Owl's Head-West Bond-North Twin

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Neil

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A gang of Québecois hikers bagged forty-five 4000 footers on Saturday and raised $3000 for Leukemia research. Cory and I were responsible for Owl’s Head and West Bond.

Preamble :

Right off the bat at 5:00am I hit a moose while looking for Haystack Rd. All the little roads running off of Rte 3 are signed except this one so while I was cruising along slowly a moose suddenly loomed into view above my windshield and I hit the breaks so hard it wasn’t funny and the poor moose buckled under my front end. Then he was lying on the road looking me right in the eye and got up and dashed off into the woods. I was pretty much wide awake by that time and continued searching for the stupid road. I found the road and drove to the trailhead to find….no Cory so I drove back to Rte 3 very warily now and sat and waited for him for all of 1 minute. We left my car at the N Twin TH and drive around to Lincoln Woods.

Lincoln Woods to Black Pond was uneventful. Black Pond Bushwhack to Linclon Brook Trail took 30 minutes of pushing. I would have gone around on the trail but Cory convinced me that the whack was a better bet and he was right, there was a lot of water in the brook and we saved a couple of crossings. I had estimated 2:15 to the Owl’s Head cutoff and it took us 2:30 so the day was already shot. I said to Cory that we should turn back right then and there but he told me to straighten my spine.

We made it to the true summit of OH in 50 minutes and as I had estimated 60 we had won back 10 of the 15 lost minutes so I felt OK with continuing on to West Bond. But first we had to drop 2000 feet to Franconia Brook and this was a big unknown to us ADK fish out of water. We headed due east from the summit and were very mindful not to get sucked into the drainage. (Hindsight dictates whacking 100 yards north from Owlie summit before dropping due east. ) The woods were wide open and the footing excellent for the first 2/3 of the drop and then it got rocky and birch-branchy which slowed us down. I had predicted 60 minutes to Hellgate Brook and it took us 75 minutes so once again I recommended we call it a day and hit the bar in Linclon but Cory just gave me a scornful look and booted it into the woods following a 60 degree magnetic bearing.

The lower Hellgate is a curvaceous brook and we avoided an elbow right away by going up and away from it (on the north side) across a big tongue of hill. I had whacked up Redrock Brook in March and I figured Hellgate would be a carbon copy so when the the tongue was behind us and we found ourselves doing some hateful side-hilling across tons of wet birch branches I lobbied hard for a descent to the creek. In spite of the map showing tight contour lines along a drainage there is often a flat and broad bed that offers good travelling conditions and this proved to be the case on Hellgate. Bonus: there was a very solid herd path that offered us firm footing and some fast cruising.

Our initial plan (after abandoning my idea to whack the west ridge of Bondcliff) was to ascend one of the West Bond slides that you see from Bondcliff. (I think those slides are on the cover of the AMC guide-book). However, it rained gently all morning and given that the slides have an 80% slope we activated our fallback plan to go up the slide on the south end of West Bond. We had a map that showed this slide as a pale area on it and I fired up my gps so we could get our elevation. If we turned due north at 2850 feet we would hit the slide dead on. We headed uphill just shy of that elevation and then after climbing up for a while made a hard right hand turn and entered a rubbly drainage which led us directly to our slide.

It was a rubbly slide with a few smooth slabs and the views from it were priceless. The main reason I do off-trail hikes is to get the unique views and perspectives and we definitely got our salt's worth.

When the slide ran out we entered the woods and it was really, really steep and the Red Spruce branches impeded out progress. The gps altimeter served as a psychological crutch telling us we were indeed gaining elevation, although just looking over our shoulders at Bondcliff gave us the same information with a spectacular view to boot.

