Never Underestimate a Mountain Named Nancy - 8/17/07

vftt.org

Help Support vftt.org:

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

p2piper

New member
Joined
May 10, 2006
Messages
77
Reaction score
28
Location
Jaffrey, NH
Additional comments by Nancy

Stats: Date: August 17, 2007
Time: 7.5 hours
Weather: Partly Cloudy, low 70's
Miles: 10
Steps: 34,013
Trails: Nancy Pond Brook Trail to herd path to summit and back

Pictures


Nancy and I took a day off so we could squeeze a hike in, weekend time being less available right now. We took off from Keene at 5am and headed north. After passing the Henniker exit we saw a black bear cross the road about 50 yards in front of us. Hard to believe - like a huge black ghost - no one saw it but us. We made our usual pit stops, including buying our favorite Lost Pilgrim sandwich at the Mountain Bean. We arrived at the Nancy Brook trailhead a little after 8am. No cars in the lot. We loaded our gear, let Dejah (Nancy's daughter's 2 and a half year old yellow lab) out of the car, and off we went at 8:17 am.

The first mile or so of the trail was an old logging road, wide enough for the two of us to walk abreast. The cool air and the quality of the late summer light made me so aware of the changing season. I struggle with the change, especially in August and September. By October I've given up and stop fighting the fact that fall is coming, ready or not. The bunch berry leaves were starting to turn brown at the edges. No more spring bird songs. The trail was beautiful, especially after we left the logging road and started to parallel Nancy Brook. The Nancy Cascades was spectacular with the morning light glinting off the upper reaches of the waterfall. Once we passed the cascades, the trail started to get steeper - winding up the ravine next to the Brook until we hit a more level ridge. Shortly afterward we came to a small clearing and saw the east end of Nancy Pond. What a beautiful pond - a bit brackish, but pristine in that there was no sign of human presence. I hoped to see some wildlife, but all we saw was a lone female duck swimming across the pond.


Half a mile later we reached the east end of Norcross Pond, a bit bigger than Nancy Pond, and just as beautiful. At the west end there is a No Camping sign and the summit path is at 4 o'clock behind your shoulder when facing the sign. Walk into a little clearing and take the left fork - we were lucky and had done some research. We would never have known which path to take without reading someone else's trip report. Before heading to the summit we walked to the beaver dam at the end of the pond and found a rocky sluice where the water drained. We sat there and ate our lunch with the most spectacular view of Zealand and the Bonds and the Pemigewasset wilderness laid out before us.

At 11:40 am we started up the herd path to the Nancy summit. Ok, now anyone who says the hundred highest is a wimpy list of mountains has not climbed Nancy. Wow - what a steep, relentless half mile that was. Good stuff though, breathing hard, feeling our calves scream, sweating. When the trail leveled out a bit, I knew I had burned some fat cells. Yes, indeed. We hit the view spot at 12:22 pm, took some pictures, and looked for the yellow canister to no avail. We saw nothing. I was bummed. I had hoped to sign the register, but was not to be. We took a last look and started down the trail at 12:40 pm. Interesting descent with wet roots on the path every inch of the way.

We arrived back at the Nancy Brook Trail at 1:05 pm and spent a very pleasant couple of hours backtracking to the parking lot. I was amazed at how different the trail looked in the afternoon light than it had in the morning light. We arrived back at the trailhead at 4 pm. This is a beautiful hike, with ponds and waterfalls, and views and a steep summit hike thrown in. A perfect day.

The Three Gifts of Nancy

Submitted by Nancy


BEAUTIFUL: The Nancy Cascades were majestic, beautiful, inviting, gorgeous take-your-breath-away water falls. The clear water cascades over a rock ledge 360 feet into a small pool at the bottom. The falls are named for a servant woman who perished trying to reach her fiancé’s camp in the White Mountains one winter. A bit later in the hike we came across Nancy and Norcross Ponds, just what you would picture secluded wilderness ponds to look like – but the peacefulness and quiet of the scene made me pause with its power. Seeing not a ripple in the water calmed me, made me walk slower and appreciate more. And then our lunch spot sitting on warm rocks at the dam looking out at the blue mountains in the distance was idyllic. Checking the map we realized we were looking at the Bonds – the 20-mile-killer-hike we did last summer. I could have sat there all day being amazed and thankful for what lay before me. All this beauty and we had not even reached the summit. Nancy reminded me that the beauty is not just at the top it is also in the journey to get there.


NOT WIMPY: The second gift from Nancy was the steepness of the last half-mile up the mountain which Pat talked about in her report. Just when I think I have seen the steepest of steep, I come across a doozy of a trail that beats my previous definition. Not even an official trail, the herd path to the summit of Nancy now tops my steep list. Wowsers! It was like the Mountain Gods tied a cable to the last half mile of the mountain and pulled straight up with all their might, making the mountaintop skinnier, taller and very steep instead of fatter and more gradual. I’m sure they did it just to remind us that the 100-highest are not, as Pat said, wimpy. Then the Mountain Gods made sure the herd path was lined with trees so we human hikers could use them to pull ourselves up the trail, holding on for dear life, and to brace ourselves, as we skid down the mountain, struggling to stay on our feet and off our butts.

