Bonds trip from hell, March 12, Winter peaks 46 & 47

vftt.org

Help Support vftt.org:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Lawn Sale

New member
Joined
Jun 14, 2005
Messages
899
Reaction score
97
Location
Nobleboro, Maine Avatar: Even my shadow hikes!
I’m not going to write about Jackson, my 48th peak, because it was uneventful. Instead I’ll write about the day prior, March 12, 2010, when I hiked solo to get Bond and West Bond.

I left home in midcoast Maine at 3:15 in the morning, the drive out was uneventful and I arrived at 7:15, this is when things started to go wrong. I realized I left my hiking clothes on the kitchen table, but luckily I keep spare shirt in my pack, so I changed and was boots to trail at 7:30, but with no spare dry clothing. I met up with Fran Maineri in the parking lot, and walked with him until the Black Pond cutoff since he was hiking Owl’s Head. I brought my pulk thinking I could make some time on the Wilderness Trail by hauling the pack on it, and I was right, until it snapped it almost in half on a stream crossing.

I abandoned the sled, donned the pack and hit the trail once again. I wore my trail runners, but the Hillsound Trampons didn’t like to stay in one place, so I was always adjusting them, and I also wore some new EMS gaiters because my OR Crocs are just worn out. They didn’t like to stay up on my calves, so I was hiking them up like a pair of socks with no elastic for most of the day. Adjust-adjust-adjust, fun-fun (not). The trail soon split and I took the better defined left track, only to find out it was a bushwack, where the snow became very deep (5-6 feet) and my GTX shoes were soon soaked, but at least my feet were warm from the exertion. I donned my snowshoes and soon arrived on the main trail, only to find severe blowdowns, and while the trail was packed and solid, weaving and ducking around them made for slow going. I was doing fine until about a ½ mile from the Bondcliff summit, where a stick poked me in the eye. I covered my eye immediately with my hand and noticed blood when I drew it back, and it hurt to open it. It made me nervous since I had no cell signal, was 9 miles into the woods, and there was no one else around.

I wiped the blood away and couldn’t see anything except light out of my eye, but it didn’t feel like there was any debris lodged and soon it was tearing profusely. Not having a mirror handy (there is a tiny one in my first aid kit, but too small to look from one eye into the other), I put my digital camera on macro mode and took a picture of my eye, then blew it up on the screen. It felt worse than it looked, so I had a power bar and water, then rested to decide what to do. In a few minutes I decided to head to Bondcliff and reassess the situation. Once there, I decided I could do the 1.2 miles to Bond, where I knew from FOT48 I could get a cell signal. My vision was improving greatly by then, so I posted online what had happened and continued to West Bond, not wanting to have to wait another year to finish the list since I was within a mile and so close. At the trail junction I met 3 other people grabbing West Bond from Zealand, so we chatted a bit and I was relieved just to meet up with anyone. By now my vision was completely back but my eye still watering greatly, which I saw as a good sign, so I grabbed West Bond and headed back to Bond. I was amazed at how many friends were willing to come to my aid despite being so far into the woods and them living in various states. It made me realize how great the hiking community is and how appreciative I am for my friends. I changed socks for the return trip and hoofed it back down to Bondcliff since the weather was starting to worsen.

All was going well despite the usual face and arm slapping from the blowdowns, until I broke a snowshoe binding. I hauled out my repair kit, fixed it, and was back on trail in about 5 minutes. At one of the water crossings I decided to go across a snow bridge, which I thought was safe since I saw large rocks underneath. I was wrong, it collapsed and now my feet were soaked. I booked it back to the Wilderness Trail and found the sled remnants, which I cobbled together to travel, and put the pack on it. With the pack tied in place the sled kept rolling over, which was really ticking me off, so I adjusted the poles to pull from different angles and it stopped tipping over. At dusk, which was long after I hoped to be finished, I put on my standard Tikka Plus headlamp. I had taken the never used, freshly charged batteries from the pouch where I keep them and put them in the headlamp before I left. I neglected to realize how fast AAA batteries degrade from just sitting, and in 10 minutes was without a working headlamp. My normal headlamp uses AA batteries, but I wanted to go lighter to shave some weight and thus time. Back into the first aid kit I go, where I dug out my emergency lithiums, and put those in so I had light again. At this point I had a nasty headache, my arms were cut and bruised, my feet and shirt soaked, the sled broken, my eye still watering a little and throbbing, and I was tired. I stepped up my hiking speed a notch, to 4-5 mph, or just shy of a run and by the time I arrived back at the car, 11 hours and 23.2 miles later, I also had blisters on my feet from the wet shoes.

I packed the car, changed socks and shoes, changed into my traveling clothes, and grabbed one of the hard boiled eggs I’d saved for the ride home. Upon cracking and peeling it, I noticed a shimmer in the reflection, so I turned on the interior light to find the egg covered in blood. It turns out a dry crack in my thumb had burst open and was now bleeding profusely. I honestly contemplated not driving home, but luckily the trip home was as uneventful as that morning. It was certainly the hike of hikes for me and one of the worst days I’d had, but the mountains were done and I was glad for it.
 
Wow! Congrats on getting 'em done, but my, those Bonds were quite the bullies to you, weren't they..! :eek:

Glad you're safe, and hope your eye is doing well (along with your thumb and your feet!).
 
I am still covered with scratches from Thursday, but at least the blisters are healing nicely. Congratulations, Mark, on a hard-earned 46 and 47. Most of the peaks this winter were really pretty easy, so at least I feel like I earned 45-48. I did have to wear sunglasses most of the day to protect my eyes. I should have brought the clear lenses for the last bit out in the dark.

