Date of Hike: 6/14/15
Old Speck Trail: 3.2 miles / Mahoosuc Trail: 22.6 miles / Centennial Trail: 2.8 miles
Total Miles: 28.6 miles (10,285 feet elevation gained) Garmin Forerunner 910XT
31.2 miles (10,750' gained) White Mountain Guide Book
Trip Report:
- For the past four years I've been itching to do a one day Mahoosuc Range Traverse but just never could make it happen. From a logistic standpoint it's tougher to make this hike happen, you need a car spot and you have to head into Maine so it's a haul. Most important you need decent weather as the trails are very rough and unforgiving.
- Finally this past Sunday everything came together, car spot, weather, two other strong hiker/runners (Kyle and Tony). This was going to be a fast hike but with minimal running, as I had never been on any of the trails south of Old Speck's summit, and wanted to take it all in and document it for the blog and familiarize myself with the terrain.
- We met at McDonald's in Gorham where Tony informed us he was going to sit this one out, the day before he hiked the Tripyramids and his calve muscle was giving him issues and he did not want to chance it over 30 brutal miles. It was unfortunate that he couldn't make it but extremely nice of him to give us a car spot off Route 2 on Hogan Road and driving us over to Grafton Notch, saving us close to two hours of driving after the hike was over, huge thanks to Tony!
- Kyle and I started up the Old Speck Trail just after 7 a.m. The weather was perfect, temperatures were in the 50's, there was a calm breeze, under mostly sunny skies. We made good time up the Old Speck Trail, it has some steep short bursts mixed in with moderate grades but nothing we are not used to. The footing is decent to rough as it heads through the woods until it gains the ridge a few tenths of a mile short of Old Speck's summit and it's tower. At the summit we climbed the tower where we had great views, including one looking south over the route we were about to tackle.
- From the summit we headed south on the Mahoosuc Trail to Speck Pond Campsite. The trail down to the campsite was slab, rocks, and roots, it was wet in spots but not too bad overall. There were a few tent platforms with hikers breaking down camp and one guy sound asleep in his sleeping bag in the lean-to. The Mahoosuc Trail then headed around the eastern rocky banks of Speck Pond before reaching its outlet where we had a great view of the pond. From the pond the trail ascended steeply up to Mahoosuc Arm where there were some great views from rocky ledges, to the north we could see Old Speck and to the east we could see Sunday River ski area. After topping out on the arm the trail descended at a ridiculously steep grade over very brutal footing of slick slab followed by some nasty boulders before reaching the foot of the infamous Mahoosuc Notch.
- The Mahoosuc Notch has been branded the "Hardest Mile on the A.T." It's a mile long minefield of boulders where care is required in order to navigate over, under, and around car to house sized boulders out the other side of the notch. Going in I thought it was going to be a tougher version of the Subway and Ice Caves in the King Ravine. After going though it I can honestly say it's not as physically demanding as those, just longer. Still it was a tremendous amount of fun heading through the notch. We also lucked out as the trail crew had come through and cleaned out a massive amount of blowdowns over the last third of a mile through the notch, incredible trail work. There must have been a huge storm burst over the Mahoosuc Range recently because over the next fifteen miles there were cleared blowdowns on half of the trail!
- After passing through the notch we banged an immediate left and started the steep climb up to the Full Goose Campsite. This site was pretty cool as it sits on a small shelf on the northern shoulder of North Goose Eye Mountain. Above and below the campsite is pretty steep terrain, just past the campsite there is a section of iron wrungs to help hikers up a steep wet mossy slab section.
- The next few miles of the hike were my absolute favorite of the day, hiking over North, East, and the main peak of Goose Eye Mountain. The Mahoosuc Trail travels in and out of the scrub and though a beautiful alpine meadow between the peaks over moderate grades of slab with one steep burst north of East Goose. The trail had one curve ball as we headed along the alpine meadow...waist deep mud pits which luckily I had been warned about from Whitney who hiked through here last August during her A.T. thru-hike. Thankfully we were able to stay on the bog bridges and navigate around the worst mud pits only going in ankle deep once or twice. I consider this a win!
- After Goose Eye, the trail took on a 'Garfield Ridge' type feel to it, up and downs with rough footing as we headed over Mount Carlo, down to the Carlo Col, across the state line, and up to Mount Success where we took a much needed break to enjoy our last great view spot of the day.
