Twins and Galehead from Seven Dwarfs to Beaver Brook

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bikehikeskifish

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Seven Dwarfs, old North Twin Trail, North Twin Trail, North Twin Spur, Twinway, Frost Trail, Garfield Ridge Trail, Gale River Trail, 14 miles, 3900'+, 9:00

24-Jan-2009

An assortment of hikers from RoT arranged to meet at Beaver Brook at 7am. Included were BikeHikeSkiFish, Bob&Geri, J&J, AndyF, Steve, Getawaygirl, Mad River, OldMan, and Jeff. Kevin and Emma went out of Seven Dwarfs ahead of us with the intention of being caught. We piled all the packs into Mad River's truck, and when the cab was full of people, the rest of us piled into Bob & Geri's SUV for the short ride to 7Ds. At 7:20, we were underway. AndyF suggested following the old North Twin trail and it was here that we stopped and put on snowshoes. It was possibly this decision that pushed us ahead of Kevin and Emma as we hadn't caught them by North Twin. The old North Twin trail was well-packed as it followed the Little River's west bank. Occasional glimpses of blue sky showed overhead, through open woods and clearings, complimenting the views of the Peak Above The Nubble as we hiked into the box canyon formed by Hale, Zealand Ridge and the Twins. About 40 minutes later, the old North Twin trail deposited us on Haystack Road next to the bridge by the summer trailhead.

Now on the "new" North Twin trail, we continued along the east side of the river, skipping the first two crossings. The third crossing was solidly bridged and all crossed without difficulty. With the trail beginning to pitch upward, we adjusted layers and began climbing. To this point, there were maybe 2-3 inches of new snow, but as we climbed through 3700 feet the new snow depth increased to 8 inches with occasional deeper drifts. AndyF took the lead doing most of the trail breaking work. Just below the North Twin knob (viewpoint), we stopped to dress for the exposed section above. The summit was in the bottom of the clouds and there were filtered views over to Hale and Zealand.

After a necessarily brief stop at the outlook, we pushed on to the summit and summit view point. At this point, we agreed to split into 3 groups (4 if you count Kevin and Emma who had not yet been seen.) Bob & Geri turned around here and returned to 7Ds. Two groups continued on, the first being me, OldMan, Andy, and the three Js: J&J and Jeff, and the second being Mad River, Getawaygirl and Steve.

Bob & Geri would meet up with Mad River's group on their way back, and inform them we were now continuing in two groups. The first group only had cars at Beaver Brook, while the second group had cars at both locations, and so there weren't any logistical reasons to remain in one large group. We set off for South Twin, following the wind-blown remains of a snowshoe track. Down low in the scrub, it is easy to see how one could lose the trail, but visibility was fine and though we were given to an occasional pause, a few glances around would spot the likely way to go. OldMan Ed had a GPS track from last summer as a backup and it confirmed we never really were off course. After scrambing over a few steep and drifted sections, the rocky cliff of South Twin appeared before us. Coming out of the trees, the wind was once again cold. I had to zip the 'pit vent on my shell before the winward side of me froze. A very brief stop for the views, a quick summit photo, and we ducked down the Twinway towards the hut. Once into the trees, we split up a bit for the butt slide down to the hut. Along the way we encountered Farmer Bob, Rocks-n-Rolls and Hiker Bob. With the butt sliding, we made it to the hut in under 15 minutes.

At the hut, we sat in the sun and ate our lunches. Well, AndyF preferred to tag Galehead before eating, so he went up while we ate, and he watched our packs while the rest of us went up. It was the most-comfortable leg of the day. As usual, the sun shown down on the hut, and the Frost Trail to the summit is in the lee of the moutain all the way. Back at the hut, the Twins-only gang reappeared, followed shortly by Mad River, Getawaygirl and Steve who were behind us. Wet gloves and hats were exchanged for dry ones, and shortly past 2pm, we set off for the home stretch. The Garfield Ridge Trail and Galehead Trails were packed like a concrete sidewalk, but we remained in our snowshoes. At the viewpoint by the Gale River, where the trail flattens out, we passed Hiker Bob who was contemplating skiing the rest of the way out. When we came out on Gale River Road, the snowmobile police were hanging out and we chatted briefly. They mentioned they had seen Kevin and Emma near 7Ds. We turned right on Gale River Road, and then followed it to the left. There are small US Forest Service signs pointing the way to Beaver Brook. Turn right at camp site #3 and left towards the rear and you'll be on the Beaver Brook XC trail system. Stay to the left to follow it back to the parking area.

