peakbagger meant the Sentinel Trail from Daicey Ponds was closed due to the Nesowednehunk Stream levels. I'm not sure there was a bridge there recently unless it was a short log bridge over the main channel. It is mostly a lot of stone hopping and perhaps wading at normal levels. The Sentinal Trail from Kidney Pond is a bit shorter and, when it is a wet woods walk, probably appreciated by some.
Double Top was enjoyable, especially that we were able to spot a car at the end of Slaughter Pond Trail. There was a stream crossing near the end that was running above summer normal but, being so close to the end, we cast dry feet to the wind and just walked across the stones as best we could ... as it turned out I don't think any of us got wet feet from that.
We may have gotten wet feet from a few stretches where the trail had taken on drainage like a small stream and from a couple boggy areas around which there were no feasible routes.
I had done this once before when the visibility was about 10 yards. It was a beautiful hike that day, too! This day we had panoramic views for many miles. The total hike was about 8 miles with an elevation gain of nearly 2200 feet. Real scrambles both ways near the peaks and a nice ridge between them.
An extra treat was chatting with Jensen Bissell, park director, at the Doubletop trailhead. He noted that they had spent a lot of time preparing for "hurricane" Irene, cleaning drainages and culverts for example, and that helped minimize erosion. I thought it was interesting that instead of driving around in a classical forest green humongous SUV, he was driving around in, what peakbagger, a Honda Accord?
That pleasant discussion was a follow up to a campfire talk given the night before by Buzz Caverly, the previous park director who had been hired by Helon Taylor, the first park director. Buzz came to know Governor Baxter and his intentions for the park well and told a couple stories, including one related to the fact that Baxter and one of state's US Senators were at odds; Baxter wanted an authority independent of government funding and politics, the senator wanted a national park ... I like Governor Baxter's solution better but his did come with an endowment.
peakbagger and I agree on one complaint, that is, taking the "wildness" a little too far in letting some areas get overgrown, Nesowednehunk Field for example.
While in the Park, Erik and I also enjoyed hiking Trout Brook Mountain loop and The Ledges near South Branch Pond where we stayed one night and canoed the Pond.
... of course, there was a moose on Stump Pond whereas we had seen none elsewhere, most unusual in our experience.
After we left the Park we scouted out Debsconeag Lake which I'll report on the paddling forum and hiked into Maine Huts and Trails new Grand Falls Hut which I'll also report on in this forum.