- From Mount Success the Mahoosuc Trail heads through another alpine and scrub section before heading into the woods for good as it starts the long descent down to the Austin Brook and Gentian Pond. I was not a fan of this descent, it became rough and steep and I could not get into a good hiking pace, it became tiring to shift into different speeds over some really crummy footing. I hit my only wall of the day through here, the water I filtered in the North/East Goose Eye col was not refreshing anymore. Luckily the Austin Brook was flowing at a good rate and we both filtered some much needed cold/refreshing water and fueled up before heading up to Gentian Pond and then by Dream Lake.
- After Dream Lake the trail started to get a little overgrown and narrow in spots as we headed up past a decent outlook at Wocket Ledge. From here the trail eased up quite a bit footing wise. It became mostly dirt with only a few short boulder or slab sections. However, the trail workers had yet to make it this far south and the blowdowns were now in the trail. Luckily there weren't too many bad spots and the trail was easy to pick up on the other side of the blowdowns. The worst spot was in the woods just north of Cascade Mountain's summit.
- From Cascade Mountain we could see Mount Hayes, which would be our final high point of the day before booking it down the Centennial Trail to Hogan Road, bypassing the final 2.5 miles of the Mahoosuc Trail and the nasty bugs that eat hikers alive on the lower end of that section.
- The hike between Cascade and Hayes was pretty tame, the footing was good and the grades were easy to moderate and we made it to the Centennial Trail junction just after 5:30 p.m. From here we ran down to Hogan Road and made great time and really finished with a flurry. With a quarter mile to go I tripped and crashed to the ground, it was my worst fall ever in the White Mountains but was on dirt so I got off lucky with just a bruised ring finger and a nasty raspberry burn on my shoulder and upper bicep. After the fall, I got up, dusted myself off, and we ran it in to the trailhead finishing the Mahoosuc Traverse in 10 hours 59 minutes and 48 seconds!
- We quickly jumped in our cars to escape the most vicious mosquitoes I have ever encountered! I was covered in dirt and blood from my fall so we headed to Gorham and jumped in the small public man made pond that has a sandy beach on Route 16. It felt good to cool off and clean all the dirt, sweat, and blood off of me. After relaxing in the pond we headed to Mr. Pizza to stuff our faces before going our separate ways.
- The Mahoosuc Traverse was definitely tougher than a Presi Traverse or a Pemi Loop. I still prefer the other two because of the views but this one is right up there for hikers/runners who want an extreme challenge. I am looking forward to getting back and hiking some of the trails up to the Mahoosuc Range, especially those that go up to the Goose Eyes, plus I want to find the downed plane a little further south on Mount Success as well.
- I'll eventually do another one day traverse but not in the foreseeable future. I'm grateful I got to enjoy it with my friend Kyle, he's a very strong hiker / runner who set a great pace for the whole day and didn't mind me throttling down to take hundreds of pictures along the way.
- The hike went better than expected and I am happy to check another bucket-list hike off my to-do list!
Old Speck Trail: 3.2 miles / Mahoosuc Trail: 22.6 miles / Centennial Trail: 2.8 miles
Total Miles: 28.6 miles (10,285 feet elevation gained) Garmin Forerunner 910XT
31.2 miles (10,750' gained) White Mountain Guide Book
Trip Report:
- For the past four years I've been itching to do a one day Mahoosuc Range Traverse but just never could make it happen. From a logistic standpoint it's tougher to make this hike happen, you need a car spot and you have to head into Maine so it's a haul. Most important you need decent weather as the trails are very rough and unforgiving.
- Finally this past Sunday everything came together, car spot, weather, two other strong hiker/runners (Kyle and Tony). This was going to be a fast hike but with minimal running, as I had never been on any of the trails south of Old Speck's summit, and wanted to take it all in and document it for the blog and familiarize myself with the terrain.
- We met at McDonald's in Gorham where Tony informed us he was going to sit this one out, the day before he hiked the Tripyramids and his calve muscle was giving him issues and he did not want to chance it over 30 brutal miles. It was unfortunate that he couldn't make it but extremely nice of him to give us a car spot off Route 2 on Hogan Road and driving us over to Grafton Notch, saving us close to two hours of driving after the hike was over, huge thanks to Tony!
