Crockers and Redington Hike Cancelled

Unfortunately, due to trail conditions and the weather, we are going to have to cancel this hike which was originally planned for April 17th.  The road conditions getting to the trailhead are VERY poor at this time and due to the freeze thaw cycle, we would like to keep the impact on the subalpine vegetation common in the area to a minimum.

Our full roster of hikes for the spring, summer and fall should be posted shortly – this hike will be among them!  In the meantime, head out on the A.T. this weekend with AMC for in the same area.

A.T. Hike near Oberton Stream

The Appalachian Mountain Club will be having a hike of about two miles in the Orbeton Stream area of the A.T.  Here’s the info:

AT Hike near Oberton Stream

Date: Sunday, April 17

Low elevation hike (all under 2,300′ so low snow risk) with great scenery on a remote section of the Appalachian Trail (A.T.). This two mile section of the A.T. is truly a “Walk in the Woods” crossing the Redington Public Reserve Land Unit and the US Navy SERE property, through mixed hardwoods, spruce/fir to old cedars. The Sluice brook waterfall should have plenty of water flow. Orbeton canyon and lumbering history are other highlights of this hike. The easy terrain and relatively short hiking distance make this walk a good start of the season hike for experienced hikers as well as beginners. Elevation gain of about 750′ but with easy grades. If you are looking to find an easy section of the A.T. in Maine, there are not many – but this is one. Due to vehicle logistics, this is a difficult hike to accomplish on your own. We will carpool and spot cars to avoid an up-and-back hike. Group is limited to 15. People with high-clearance vehicles (i.e. Subaru Outback – 4WD not needed) will have a priority.

HikingActivity Categories: Hiking
Location: AT near Oberton Stream
Region: Maine, Western
Leader: Peter Roderick 207-293-2704 (before 9pm)
Co-Leader: Tony Barrett 207-833-0939 (Before 9PM)
Registrar: Tony Barrett 207-833-0939 (Before 9PM)
Trip Difficulty: Moderate

This is an excellent alternative to our Crockers – Redington hike on the same day!

Crockers and Redington Hike

The next Maine A.T. Land Trust hike will be on Sunday, April 17th.  The destination will  be the Crockers and Mount Redington from Caribou Valley Road.  The route we will take will follow the Appalachian Trail from CVR to South Crocker, then (North) Crocker, and then back over South Crocker to the herd path over to Mount Redington.  From there, we can either back track or take another herd path from Redington down to CVR.

This is will be a very strenuous hike and the itinerary will depend on trail conditions.  You must be in good physical shape and have experience hiking 4,000-foot mountains in New England.  We have had an early spring this year but many areas on the A.T. in Maine have continued to receive snowfall in the past few weeks (there are reports of this area receiving five inches of snow last night).  Traction aids like microspikes will probably be necessary.  Please monitor our website and social media for updates.  There is a greater than normal chance that this hike may be postponed or the route will be altered.

You must RSVP for this hike by emailing us at info@matlt.org or by calling 207-808-2073.  Once we have a list of attendees (no more than 8) we will distribute information about meeting up, ridesharing, etc.

For those of you looking for a less strenuous hike, please see this post about a moderate hike taking place in the same area on the same day!

Old Speck Trip Report

View of the summit from the Eyebrow.
View of the summit from the Eyebrow.

On a recent Saturday, the land trust spent the day in Grafton Notch State Park as part of our Maine Hikes guided Appalachian Trail hike program.  The A.T. follows the Mahoosuc Range from the New Hampshire border for approximately twenty miles before crossing the Baldpates and heading north to Bemis Mountain and beyond.

The view west into Mahoosuc Notch and the Presidential Range.
The view west into Mahoosuc Notch and the Presidential Range.

We had a group of ten set out on the A.T. – destination, Old Speck, the fifth highest mountain in Maine and the highest until the A.T. reaches Crocker Mountain.  It was a beautiful, clear day (as you can see from the photos) and the conditions were manageable.  Kimberley had hiked up Old Speck just a week before and she said that snowshoes weren’t needed, so everybody in the group of ten (and two dogs) slipped on their traction aids and we headed up at 8:30am.

Negotiating the icy trail.
Negotiating the icy trail.

Traction aids were definitely needed!  While the ground was bare at lower elevations, once we entered the woods there was ice on the trail.  Above about 2,500 feet, there was 1 to 2 feet of snow in the woods and there were long stretches of trail that were covered in frozen meltwater.  Fortunately, everybody helped out and the dogs were either carried or they went through the deep snow in the woods.  The sun was out and the winds were generally light, and everybody was hungry by the time we reached the summit at 1pm.  We spent about half an hour on top and a few people headed up the fire tower.

The group as seen from the fire tower.
The group as seen from the fire tower.

Three or four additional groups were there at the same time.  The conditions were so nice that one group unpacked a camp stove and made grilled cheese sandwiches!  Temperatures were in the 40’s and winds remained light.  Another guy set up a hammock between a tree and the fire tower leg.  Our group hit the trail at 1:30pm.

