Friday, October 4,
2013
I’d
woken many times through the night, but as light was starting to dominate the
morning sky, decided it was time to pack up and head for the diner. It was 6:30 a.m.
I’d
just begun rolling up my bag when Paul’s Toyota pulled into the lot. He drove over and parked next to me.
“Did
you sleep at all last night?” I asked.
“Yeah…stopped
for a few hours a little ways from here and nodded off,” he said.
He
doesn’t seem to need much sleep; one of his many abnormalities. I packed and we drove to Noon Mark where I
had a ham and cheese omelet and looked over the map to determine our climbing
destination for the day.
“I’d
like to tackle Sawteeth, but its 15 miles round trip and 2,500 feet of
elevation change. I don’t know if my hip
can take that, but more importantly, I don’t want to climb it if there isn’t
going to be a view,” I said.
My
biggest concern was the weather report. We
were looking at a 30% chance of rain, which could mean none at all, but often
meant foggy conditions and limited views.
Sawteeth was renowned for its fabulous views and I didn’t want to spend
an entire day on the trail only to be looking at pea soup from the summit. The pain in my hip I felt I could deal with.
We
drove from the diner to the trail head for Round Pond; our camping
destination. It was a short hike – about
25 minutes – but a wonderfully secluded camping area seldom used and offering
complete serenity. We saw a notice
posted at the trailhead indicating that a hiker from Mass., Scott Haworth, was
missing. He’d parked his car and signed
the trailhead book at this location on August 30th and never been
seen again. It said that he often hiked
alone. If he came to this trailhead, he
may have been headed for the Dix Mt. wilderness area and been doing some
bushwhacking to visit the four peaks above 4,000 feet. If he did and managed to get lost, I suspect
he will never be found. The area is too
vast and once off trail, practically impossible to travel. Few people do unless skilled with map and
compass and plenty of time to burn. The undergrowth
is so tangled and thick that traveling through it takes extreme patience and
caution. I avoid it at all costs.
We
arrived on the pond to find our site empty and quickly pitched our tent, loaded
in our sleeping gear, put up the rain fly, and headed back to the car. On the hike back, I decided that between my
hip and the overcast conditions, I’d forgo a trip to Sawteeth and climb a
lesser peak, Hurricane Mt. It was a good
choice because it had a clear summit with, on a clear day, tremendous views
east of Lake Champlain and the Green Mts. of Vermont. It had a 2,000 foot elevation change in a 2.6
mile hike, so would prove to be challenging, as well. We hiked about half a mile and were crossing
a bog when the first drops began to fall.
We both put our cameras in the day pack and I congratulated myself on
the decision not to head for Sawteeth.
The trail would become slippery from the rain and with the leaves that had
already fallen, additionally hazardous.
Not a good day for a 15-mile climb.
We
reached the summit in a little less than 2 hours and spent almost an hour on
top. It had an aging, unused fire tower,
which Paul climbed in spite of the missing steps. The views were decent, though clouds blocked
most of the lake and the Vermont mountains.
I’d broken a vigorous sweat on the climb, which meant I began to cool
quickly in the wind and from the cooler temperatures on top. I know how quickly hypothermia can kick in,
so I hunkered down behind a large boulder and had some lunch. We were alone on the peak, but met some other
hikers on our way down, reaching the car in about the same time it took to
climb.
Since
it was too early to return to our campsite, we drove to Lake Placid and visited
the historical site of John Brown’s Adirondack farm. His wife was living there when he conducted
his ill-fated attempt at Harper’s Ferry in 1859. After dinner at Noon Mark and some
site-seeing in Lake Placid, headed back to the trailhead into Round Pond. It was 9 p.m. and pitch black. We walked in with head lamps, discussing that
if they both went out, we’d be unable to take another step and would have to
sleep on the side of the trail. We would
have returned in daylight and scoured the woods for firewood and sat around a
fire for several hours, but since the rain was falling this was not an option. The forecast for Saturday was more of the
same, so climbing options would be limited again.
Hike duration: Five hours.
Training Heart
Rate: 90-140 bpm.
Calories burned during
workout: 2500.