MtnMagic
New member
Dates Hiked:
Oct 22 & 23, 2006.
Oct 22 & 23, 2006.
Trails Hiked:
Dry River
Dry River
Total Distance:
12.6 miles
12.6 miles
Difficulty:
Not so difficult with a fully loaded back pack
Not so difficult with a fully loaded back pack
Conditions:
Friday was the perfect day. Saturday was sprinkles with low clouds.
Friday was the perfect day. Saturday was sprinkles with low clouds.
Special Required Equipment:
Brushetta w/3 kinds of delicious sliced olives, wheat pasta, roasted red peppers, soyballs, lotsa garlic, & plenty of extra virgin olive oil. Plus the usual overnight gear.
Brushetta w/3 kinds of delicious sliced olives, wheat pasta, roasted red peppers, soyballs, lotsa garlic, & plenty of extra virgin olive oil. Plus the usual overnight gear.
Trip Report:
The goal was 3 days hiking in the wilderness culminating with Rockgoddess finishing # 48 on Isolation on her 48th birthday. What an interesting weekend in the Dry River Wilderness with RockGoddess, Claudia, Maddy, Matisse, Stanley, and Ghostdog. A 10:30 meet time at Davis Path, Friday morning had come and gone. At 12:30, I ate a great Subway sub originally packed for the trip. Shortly after a vehicle arrives with ladies waving. Who is this? Why it is Rockgoddess et al! The auto dealership delayed an early appointment and even a simple inspection. Rockgoddess forgot her tent and had to return home for it. Just a common snafu on a beautiful, sunny Friday afternoon.
The goal was 3 days hiking in the wilderness culminating with Rockgoddess finishing # 48 on Isolation on her 48th birthday. What an interesting weekend in the Dry River Wilderness with RockGoddess, Claudia, Maddy, Matisse, Stanley, and Ghostdog. A 10:30 meet time at Davis Path, Friday morning had come and gone. At 12:30, I ate a great Subway sub originally packed for the trip. Shortly after a vehicle arrives with ladies waving. Who is this? Why it is Rockgoddess et al! The auto dealership delayed an early appointment and even a simple inspection. Rockgoddess forgot her tent and had to return home for it. Just a common snafu on a beautiful, sunny Friday afternoon.
We hugged, a fine way to meet each other, then discussed the most important point, the weather forecast. I checked the WCAX forecast out of Burlington Vermont, the Mount Washington Observatory higher elevation weather forecast, and 3 of the other internet sites which all concluded Sunday's forecast to be: "Summits mainly in the clouds with showers and t-storms likely. Highs: 40's. Temps falling into the 30s°F. Wind: Increasing to 50 to 70 from the NW with higher gusts. Tonight: Summits mainly in the clouds, some clearing towards morning. Lows: Around 30°F. Wind: NW 50 to 70 mph, decreasing late."
T-storms predicted on an open ledge summit and about 3 miles on the open Montalban Ridge did not appeal to us, so we decided to change our plans to fit the weather. At 2:05 we hit the Dry River Trail. I started tracking our journey that my hiking and mapping job dictates utilizing the new Motorola i860. A few simple button strokes and we start to leave 'bread crumbs.' Our shortened two day adventure begins. We reached the 'boarded closed' suspension bridge and decided to rock hop across.
After I crossed, I removed my backpack and re-crossed to help Claudia, who had difficulty. I donned her pack, and started re-crossing, slipped on a wet rock, and ever so slowly fell into the river. The current is very strong and the water is very cold. I almost broke my wrist and may have fractured it. We continued on until about an hour before sunset and found the perfect level spot to camp for the night down by the river. Saturday, we agreed the journey was so much more important than the destination. RockGoddess & I hiked to visit the Dry River Falls and Shelter #3. We returned, broke camp, and headed out. With the mountains socked in, we decided to not summit Isolation. It will be there patiently waiting. And so will the spectacular views seen on Montalban Ridge!