Cory cut to the left to find an open channel and freaked out to see that after we left the slide it had opened up again and we had missed out on about 300 more vertical feet of slide climbing. Sigh. We gained at least another 200 feet on the upper slide before it ended for good. The whack from there to the south summit was moderately difficult (easy, moderate or difficult) and from the south to the true summit it was OK. From Franconia Brook to West Bond required 3.5 hours whereas I had predicted 3. I did not suggest bailing on the hike because at this juncture, no matter what we did would result in bailing.

From West Bond to South Twin took us 2 hours which was exactly what I had predicted. Cory ran up and tagged Bond while I maintained the hike's forward momentum. He caught me 2/3 of the way up S. Twin. South to North took us 31 minutes and I had predicted 30.

We made it out at 8:30 after crossing the Little River like 4 times. I had predicted we would get out at 9 for a 14-hour day so the trip from N. Twin to the car required 30 minutes less time than I had estimated.

Final note. By shear co-incidence Cory and I both wore Sportiva Raptor trail runners on this hike. We tested them in a wide variety of tough conditions to say the least. My score: 5/5. I'm pretty sure Cory would agree because he headed off for a Galehead to Flume traverse in them this morning.


PICTURES
 
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A gang of Québecois hikers bagged forty-five 4000 footers on Saturday and raised $3000 for Leukemia research. Cory and I were responsible for Owl’s Head and West Bond.

Great pictures of the slide!

Congrats on raising so much money for such a worthy cause. Who were the other hikers/organization? (assuming that wasn't a joke, too :confused:)
 
Nice one Neil!. Good pic of the grouse. Next thing to try is wacking down Jumping Brook on the other side of Bond. That one is better at night.:eek:
 
Great pictures of the slide!

Congrats on raising so much money for such a worthy cause. Who were the other hikers/organization? (assuming that wasn't a joke, too :confused:)

Since I don't want to publicize our forum here, let's say we were members of a french forum (internet forum, such as this one) based in Quebec. We were raising money for LEUCAN. On their website, it says this :

its mission has been to enhance the well-being, healing and recovery of children with cancer and ensure support for their families

By the way if Neil's always serious, he must live in a pretty weird world!
 
Wow! Impressive and creative hike, Neil! Loved the report.
Full credit goes to Cold River Run (Cory) for the idea of adding on the Twins. I would have just gone back to Lincoln Woods over Bond (groan).

Having 2 cars helped. Duh!
 
Since I don't want to publicize our forum here, let's say we were members of a french forum (internet forum, such as this one) based in Quebec. We were raising money for LEUCAN. On their website, it says this :

its mission has been to enhance the well-being, healing and recovery of children with cancer and ensure support for their families

By the way if Neil's always serious, he must live in a pretty weird world!

Ah, a group of highly generous, humble and fit Canadian do-gooders -- Bravo and congrats on your successful day!
 
A hell of a hike and a great cause! Way to go! Beware the black chicken.......

Petch
 
Very nice TR and pics Neil! You always seem to do your hikes with style! As you said Owlie was just going to be your "speed bump" but it sure didn't slow you guys down much! Kudos on the great cause as well!:D

May be interesting to consider a Pemi Traverse East to West or vice versa using a Fanconia Ridge route. I can tell you the Liberty whack I did would not be a bad climb if you were heading West!;)
 
I'm just happy to be alive after the black chicken fly-by. I was jogging along trying to catch back up with Neil and it flew across the trail grazing my chest. If I had been drinking out of a puddle I could of had my eyes pecked out! Luckily I think Neil blinded it with the flash from his camera long enough for me to make a narrow escape. Does bear spray work on chickens?
 
That was no chicken.

This is a chicken:

Order: Galliformes
Family: Phasianidae
Genus: Gallus
Species: Gallus gallus
Subspecies: Gallus gallus domesticus

It looks like this:

chickencooked5.jpg



This is a Spruce Grouse:

Order: Galliformes
Family: Tetraonidae
Genus: Falcipennis
Species: F. canadensis

It looks like my avatar.


Not even in the same family.

With a population of more than 24 billion there are more chickens in the world than any other bird.
 
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