Limited photos (due to cold) here

Tim
 
This TR. Mike E, & Kevin & Emma were actually behind you, we left 7 Dwarfs at about 7:45 & turned back at North Twin.

In case it's not clear to others, the snow up top makes the area between the rocky view point & the summit much more exposed than in summer. Instead of being in the trees, it's more like being in scrub.

Thanks for breaking the trail for us! Thanks to Rocket21 for a great TR the weeek before that helped with getting to Haystack Road.
 
Yep!

Kevin and Emma had some serious squalls from Plymouth to Lincoln to contend with, then a snowplow through the notch. Arrived a little late, but hooked up with Mike P and his buddy Mike from Gilford. Also ran into a few others. While gearing up to cross the last 1/4 mile to the summit I noticed Emma shivering, something I hadn't seen before out there. Her paws were clogged with ice, so I decided to turn around at North Twin.

As much as I wanted to continue on to South Twin I wasn't going to put Emma through anymore this day. Her safety is way more important than baggin' any peaks.

South Twin can be another one of my White Whales. :)

We'll head back when the weather isn't sub-arctic. One report I read said the temp dropped 25 degrees while we were out there. I'm sure it did, and the wind was "Screamin' like a banshee" as Geri put it.

Big Earl had the right idea stayin' off the ridges yesterday. Kudos to those of you who made it through! Great job!

KDT
 
Congrats to those who did all three peaks, and an equal congrats to those who turned back when they felt they should. It's all good, everyone hiked their own hike. Sounds like it was a successful day for all involved, for various reasons. :)
 
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The front group had all their cars at Beaver Brook... so that made it easier to make the trip. Plus once descending the Twinway, it's all sheltered. Down low the wind was blowing good through the the open woods approaching Gale River Road...

20090124_121839_conditions-vi.jpg


This shows the temp in the -5 to -10 range at about that 4500-5000 foot range. There is no chance the wind was anywhere near 70 MPH. The temp dropped close to 30 degrees over this period.

Tim
 
I had a fun on this hike. This was W48 8,9,10 for me. Thanks for posting a great TR Tim!

Garmin 60CSx: 14.2 miles, 5531 ascent, 9 hours, 1.5MPH average.
 
Booties

Maddy, we have tried booties on Emma. She wasn't exactly cooperative.
We haven't tried them in a long time, so perhaps it's time to try again.
Maybe I'll try Tom's approach to booties for Atticus- let her get a little
uncomfortable out there first, and maybe she won't be so quick to dissent
when the booties get put on.;)
 
Just adding a little bootie plug....Hike4Fun recommended these booties, that they use on Shiloh in the Daks:

http://www.ultrapaws.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=303R

They are AWESOME! I got a pair for Terra and she runs and runs (and runs and runs and runs) and they do not come off!

They have two straps, and padding on the inside, so you can pull them super tight. And, the best part is the price -- four boots for about $34 !!

I am extremely happy with them! Big thanks to Hike4Fun for the tip.

We tried the Ruffwear Griptex Bootie, and she flung them off in seconds flat.

Kevin, I think the key is to put them on in the house, one at a time, and give treats each time a bootie goes on. (Judy will be a pro at this). Then take them off immediately. Booties=treats!
The next time you put them back on -- make it right before the hike, and then set off. She'll soon forget about them, becuase she'd rather be hiking and keeping up with you guys (or ahead of you as usual!!).
 
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Great Tr & Pics, looks like
a fun group to spend the day with! :D

Kevin, you made the right choice!! :)
 
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