FUN IN THE MOMENT: The final and most precious gift from Nancy was the reminder to follow my heart. When we hiked back down the mountain to the Nancy Cascades, the mountains spirited playground, my inner kid was screaming to get into the little moat at the bottom of the Cascades and put my sweat-soaked head under the falling water. Whooo Hooooo! But I didn’t. I manufactured an excuse inside, saying to myself that it would be crazy and not adult hiker-like, that I would get cold, that Pat wouldn’t want to, that it would waste time. WHAT WAS I THINKING? It was my chance and I let it slip away. What I am sure of is that if I follow my heart I will be really living in that moment. So I pledge to myself that the next time my inner child starts screaming she wants to do something, I will follow my heart and do what she suggests. You will all hear about it – I promise!
 
Nice report, you two! You are making such great progress. <insert thumbs up here>

Nancy, like steep? C'mon over to the Adirondacks....we got steep for ya over here. :D
 
Last edited:
Nice TR. I hiked Nancy for the first time on Friday with a friend and it was wonderful. That spot at the end of Norcross Pond is magical. We probably spent over an hour just hanging there, gawking, talking, eating and playing with the water. Unfortunately, as you saw at the summit, the cannister has been removed (this is a pretty recent development)--cannisters in wildnerness areas seem to be a dying breed. Thanks for sharing.
 
HighHorse said:
...Unfortunately, as you saw at the summit, the cannister has been removed (this is a pretty recent development)--cannisters in wildnerness areas seem to be a dying breed. Thanks for sharing.

There have been about 6 cannisters removed from that area recently, NONE of them were within a Wilderness Area.

That area is very nice though, even without the cannisters.
 
That area is beautiful in all seasons. Did you hear Nancy's ghost? Pat and I heard the story from a passing hiker while sitting at the top of the cascades. It was a dark overcast day, and he told it so well that our neck hairs were prickling. Mt. Nancy has always given us a little extra adventure, especially in May when the switchbacks and the summit cone are solid ice!
 
una_dogger said:
C'mon over to the Adirondacks....we got steep for ya over here.

You've obviously never climbed Mt. Nancy. That herd path is akin to a 0.4 mile long ladder with trees to pull yourself up on, before it finally eases up near the summit. I don't remember any extended portion of any standard route in the ADKs, save for the slides on Gothics, Dix and East Dix, that would rightfully compare. Go climb Mt. Nancy - then you will prefer the ADKs!
 
p2piper said:
FUN IN THE MOMENT: The final and most precious gift from Nancy was the reminder to follow my heart. When we hiked back down the mountain to the Nancy Cascades, the mountains spirited playground, my inner kid was screaming to get into the little moat at the bottom of the Cascades and put my sweat-soaked head under the falling water. Whooo Hooooo! But I didn’t. I manufactured an excuse inside, saying to myself that it would be crazy and not adult hiker-like, that I would get cold, that Pat wouldn’t want to, that it would waste time. WHAT WAS I THINKING? It was my chance and I let it slip away. What I am sure of is that if I follow my heart I will be really living in that moment. So I pledge to myself that the next time my inner child starts screaming she wants to do something, I will follow my heart and do what she suggests. You will all hear about it – I promise!

Yes! Yes! Yes! Most of us need to spend more time listening to that inner child. Not the whining, complaining one though, just the spontaneous, less self conscious, creative one.

I always enjoy your trip reports.
 
Wilderness boundary

NH_Mtn_Hiker said:
There have been about 6 cannisters removed from that area recently, NONE of them were within a Wilderness Area.

That area is very nice though, even without the cannisters.

The Pemigewasset Wilderness boundary runs between Nancy pond and Norcross pond. This puts one side of Nancy within the Pemi-wilderness. As is Pemi-Owls Head. The boundary runs across the summits of Carrigain, Vose Spur, Lowell and Anderson and they are at least partially within the Wilderness. Therefore I respectfully find fault with the above statement. But agree on the beauty of the area.
 
Hillwalker said:
The Pemigewasset Wilderness boundary runs between Nancy pond and Norcross pond. This puts one side of Nancy within the Pemi-wilderness. As is Pemi-Owls Head. The boundary runs across the summits of Carrigain, Vose Spur, Lowell and Anderson and they are at least partially within the Wilderness. Therefore I respectfully find fault with the above statement. But agree on the beauty of the area.
Being ON the boundary is not the same as being WITHIN the boundary.....Besides, I know why the cannisters are being removed. ;) :p
 
The solution to the problem of missing registers is easy to solve, EVERYONE doing register peaks should carry a bottle, paper, pencil, ziplock baggie, and string, just put up a new one. It's always pretty easy to see where the original register was located, just hang a new one right there. There are more of us who want registers than there are of the people taking them down.
 
Top