Tim
 
Congratulations Lawn Sale. Job well done.
This is one hike you won't soon forget.
 
Last edited:
Wow! Congrats on getting 'em done, but my, those Bonds were quite the bullies to you, weren't they..! :eek:

Glad you're safe, and hope your eye is doing well (along with your thumb and your feet!).

It didn't hurt as much as Alex's 7th birthday on Cannon, when I broke my shoulder on the way down.

Eye apears to be doing well. If there was the slightest complication following the trip I was going to see a doctor, but it has been fine. If anything arises I'll be sure to see a specialist about it. Blisters always heal and the thumb stopped bleeding after I taped it.
 
I was doing fine until about a ½ mile from the Bondcliff summit, where a stick poked me in the eye. I covered my eye immediately with my hand and noticed blood when I drew it back, and it hurt to open it. It made me nervous since I had no cell signal, was 9 miles into the woods, and there was no one else around.

I wiped the blood away and couldn’t see anything except light out of my eye, but it didn’t feel like there was any debris lodged and soon it was tearing profusely. Not having a mirror handy (there is a tiny one in my first aid kit, but too small to look from one eye into the other), I put my digital camera on macro mode and took a picture of my eye, then blew it up on the screen. It felt worse than it looked, so I had a power bar and water, then rested to decide what to do.
This is another use for the mirror on a sighting compass... I have used mine to check a bleeding facial injury.

Sounds like a memorable hike. (Or at least one that you will remember :) .)

Doug
 
A bloody good effort Mark!!!!

I was amazed at how many friends were willing to come to my aid despite being so far into the woods and them living in various states. It made me realize how great the hiking community is and how appreciative I am for my friends
.

Wow Mark. What a bloody good hard won fight!! Fran will be so pumped to read your report! You kept going despite the setbacks along the way. (A good metaphor for life!) Very happy to hear you achieved your goal. We will raise a glass to you and our other hking friends at the C Man on friday night!!
Karen
 
A fine job on continuing on as you did despite one problem after another. As I read your report, I didn't think it could get much worse. You'll savor those 2 peaks for a long time. Congratulations on completing your 48's.

Donna:)
 
I abandoned the sled, donned the pack and hit the trail once again. .......I was doing fine until about a ½ mile from the Bondcliff summit, where a stick poked me in the eye. I covered my eye immediately with my hand and noticed blood when I drew it back, and it hurt to open it. It made me nervous since I had no cell signal, was 9 miles into the woods, and there was no one else around.

I wiped the blood away and couldn’t see anything except light out of my eye, but it didn’t feel like there was any debris lodged and soon it was tearing profusely. Not having a mirror handy (there is a tiny one in my first aid kit, but too small to look from one eye into the other), I put my digital camera on macro mode and took a picture of my eye, then blew it up on the screen. It felt worse than it looked, so I had a power bar and water, then rested to decide what to do.

Great trip report and congrats; you definitely earned those two peaks! I thnk that sleds are way over-rated. Very ingenious on taking the digital photo of your eye. At the beginning of our Huntingtons bushwhack in late January, arm took a digital photo of the paper copy of my 7.5' map, which was far easier to read on his camera screen. :)
 
Mark, You fought the Bonds and................YOU won! Good job! :p
Stu
 
my first thought reading your report was about the things we do or shouldn't do pursuing the peaks we need for our "lists". I say "we" because I've been there as well. Glad you made it through.

ps

enjoyed your presentation to ME AMC group recently, you'll need to work in the need for a mirror from now on;)
 
I got a branch in the eye one time - and the eye doctor told me that a scratch on the eye is one that can never completely heal. There are nights when I wake up suddenly for some reason and my eyes fly open, tearing any sort of "scab" off of the scratch - and it feels almost as bad as the first time I injured it. SO... long story short, I hope this doesn't happen to you, but I'd keep some saline solution handy in case it does.
 
Keith,

It was definitely a learning experience, and I proved once again that no level of experience equates to knowing what the hell you're doing.


hikingmaineac,
I actually punctured my eye once before, on the apple tree out front, only that time it was much worse. Blood soaked down the front of my shirt and I couldn't see at all, hurt to move. I looked like a vampire from a B movie in that one eye. They took out the pieces and flushed it, but there was no apparent permanent damage. I had visions of a repeat performance when it happened, glad it wasn't the same or I really would have been in trouble.
 
Sweet Moses, smell the roses! What an epic hike. Way to battle through and finish. Those darn Maineiac's are hard to keep down ;)

Petch
 
Hey Mark,

CONGRATS on your completion!!

Hope the eye is ok. You may want to check that puppy out anyway. Don't mess with your eyes.
I took one in the eye on the way to Mt. Kanc. & it left a crater like divot in the white area. Ended up ok, but was able to run the symptoms by my brother, an optometrist, so just had to put ointment and it's been fine since.
 
Congratulations!

From Bob & Bobby, who met you near the start of the Bondcliff Trail as you were coming in, and we were heading on out.

I almost got a branch in the ear Thursday when we were climbing Bondcliff. Fortunately I had my hat over my ears, and the branch could only stick in part way. Even so it felt like I was in trouble, until I realized the hat had saved me. I do think the branches were a bit much, as they were on East Peak.

But at least you weren't hurt badly, and could continue the hike. Having split the 23 miles into 3 days of 5/13/5, my hat is off to those of you who do it in one day. I do believe I (Bob) am too old for those trips. I'll leave them for Bobby and you young folks ;-)
 
Top