High-level clouds started to float in from the west, making the trek much easier without the sun beating down on me from above treeline. 
- I felt good along the way, only hitting a little bit of a slump as I approached Edmands Col, where the coffee cake I had purchased came in handy.
- Views were pretty spectacular from Clay (1:30PM), Jefferson, (2PM), Adams (2:50PM), and Madison (3:30PM)

Along the Mount Clay Loop

Monticello Lawn with Mount Clay, Mount Washington, and Great Gulf headwall in view

Flag waving in the wind on Mount Jefferson

Looking north to Mount Adams

Star Lake and Mount Madison as seen from Mount Adams

Madison Spring Hut and the summit cone of Madison

JQ Adams, a sub-peak of Adams, can be seen rising above the hut with Mount Adams rising above JQ

Mount Adams and Washington from the summit of Mount Madison

- It was now time for the final segment of the loop, ruggedly dropping back below treeline to Pinkham B Road, followed by one final burst up Pine Mountain before making my way back to Big Day Brewing.
- The initial 0.3 miles down on the Watson Path to the Pine Link junction is over jagged boulders, one wrong step could end in a twisted ankle or a terrible knee-bashing fall. I carefully picked my way down and safely made it to the Pine Link Trail where I was greeted with much better footing until treeline. Unfortunately, the upper section of Pine Link has grown in, and I was swimming through tree branches, making for a tedious half-mile descent before the trail conditions improved dramatically.
- I only ran into three people on the way down: a father with his two sons, slowly making their way to Madison Spring Hut.
- I reached Pinkham B Road at 4:40PM, and crossed onto Pine Mountain Road for about a mile, shuffling along while getting passed by a Horton Center councilor out for an afternoon run. I banged a right off the road onto the Ledge Trail, ascending steeply to the Pine Mountain Ledges, where I enjoyed incredible views looking back at my whole route for the day. 
- Just above the ledges is the official summit of Pine Mountain, no views, so I continued to my last view of the day, Chapel Rock, reached by a short, steep out and back.
- After leaving Chapel Rock, I cruised down the Pine Mountain Trail into Gorham and then connected onto the Coos Trail system, arriving at my Jeep at Big Day Brewing at 6PM.
- Back at the Jeep, I cleaned forty miles of dirt and sweat off me and relaxed for a solid twenty minutes.  After settling down, I hoped to score a seat to eat a bunch of food and drink a beer before heading back home, but Big Day was jamming, so I was out of luck. I was starving and craving garbage food, so I made my annual visit to McD's for nuggets, fries, and a shake, scarfing those down at home with Sarge, who earned a couple of french fries for being a good boy while I was out all day!
- This was a fun and challenging route, about a step below a Hut to Hut with an easier back end and shorter in miles, but similar in elevation gain and ruggedness!

Pano from Pine Mountain ledges. You can see practically my whole route in this picture; Moriah-Carters-Cats to the left and Presidential Range to the right

Chapel Rock

One last view from an awesome day on the trail!

Tuckerman Ravine Throwdown / Leaf Peepin' with Sarge / Crawford Notch Loop

Tuckerman Ravine Throwdown & RUN NH48 #47

Tuckerman Ravine Trail: 8.4 miles, 4,250' elevation gained

Fall started off with extended summer weather until the second week of October. My initial plan was to run Mount Lafayette for my RUN NH48 project I have been working on now for ten years. Lafayette would have been peak #47, saving my home mountain, Washington, for #48. However, Andrew Drummond of White Mountain Ski Company & Run the Whites put out a challenge to all trail runners called the Tuckerman Ravine Throwdown. He would give out gift cards to the top ten fastest uphill ascents on Tuckerman Ravine Trail for both men and women between September 19th and October 14th. I wouldn't be able to sniff the top ten, but I thought it would be a blast to incorporate this into my up and down speed run of Washington for #47. 
- I break the Tuckerman Ravine Trail down into two sections, the first is Pinkham Notch to Hermit Lake (Hojo's), 2.4 miles and 1850' elevation gained over moderate grades with a mix of dirt and rocks of all sizes, followed by HoJo's to the summit, 1.8 miles 2400' feet elevation gain with steep grades over a rock staircase and odd sized big boulders.
- My goal for running Mount Washington has always been an under two hours up & down. With perfect conditions I knew I could go under forty minutes on the descent but it was going sub 1:20 on the ascent that would be the make/break point. I set my goal for this ascent at a 1:18, (previous PR was low 1:20's) which should leave me just enough time to break the two-hour mark.
- On Tuesday, September 24th I woke up, packed my running vest, drove ten minutes down the road to Pinkham Notch, and started my run at dawn around 6:30am. It was a nice cool morning, temps were in the mid-forties, perfect for running as I motored up the first 2.4 miles to HoJo's. I passed a couple of early morning hikers in the first half mile then I wouldn't see anyone else on trail until halfway down the mountain. my previous PR to Hojo's was 35:49, last September, this time around I was hoping to knock 90 seconds off, mission accomplished, I huffed and puffed my way to a 33:15 with Hermit Lakes caretaker, Jimmy Rips, popping out of the ranger's cabin and cheering me on. As you can see from the screenshot below, I did not come close to the top ten on this Strava segment but still impressive none the less considering how many people have "ran" Tucks.