The ice was a bit more difficult going down but we took our time and helped each other out.  We made up time by descending quickly, as the temperatures were in the 50’s at lower elevations and much of the snow and ice on the trail had softened significantly.  Back at the cars at 4:30pm.  A great hike with even greater company!

Photo courtesy of Deb Carroll, who I didn't ask to use this photo but she won't mind...
Photo courtesy of Deb Carroll, who I didn’t ask to use this photo but she won’t mind…

 

 

Old Speck!

Summit of Old Speck..way up there.
Summit of Old Speck..way up there.

The land trust has decided on our next hike…Old Speck in Grafton Notch.  This challenging yet awesome hike will run via the Appalachian Trail for a total roundtrip hike of 7.6 miles.  The summit elevation is 4,170 feet – the fifth highest summit in Maine and the highest in the Mahoosucs/Grafton Notch area.  Despite the warm winter and foretasted warm conditions for next week, we are expecting deep snow at higher elevations and icy spots throughout – snowshoes and traction aids for the ice are a necessity.

The date of the hike will be Saturday, March 12th at 8am.  We will meet in the Grafton Notch parking lot on the west side of Route 26 where the A.T. crosses the road.  You must RSVP for this hike by emailing us at info@matlt.org, calling 207-808-2073, or by RSVPing to the Facebook event listing.

Here are some additional resources:

Maine Trail Finder

Grafton Notch State Park Map

Get in touch and come along!

LMF Board Approves Maine A.T. Land Trust as Co-Easement Holder

File photo of a Land For Maine's Future Board Meeting.
File photo of a Land For Maine’s Future Board Meeting.

At the most recent LMF board meeting, the members voted unanimously to approve the Redington Forest project structure that has been in place for the past year:  the U.S. Navy / Department of Defense will co-hold the easement with the Maine Appalachian Trail Land Trust, who will have stewardship responsibilities.

With this approval from the LMF board, we have surmounted a major hurdle on the road to getting the Redington Forest property conserved.  It is a little like taking a certification test – while there was never any doubt that LMF would approve, it is still something the land trust had to prepare for and be involved in to ensure that there were no issues.  We are glad to be able to proceed with the project and get it closed in the next half-year or so.  As we move towards the summer, we will have further updates on Redington.

Caribou Mountain Trip Report

Heading out.
Typical trailhead preparations. One would think that this was a normal group of hikers.
…what are these strange forms of communication.
What TV show?
It was actually warmer on the ground in the snow.
Perfectly symmetrical snow angel.
Some people express joy at getting down the mountain in different ways.

By Deborah Carroll

In spite of warnings from friends and family regarding forecasted cold temperatures, a decision was made to move forward with our hike up Caribou Mountain the day prior to our trip.  The understanding however, was that if the weather did in fact prove to be too cold, even a mile into hike, the group would turn back.

Dressed in multiple layers of our favorite hiking duds, our happy herd of hearty hikers met at the trailhead at 9:00 in the morning on Saturday, February 13.  Though the temperatures were indeed hovering in single digits, the sun was shining, spirits were high, and we were all well equipped for a day of wandering in snowy woods.

Given the lack of significant snowfall, decisions were made to leave the snowshoes in the car and make the trek using just microspikes.  A decision that, except for a few very short sections where blowing snow had filled in previously shallow or packed areas of the trail, proved good.

Unlike a previous hike, we were able to park at the gate located about a half mile up the road past Pooh Corner Farm.  Our hike began with a relatively flat and short walk along a forest service road before the trail veered to the right and into a forest of mixed evergreen and birch, and our group fell quickly into a really nice pace.

After a mile or so of multiple, mostly frozen, stream crossings, and a few brief pauses to layer down, we began a mostly gradual ascent which took us to the “Caribou Speckled Mtn. Wilderness, WMNF” sign and, a little further on, to a trail junction in the Caribou-Gammon col where the trail turns sharply left and the final push to the summit begins.

Though the temperatures continued to hover in single digits, as per the thermometer dangling from one pack, the sun and lack of wind (combined with exertion and being well prepared) made for warm wanderings.  Still, we paused a few hundred yards from the summit to put on warmer layers.

As one member of our party put it: “Walking onto the summit was like getting sand blasted with tiny ice particles.”  Though we didn’t check the thermometer, the temperature at the summit dropped drastically and the gusts of winds whipped us about.  Needless to say, after snapping a few quick group selfies that left us with frigid fingers and USGS marker group boot photos (a tradition with members of this group) we headed back down to the quiet stillness of the col to eat our lunch, make snow angels, and do a headstand (another tradition).

After the wildly windy and super chilled summit, the walk out of the woods felt positively balmy and, as we did on the way up, we stopped a few times to admire ice flows and vistas, chat, and play at pretzel tree.

No trip up the north side of Caribou would be complete without a post-hike visit to Carol in her flower and gift shop at Pooh Corner Farm, and so we did before saying goodbye to the old and new friends who had shared a cold, snowy, and memorable “Great Maine Outdoor Weekend” adventure.