- Kyle and I started up the Old Speck Trail just after 7 a.m. The weather was perfect, temperatures were in the 50's, there was a calm breeze, under mostly sunny skies. We made good time up the Old Speck Trail, it has some steep short bursts mixed in with moderate grades but nothing we are not used to. The footing is decent to rough as it heads through the woods until it gains the ridge a few tenths of a mile short of Old Speck's summit and it's tower. At the summit we climbed the tower where we had great views, including one looking south over the route we were about to tackle.
- From the summit we headed south on the Mahoosuc Trail to Speck Pond Campsite. The trail down to the campsite was slab, rocks, and roots, it was wet in spots but not too bad overall. There were a few tent platforms with hikers breaking down camp and one guy sound asleep in his sleeping bag in the lean-to. The Mahoosuc Trail then headed around the eastern rocky banks of Speck Pond before reaching its outlet where we had a great view of the pond. From the pond the trail ascended steeply up to Mahoosuc Arm where there were some great views from rocky ledges, to the north we could see Old Speck and to the east we could see Sunday River ski area. After topping out on the arm the trail descended at a ridiculously steep grade over very brutal footing of slick slab followed by some nasty boulders before reaching the foot of the infamous Mahoosuc Notch.
- The Mahoosuc Notch has been branded the "Hardest Mile on the A.T." It's a mile long minefield of boulders where care is required in order to navigate over, under, and around car to house sized boulders out the other side of the notch. Going in I thought it was going to be a tougher version of the Subway and Ice Caves in the King Ravine. After going though it I can honestly say it's not as physically demanding as those, just longer. Still it was a tremendous amount of fun heading through the notch. We also lucked out as the trail crew had come through and cleaned out a massive amount of blowdowns over the last third of a mile through the notch, incredible trail work. There must have been a huge storm burst over the Mahoosuc Range recently because over the next fifteen miles there were cleared blowdowns on half of the trail!
- After passing through the notch we banged an immediate left and started the steep climb up to the Full Goose Campsite. This site was pretty cool as it sits on a small shelf on the northern shoulder of North Goose Eye Mountain. Above and below the campsite is pretty steep terrain, just past the campsite there is a section of iron wrungs to help hikers up a steep wet mossy slab section.
- The next few miles of the hike were my absolute favorite of the day, hiking over North, East, and the main peak of Goose Eye Mountain. The Mahoosuc Trail travels in and out of the scrub and though a beautiful alpine meadow between the peaks over moderate grades of slab with one steep burst north of East Goose. The trail had one curve ball as we headed along the alpine meadow...waist deep mud pits which luckily I had been warned about from Whitney who hiked through here last August during her A.T. thru-hike. Thankfully we were able to stay on the bog bridges and navigate around the worst mud pits only going in ankle deep once or twice. I consider this a win!
- After Goose Eye, the trail took on a 'Garfield Ridge' type feel to it, up and downs with rough footing as we headed over Mount Carlo, down to the Carlo Col, across the state line, and up to Mount Success where we took a much needed break to enjoy our last great view spot of the day.
- From Mount Success the Mahoosuc Trail heads through another alpine and scrub section before heading into the woods for good as it starts the long descent down to the Austin Brook and Gentian Pond. I was not a fan of this descent, it became rough and steep and I could not get into a good hiking pace, it became tiring to shift into different speeds over some really crummy footing. I hit my only wall of the day through here, the water I filtered in the North/East Goose Eye col was not refreshing anymore. Luckily the Austin Brook was flowing at a good rate and we both filtered some much needed cold/refreshing water and fueled up before heading up to Gentian Pond and then by Dream Lake.
- After Dream Lake the trail started to get a little overgrown and narrow in spots as we headed up past a decent outlook at Wocket Ledge. From here the trail eased up quite a bit footing wise. It became mostly dirt with only a few short boulder or slab sections. However, the trail workers had yet to make it this far south and the blowdowns were now in the trail. Luckily there weren't too many bad spots and the trail was easy to pick up on the other side of the blowdowns. The worst spot was in the woods just north of Cascade Mountain's summit.
- From Cascade Mountain we could see Mount Hayes, which would be our final high point of the day before booking it down the Centennial Trail to Hogan Road, bypassing the final 2.5 miles of the Mahoosuc Trail and the nasty bugs that eat hikers alive on the lower end of that section.
