An afternoon winter warmup hike - with December-like cold and powder snow - on a mellow trail to unique views of the Waterville Valley backcountry.
Following a logging road on a section of Greeley Ponds Trail that was formerly part of the Timber Camp Trail, before a major relocation due to washouts from Tropical Storm Irene.
Start of the Timber Camp Trail.
After a hairpin turn, a first look at the Painted Cliff of East Osceola.
Looked like winter up here, with 5" of powder snow on the ground.
Inviting corridor.
The trail runs along the base of this high, open gravel bank. A short climb up rewards with excellent views.
From the gravel bank you can spot both the K1 Cliff (R) and K2 Cliff (L) on the west slope of Mt. Kancamagus. In the early 1900s both of these cliffs were reached by trails built by Waterville Valley hikers, but those paths have been abandoned for many decades.
Zoom on the K1 Cliff. There's an unusual high-elevation flume towards its N (L) end.
From the gravel bank you look up at East Osceola's Painted Cliff, named by Waterville hiker,
trail-builder and historian Nathaniel Goodrich for its curiously-colored
rock. According to Goodrich in his 1952 book, The Waterville Valley, in the late 1930s his brother Hubert and friends blazed a "Nature Trail" up towards these
cliffs and back down to the Mad River. But the path
was soon obliterated by the 1938 hurricane. In the 1990s two friends and I
snowshoe-whacked up to the talus slope at the base of the cliff. The
closeup of the cliff was impressive, and the view out to the E was
wild and expansive. The whack was very thick in places and along the way we passed through some scary terrain with huge boulders and deep holes.
The prize vista from the gravel bank looks across wild backcountry to Scaur Peak, Flume Peak and
Mt. Tripyramid.
One of the best angles on Tripyramid.
North Tripyramid and the upper reach of the North Slide.
From the gravel bank the trail continues another 0.3 mile to "High Camp," a logging camp used in the 1960s when there was a 185-acre logging cut here in the valley of Greeley Brook. The floor and south side of this valley are laced with old logging roads from that operation. Two documents
found online note that this valley did hold old-growth spruce, but the
1960s logged areas now support a scrubby growth of young birch and
conifer.
Hi Steve
ReplyDeleteNice photos as always. How did K1 and K2 get these names? Certainly not from some lost Karakorum surveyor!
Cheers,
Mike Dorais
Hi Mike,
DeleteI believe it was simply "K" for "Kancamagus." Check out this post showing a high-elevation flume on the K1 Cliff:
http://mountainwandering.blogspot.com/2018/08/sw-ridge-mount-kancamagus-81618.html
Steve
Thanks Steve. I miss the Whites!
ReplyDeleteI've always wanted to do that hike. Thanks Buddy.
ReplyDelete