Great Maine Outdoor Weekend Caribou Mountain Snowshoe Hike

The view from Caribou.
The view from Caribou.

Our next hike will be for the Great Maine Outdoor Weekend on Saturday, February 13th at 9am.  We will be heading up Caribou Mountain in the White Mountain National Forest.  While the mountain is not directly on the Appalachian Trail it is on Forest Service land (like much of the A.T. landscape to the south) and there are great views of areas where the trail passes to the west and north.  Plus it is one of our favorite snowshoe trips!

General directions to the trailhead can be found here, on the White Mountain National Forest website, and here’s the link to the map.  We will be taking the Caribou Trail from the east trailhead, which is 2.8 miles down Bog Road off Route 2 in West Bethel.  Many guidebooks only describe this trail from the Route 113 side in Evans Notch, so be careful!  The hike is relatively moderate for most of its length and the distance to the summit is 3.1 miles.  We will meet in front of Pooh Corner Farm where a few parking spaces have been plowed.  There will be an update on trail conditions later this week, but as of yesterday some kind of traction aid like stabilicers or microspikes seemed to be best for getting to the top.

Feel free to contact us at info@matlt.org or 207-808-2073 if you have any questions.  You must RSVP for this hike!  When entering a Forest Service wilderness area, the limit per group is ten people.

Here is the full listing:  Great Maine Outdoor Weekend Caribou Mountain Snowshoe Trip

Conservation Champion Bob Cummings Passes Away

Bob Cummings at the end of his 1993 Appalachian Trail thru-hike.

If you have seen the Press Herald article about Bob Cummings, a founding director of the Maine Appalachian Trail Land Trust, you might have read it and thought, “wow, I can’t believe the life this guy had, how did he do all of this?”.  Most people know Bob, who passed away on Saturday, from his 1972 report on what are today known as Maine Public Reserved Lands, which led to two Pulitzer Prize nominations.  Bob’s obituary (which he wrote himself) provides even more in the way of fascinating detail – from his report on tidal dams in Nova Scotia, to the development of a tax assessment system for Phippsburg, to his championing of environmental regulations at a time when other reporters wouldn’t touch those issues with a ten-foot pole.

Undeterred by the weather on a hike in recent years.
Undeterred by the weather on a hike in recent years.

Even the litany of awards and citations from environmental and press organizations – enough for roughly ten people – do not capture the full depth of what Bob’s accomplishments as a journalist and environmental mean to the State of Maine.  The public reserved lands do not consist solely of the Bigelow and Mahoosuc preserves – if you look at this map you can see the full scale of what began with Bob’s articles in 1972.  Every speck of dark green on the map – including the ones that are not labelled because there are too many to give names to all of them – has been created for the public.  Open your Maine Atlas and Gazetteer to almost any page and you will find a piece of land labelled “MPRL” which stands for – you guessed it – Maine Public Reserved Land.

Bob retired in the early 1990’s but remained active in Phippsburg politics and with state conservation organizations.  He continued to serve as president of the Phippsburg Land Trust (which he helped to found in 1974) and helped to found this land trust in 2002.  Along the way he hiked the entire Appalachian Trail, which led to his involvement with Appalachian Mountain Club and the Maine Appalachian Trail Club.  He was maintainer for the White Brook Trail on White Cap Mountain for twenty-five years – a notoriously rough and remote trail.  This was in keeping with Bob’s lifelong enthusiasm for getting out on the lands he championed.  Mention of Bob Cummings in any professional or social setting often led to somebody retelling stories of trips taken with him and the narrow misses that ensued.

His dedication in later years to the protection of the Appalachian Trail landscape was unmatched and his vision of the trail will resonate for years to come.  Bob will be sorely missed for his principled support of Maine’s natural environment, his thoughtful insights, and his sense of humor.  His legacy will live on for years to come.

We will have a more extensive report on Bob’s life in the Winter 2016 newsletter, which will be out in February.

 

 

 

 

 

Maine A.T. Land Trust Receives Grant from Maine Community Foundation

IMG_20150625_135128479
Stewardship work in Redington Forest.

The Maine Appalachian Trail Land Trust has received a grant of $5,700 from the Fund for Maine Land Conservation of the Maine Community Foundation for property planning, baseline documentation, stewardship training for volunteers, and stakeholder outreach for two projects along the Appalachian Trail in Maine.

“Stewardship is one of the most important land trust needs, but it’s often the most difficult to fund,” said Simon Rucker, Maine A.T. Land Trust Executive Director.  “Good land trust practices start and end with stewardship of the lands we have been entrusted to care for.  This grant will ensure that we will be able to take care of these properties for public use for years to come.”

Volunteer Easement Monitor Mike Morrone on Mount Abraham.
Volunteer Easement Monitor Mike Morrone on Mount Abraham.

With offices in Ellsworth and Portland, the Maine Community Foundation works with donors and other partners to improve the quality of life for all Maine people.  To learn more about the foundation, visit www.mainecf.org.