There was a serious snowpack in the woods beside the trail. If I stepped atop the old track I would sink in a foot in most places; off the track it was more like two feet.
These drifted-in troughs were tedious to navigate due to hidden deep soft holes.
When I plunged into this hole about 0.8 mile up, I seriously considered turning back.
Drifting was the name of the game this day.
Drifting away.
Pretty good snow load.
One of the few spots where the old snowshoe track was discernible.
Slow and steady wins the day.
Where's the trail?
Are we there yet?
Site of a future short relocation of the trail.
On the last quarter-mile climb to the sharp left turn at 1.6 miles, the wind had packed the slope into a slanted sidehill. Here the snow varied from soft and deep to hard crust.
First glimpse up to Mt. Lincoln.
And Little Haystack.
The hardest breaking of the day was on the steep pitch leading up to the left turn.
The narrow traverse above that turn was a rather nasty sidehill.
On the steep ledgy pitch just above the traverse, the wind had scoured out an old buttslide trough, providing a brief hard-packed respite from trail breaking.
Farther up, this ledgy pitch was sheathed in hard crust, offering good grip for my MSRs.
A blaze nearly swallowed by the snowpack.
Deep windpacked snow in the scrub offered great views up to the ridge well before I reached the ledge outlooks.
Though winds on Mt. Washington were gusting over 90 mph at the time I was up here mid-afternoon, the OBP ridge was sheltered from the blasts and the wind here was not bad at all. A good thing, as temperatures were likely in the low single numbers at 3400 ft.
Surf's up!
The classic view of Mts. Lafayette and Lincoln and the two branches of Walker Ravine.
Looking over to the amphitheatre at the head of the Dry Brook Ravine, under Little Haystack. Shining Rock Cliff is on the far right.
A closer look at Lafayette and the north branch of Walker Ravine.
Zoom on Mt. Lincoln and the south branch of Walker Ravine, including the long, narrow slide leading up to "Lincoln's Throat," just to the right of center. All told, a dozen slides on the west side of Franconia Ridge can be seen from these viewpoints.
Heading up the ridge to two more outlooks.
A backlit view of the Kinsmans across the notch.