- The hike between Cascade and Hayes was pretty tame, the footing was good and the grades were easy to moderate and we made it to the Centennial Trail junction just after 5:30 p.m. From here we ran down to Hogan Road and made great time and really finished with a flurry. With a quarter mile to go I tripped and crashed to the ground, it was my worst fall ever in the White Mountains but was on dirt so I got off lucky with just a bruised ring finger and a nasty raspberry burn on my shoulder and upper bicep. After the fall, I got up, dusted myself off, and we ran it in to the trailhead finishing the Mahoosuc Traverse in 10 hours 59 minutes and 48 seconds!
- We quickly jumped in our cars to escape the most vicious mosquitoes I have ever encountered! I was covered in dirt and blood from my fall so we headed to Gorham and jumped in the small public man made pond that has a sandy beach on Route 16. It felt good to cool off and clean all the dirt, sweat, and blood off of me. After relaxing in the pond we headed to Mr. Pizza to stuff our faces before going our separate ways.
- The Mahoosuc Traverse was definitely tougher than a Presi Traverse or a Pemi Loop. I still prefer the other two because of the views but this one is right up there for hikers/runners who want an extreme challenge. I am looking forward to getting back and hiking some of the trails up to the Mahoosuc Range, especially those that go up to the Goose Eyes, plus I want to find the downed plane a little further south on Mount Success as well.
- I'll eventually do another one day traverse but not in the foreseeable future. I'm grateful I got to enjoy it with my friend Kyle, he's a very strong hiker / runner who set a great pace for the whole day and didn't mind me throttling down to take hundreds of pictures along the way.
- The hike went better than expected and I am happy to check another bucket-list hike off my to-do list!
Old Speck Trailhead in Grafton Notch
The Old Speck Trail travels by Cascade Brook which has some nice little falls and cascades along the trail
The trail passes by a few ledgy outlooks where you can spy the summit of Old Speck
The Old Speck Trail has the usual rocky footing as it gains the ridge
Old Speck summit tower
A sign and a welded signature located at the bottom of the tower
Sunday River
View to the east from the top of the tower
Our route for the day, south along the Mahoosuc Range
Heading to Speck Pond Campsite
Speck Pond
The trail up from Speck Pond to Mahoosuc Arm. Looking back you can see Old Speck Mountain
Looking down to Mahoosuc Notch
The rough and rugged descent to the foot of the notch
Kyle makes his way through Mahoosuc Notch
The trail goes under and over huge boulders
Kyle navigates a ledge and an icy section
Heading through Mahoosuc Notch
The last few tenths of a mile was blowdown city!
After the notch we head up to Full Goose Campsite. Along the way we head through a nice alpine meadow
Beautiful stretch of the Mahoosuc Trail
Full Goose Shelter
Using the rebar for a helping hand!
Traveling through the picturesque alpine meadow along the Goose Eyes
Kyle heads to East Goose Eye
East Goose Eye
East and main peak of Goose Eye
East and main peak (top), North Goose eye (bottom)
Descending East Goose Eye with Goose Eye in sight
Looking back north to East Goose Eye, Mahoosuc, and Old Speck (top). Looking south to Carlo and Mount Success (bottom)
Kyle makes his way through the steep descent off of Goose Eye
The A.T. along Mount Carlo
Back in NH!
Mount Success summit
Great hiking and view just south of Mount Success
Back into the woods heading down to Austin Brook
Along the Mahoosuc Trail. This is either Gentian Pond or Dream Lake. I can't remember
The trail starts to take on a more dirt path than the tedious boulder and rock bed
Kyle heads along a muddy section and a bog bridge section
Page Pond
Heading up past Trident Pass
Making our way to Cascade Mountain with the Moriah - Carter Range coming into view
The trail got really narrow in spots
Other spots of the trail had some blowdowns to navigate
Mount Hayes from Cascade Mountain
Kyle makes his way up Mount Hayes where we bang a left before the summit and descend the Centennial Trail back to Hogan Road
Trail signs from Grafton Notch to Speck Pond
Trail Signs from Speck Pond to the NH border
Trail signs from NH Border to Hogan Road
Route for the day, click here for details
Mileage, time, and elevation data
Splits
Chris - Awesome hike and beautifully documented! Outstanding effort on doing the traverse in a day
ReplyDeleteGoose Eye and Goose Eye East is very high on my list of New England favorites and very rewarding when the weather cooperates.
Thanks for sharing,
Peter (OnAClearDay)
Thanks, Peter! Glad you enjoyed the report and pictures. We had a great day weather wise and I hope to get back to the Goose Eyes this fall during peak foliage. Hope you have a great summer out on the trails :)
Delete-Chris