Very impressive times, it's mind-boggling to me how fast the top ten covers this first section of Tuckerman Ravine trail

- From HoJo's to the summit is when it gets steep, first up a rock staircase to the first aid cache, 0.6 miles 600', then a short reprieve to Lunch Rocks, followed by another steep rock staircase the parallels the waterfall to the switchback, then the trail steeply rises up to the lip and above it to Tuckerman Junction over rocks of all sizes, some loose and some stable, 0.6 miles 900'. From Tuckerman Junction to the Auto Road it is rock hopping at its finest over boulders of all sizes, 0.4 miles 700', finally it's 0.2 miles and 200' of road/staircase/gravel/summit rock pile.
- I love the second half of Tuckerman Ravie Trail, it's steep and gnarly with breathtaking views. I made good time to the bottom of the waterfall/Lunch Rocks making it to the second rock staircase in about twelve minutes, from there I held on up through the lip to Tuckerman Junction in fourteen minutes, making the turn towards the summit in just under an hour. 
- From Tuckerman Junction to the summit the grade eases ever so slightly, it's still steep but turning over the legs is not as difficult as going through the two staircase sections below the headwall. I covered the last 0.6 miles in about fifteen minutes arriving at the summit in 1:14:52, three minutes ahead of my goal. 

Sub one hour for the elites, let that sink in for a minute, incredible! Not too shabby time for me too!!

- Sub two was definitely in sight, and as I started rock hopping down I kept picking up the pace, tap dancing through the technical terrain past Tuckerman Junction down the headwall and by Lunch Rocks to HoJo's. The rocks below Hojo's were dry and grippy and I ripped it down. While I can't keep up on the uphill with the elites I'm proud to say I can hang with any of them on the technical descents, trying to navigate quickly downhill over this type of terrain levels the playing field, advantage me! I made it from the summit to the bottom in under 35 minutes easily attaining my round-trip goal with a 1:49:51. A run I will never forget!
- Over the next week Sarge and I would do our usual early morning hikes up the Rockpile and cheer on other runners who we'd see taking part in the TRT Throwdown, it was really great to see trail runners from all over coming up to Pinkham and giving TRT all they had. It was a really cool challenge that Andrew put out there and I hope it becomes an annual tradition, maybe a Lion Head King of the Mountain next fall??!!

I can hang on the descents. For a week I even held the top spot!

Really proud to do a sub two and to be in the top ten, for now!

Washington & Leaf Peeping Sarge: Waumbek, Great Glen, Cabot

- Sarge and I spent the first week of October getting in a few more hikes of Mount Washington and then the second week of October we stayed below treeline as a cold front came through dropping a few inches of snow up high. 
- Foliage was peaking in several spots in the White Mountains which draws a crowd, so we stayed away from the awful traffic areas while getting in some great peeping days. 

Early morning in Tuckerman Ravine

Sarge enjoying the clouds floating high above him as the sun rises

Another spectacular morning for the Dood

Hiking up the Starr King Trail

Starr King Trail blanketed in leaves

Great Glen, That is one happy Dood!

Leaf Peepin' at Great Glen

Bunnell Rock and Cabot Cabin

Bunnell Notch Trail

Crawford Notch Loop
Ethan Pond Trail: 1.6 miles / Willey Range Trail: 3.4 miles / Mount Tom Spur: 1.2 miles / A-Z Trail: 2.3 miles / Crawford Path: 3.1 miles / Webster-Cliff Trail: 7.3 miles / Willey House Station Road: 0.2 miles
Total Miles:  19.1 (7,350' elevation gained)

- Sunday morning I made the drive over to Crawford Notch to get in some miles while staying relatively low as the cold front and high winds still had a stronghold above 5K. 
- I started the day with a steep hike up Mount Willey along the Willey Range Trail. This trail has seen better days as it becomes more eroded each year and the famous ladder section is looking pretty grim with several steps missing making for an adventurous ascent. It's all worth it though as views from the Willey outlook on this early morning were pretty, pretty, pretty good.

Crossing the train tracks at the start of the Ethan Pond Trail (A.T.)

Oooff, looking pretty sad

Awesome early morning view from Mount Willey Outlook

- After Willey I made the not so exciting trek past Field and over to Tom. Both have obstructed views near the summit but the trees have slowly been swallowing those up over the sixteen years I have hiked these peaks.
- From Tom I dropped back down to 302, after seeing two hikers between Field and Tom I now saw over fifty over the final two miles, all happily enjoying their morning on trail.
- Back down to the road I crossed the street and hooked onto the oldest maintain footpath in the United States, the Crawford Path. Trail was pretty crowded heading up but everyone was in high spirits, amazingly I had the summit and the stellar late morning views to myself before dropping down to Mispah Spring Hut to refill my water.

Mount Eisenhower, Monroe, Washington, Clay, and Jefferson. Boott Spur can be seen all the way to the right

Mizpah Spring Hut

- Webster-Cliff Trail was mostly quiet as I headed over to Jackson and then to Webster. The descent off Webster was the part of the day I was really looking forward to, it was around noon and temps had warmed up and I got to enjoy the views from the many open ledges the trail passes by before dropping into the woods for good. The last group I saw on the day also had a Goldendoodle with them so that made my day, Sarge would have been jealous if he had been with me as I told the pup that they were a handsome Dood!
- Once back to 302 I crossed the road and ran uphill back into the tourist zone as there were cars parked everywhere on Willey Station Road, to add to this nonsense was someone during the day decided to stand on my Jeep's bumper, shoe prints on it and hand smudges on my hood, presumably for a foliage picture while on a Jeep??!! This isn't the first time something like this has happened, there has been a time or two in the summer while out hiking that some boob has sat in my Jeep at Pinkham when I had the doors off, or the one time I actually saw some influencer at the Grand Canyon squat in front of my Jeep posing, my Jeep is not "tricked out" or modded, so very strange and a just a bit creepy!

Pano of the loop I did. Willey, Field, Tom on the right, and Pierce and Jackson on the left

View from Mount Webster of Jackson though Washington, with Jefferson peaking out to the left in the background

Looking down to where I began and will end the day

Pano of lower Crawford Notch

Mount Willey looming large over Crawford Notch