Sunday, October 16, 2022

Dix Mountain, October 11, 2022, Eastern High Peaks, Adirondack Park

View of Noonmark, Round Mountain and Giant from Dix Mountain Summit

I always overpack when hiking solo in the Adirondack High Peaks. Even on the heavily-trafficked trails, I still want to have enough gear to spend a night in the woods in the event of some wilderness calamity. Usually, I'll also bring along a summit bag and find a higher-elevation spot to stow the heavy pack before tackling any final, super steep sections. Per usual, I took a full pack with me on a recent hike to Dix Mountain. The trail via Round Pond, however, just didn't really offer a naturally-convenient place to stow my pack so I wound up lugging all of my gear the full distance up to the summit. Oh well, that just meant a slower pace and a bigger-than-expected workout. No worries.

Round Pond

I was fortunate to get the last of the handful of parking spots available at the Round Pond lot. Since I was already getting a later start, I was particularly happy since snagging a spot here meant that I could take the Round Pond route as opposed to my backup plan - hiking in from the AMR, which adds another 400 feet of total elevation gain. I was on the trail with a headlamp at 6:30 a.m. and followed the trail up and around the east shoulder of Round Mountain, arriving at the shore of Round Pond at first light. There, I was treated to a great seasonal view of the vibrant autumn leaves and the moon reflecting in the gleaming waters. From the pond, the trail again gains elevation - consistently but at a gradual, easier grade - until the turn off to the Old Dix Trail that leads up from the AMR. This is also the junction for the trail to Noonmark.

Icy Slide on Dix Mountain Trail

The next 3+ mile section is one of long, easy miles with no elevation gain leading all the way to the crossing of the north fork of the Boquet River. After the crossing, the trail again gains elevation - again fairly gradually - until it emerges from the forest at the base of a huge slide. I took a long break on the slide, admiring the direct view to the craggy peak of Noonmark and across the valley to Giant. It turned out to be a good spot for a break because it is here that the real climbing begins, first up the slide itself and then into the woods and up an unrelenting, very steep section. I was glad that it had not rained recently because this is the kind of ADK trail that turns into a waterfall-filled stream. It was on my slow slog up this section that I got passed by another hiker. I'll chalk that up to the fact that he was carrying nothing more than a tiny daypack and half-full 12 ounce bottle of water. 

Entering the Alpine Zone on Dix

The steep climb finally eased up not far from the summit where the trail from Elk Lake connects and the alpine zone begins. From here, the trail to Dix climbs much more gradually until it reaches the rocky summit ridge and its wide, sweeping views in all directions. I found the bolt that signifies the true summit and took a long break there in order to take in the fantastic views. Looking east, one can observe the full distance covered on the day with the Round Mountain starting point appearing far off in the distance between Noonmark and Giant. The clear, full-sun conditions, light winds, colder temperatures, beautiful fall colors and sweeping views made for a great day hike. Even better, I only encountered five people during the entire eight and a half hours of trail time. Gotta love weekday hiking in the Fall. 

Peak: Dix Mountain
Elevation: 4,857 feet (Gain: 3,569 feet)
Distance: 15 miles roundtrip
Route: Out and Back: Dix Trail via Round Pond
Conditions: Sunny, 40 degrees F

Saturday, October 15, 2022

Lost Pond, October 14, 2022, Hurricane Mountain Wilderness, Adirondack Park

Lost Pond

It's always nice to revisit the Hurricane Mountain Wilderness. After all, Hurricane Mountain proper was one of our first hikes in the Adirondacks. But since the summit gets so much traffic, I much prefer some of the other trails in the area, especially the trail to Lost Pond. We first visited Lost Pond back in 2019. As we remembered it, the hike to Lost Pond was a pleasant, not too difficult uphill hike to a secluded pond with a large rocky beach on which we took a long, comfortable lunch break, skipped stones, and admired the pleasant scenery on the opposite shore. With that memory in mind, we decided to use one of our last days on a recent ADK trip to visit Lost Pond once again.

The most difficult thing about the Lost Pond hike is the parking. To get to the trailhead, you have to wind your way up a very narrow road with blind curves and washout gullies on either side which leave just enough room for one vehicle. Meeting an oncoming car, therefore, is an absolute disaster. But if you make it there, the reward is a very pleasant trail. The first mile, fully on the level, leads to a hillside lean-to and the turn off for one of the trails to Hurricane Mountain summit. It seems that most people on this trail are heading to Hurricane, so after the junction it becomes pretty quiet and lightly-trafficked. The second mile is a long, steady climb via switchbacks through a pleasant forest with the sounds of a nearby brook pretty much the whole way.

Upon reaching the pond, we turned to one another with matching looks of confusion. We both had remembered a wide open, rocky beach but no such topographical feature even remotely existed. There was no shoreline at all, the water of the pond actually pushing its way well into the woods. Thinking that our fondly-remembered destination must be farther along the trail, we continued along the path around the western shore of the pond. By the time we reached the Biesemeyer Memorial lean-to, we still had not found what we were looking for and decided to backtrack to that first point where the trail meets the pond. Returning to that spot, we scrutinized the landscape more closely and realized what had happened. There were noticeable signs of heavy beaver activity on the eastern edge of the pond at the outlet point. Indeed, beavers had decided to build a dam there, seemingly enlarging the pond and completely flooding the rocky beach that had served as our special lunch spot several years prior.

Laughing off our mistake, we found a fallen log and used that as seating for a long, much-needed lunch break and then took a bunch of photos of the pond and the beaver constructions. On the return hike, K's phone started acting funny by suddenly showing the wrong date and time. We didn't pay it too much mind until later when we realized that all of the photos that she took of the pond were completely gone, as if she never took them and/or we were never even there.

Further, when we checked our 2019 photos from the first trip to Lost Pond, they didn't show a rocky beach at all.

Worm Hole? Close Encounter? Brain Fart? Whatever. There's something strange about Lost Pond.

Destination: Lost Pond
Elevation: 2,840 feet (Gain: 650 feet)
Distance: 4.2 miles roundtrip
Route: Out and Back, Hurricane Mountain Trail to Lost Pond/Weston Mountain Trail
Conditions: Partly Sunny, 40 degrees F