Had been thinking about heading up to Tripyramid's Scaur Ridge, but with
nearly a foot of new snow that wasn't going to happen...until that
evening when Rick Simmons posted a report on the New England Trail
Conditions site that his group of four had taken that route to the
Tripyramids the day after the storm. A big thanks to the group for
breaking out that long route above the groomed part of Livermore Trail.
I
expected the Livermore Trail would be swarming with XC skiers after
fresh snow during vacation week...and was amazed when I arrived at 9:00
am to a completely empty parking lot. The first 2.2 miles of Livermore
were beautifully groomed. Snowshoes are mandatory here - they barely
dent the snow, but bare boots leave lines of divots that hinder and
frustrate skating XC skiers. Also, note that per the USFS, during ski season dogs are not
allowed on Livermore Trail beyond the Greeley Ponds Trail junction.
Per
the NETC report, on Livermore Trail beyond the groomed section the
trail-breaking group had both skiers and snowshoers. The snowshoe track
was softly packed and unconsolidated.
Snowpack at 2000 feet.
Livermore winds its way up through expansive hardwood forest.
The clearing at Avalanche Camp, used by Parker-Young Co. loggers in the 1930s and 1940s.
This mellow trail high in the mountains is a longtime favorite of mine. It is well-maintained by volunteer adopter Dennis Follensbee, Jr.
Entering the Sandwich Range Wilderness with North Tripyramid looming ahead.
For nearly a mile the trail follows a straight old logging road contouring the slope on the north side of Avalanche Ravine.
This
LIDAR hillshade image from the NH Stone Wall Mapper on the NH Granit
website reveals the series of logging roads striping the slope, probably
dating back to 1940s Parker-Young Co. cuttings. The Scaur Ridge Trail,
which was opened in the mid-1950s, follows the prominent road about 1/3
of the way up the slope.
In winter, with the leaves down, Tripyramid's North Slide is a constant companion as the trail angles up through hardwoods in its lower half.
Snowpack at 3000 ft.
Climbing to the top of the Scaur Ridge.
The Scaur Ridge Trail sign was under the snow, with the Pine Bend Brook Trail sign still poking up.
Pine Bend Brook Trail below the junction, waiting to be broken out.
North of the junction I passed through the portal leading to a winter glade of wonder. I snowshoed right over the hobblebush that gates this place in summer.
The trees here have a special quality.
In this snowfield you wander through a fantasyland of frosted softwoods.
Cold beauty.
Widely spaced.
Snowpack here was nearly four feet deep.
The flat-topped Fool Killer glimpsed to the east.
Tracks and trees.
And there are views here, too..though fuzzy today due to wind fog clinging to the peaks.
Completing a circuit around the glade.
Fresh moose sign along Pine Bend Brook Trail.
A favorite section where the trail traverses the narrow spine between Scaur Peak and North Tripyramid.
My next objective was a remnant open slide patch at the head of Avalanche Ravine, also known as the Ravine of Avalanches. When the huge North Slide fell during a great rainstorm in August 1885, several additional slides came crashing down farther up the ravine. I was heading for the top of the one that almost reaches the ridgeline in this photo taken in 1910 by Edward H. Lorenz. (Courtesy of WVAIA and Waterville historian Preston Conklin)
The woods were mostly open on the bushwhack to the slide patch...
...and the snow was deep and unconsolidated.
I had whacked up this old slide a couple of summers ago, and knew there were some good views. All I could see upon arrival today was nearby Scaur Peak.
I layered up and waited a while, hoping for some clearing, and eventually Hancock and Carrigain made a veiled appearance.
I dropped down for a view of the Osceolas behind a phalanx of tapered spruces.
The filtered sun highlighted the gaping gouge of the Painted Cliff.
I opted not to continue up the steep cone to the summit of North Tripyramid. Being alone on the mountain, mid-afternoon on a cold day, with a subzero night on the way, I was wary of the steep sliding descent. Instead, I returned to the glade, where the views had cleared somewhat, though the Presidentials remained smothered in a bitter fog.
Potash Mountain's ledgy knob, with northern spurs of Chocorua and Maine's Pleasant Mountain beyond.
Huddling together for warmth?
Sunshine brightened the descent of Scaur Ridge Trail.
Looking down a picturesque drainage crossed by the trail.
I like this spot showing both the North Slide and the gorgeous hardwoods down on the valley floor.
Top of the North Slide.
Shadows in the hardwoods.
Late afternoon on Livermore Trail. The mountains were not crowded today - in eleven miles I saw not one other person.
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