Carters and Hight, 07-Mar-2009

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bikehikeskifish

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Ed and I met Jeremy at the Wildcat ski area at 7:30 and left a vehicle there, giving us the option of including the Wildcats. Then we drove to 19 Mile Brook Trail and parked Jeremy's truck on the skating rink-I mean in the parking lot. While gearing up, the truck slid towards the road for 3-4 feet. OK... needed traction to negotiate the parking lot. After re-positioning the truck, we headed up to the Carter Dome Trail junction following the very wide and very well packed 19 Mile Brook Trail. Ordinarily I like to walk out on the dam which feeds the Great Glenn Aquaduct, but nobody had been down there and getting down looked almost as hard as getting up would have been, so I skipped it. The snow was soft and transformed and we wore snowshoes the entire way. Stepping off the edges at all caused sinking, even in shoes, and there were occasional post holes. We made it to the Carter Dome Trail in 50 minutes. After the first crossing on the CDT, which was still nicely bridged, the trail gains elevation via a series of switchbacks. In the morning, CDT was still pretty soft, especially compared to 19MBT. It was along this trail we noticed the first snow fleas. Another 1:30 or so and we made it to Zeta Pass where we took a break.


South Carter
After a snack and some water, we followed the Carter Moriah Trail to South Carter. The trail was well-packed all the way to the summit. Of course the signs, which were there in June, have been taken down (on South and Middle Carter), which means the summit photos could be taken just about anywhere. Looking south, the Wildcats were in the clear, and to the north, Middle Carter was in the clouds. We discussed some views to the east, just off the trail, which seemed plausible even from the summit, and agreed to look around a bit on the return trip. At this point, the snow depth put the spruce limbs in our faces, and caution was required to protect our eyes and heads.

Middle Carter
The Carter-Moriah Trail was not broken from South Carter to Middle Carter, and this slowed us down a lot. It had seen some traffic this winter, and by feel you could tell there was a snowshoe track, but it wasn't visible and it wasn't easy to stay on it. Given the snow depth, the edges of the trail held many spruce traps. Even though I was last in line, I fell into a handful. Thigh-deep in one particular trap, I was able to push my pole, extended to 125cm (4 feet) so far down my entire arm was also in the snow, up to my shoulder! From the open spots in the col between South and Middle, the best views were to the east towards Maine, and the Baldfaces in particular. Middle was in the clouds when we got there, but they lifted while on our way back to South, of course.



Carter Dome
After our second stop at Zeta Pass, we this time continued up the Carter DomeTrail towards Carter Dome. If we made good time, the Wildcats would still be in reach. Even thought the trail here was packed, and not very steep, it was still slow, due to brush in our faces, and having the watch your step in the soft snow so as not to slide down the hill. As we gained elevation, there are occasional very nice views of the northern Presidentials to the right. Approaching the scrub and with the summit in sight, it was amazing how much snow had drifted along the trail. When we got to the summit clearing, the north end snow drift was easily 6 feet higher than the summit sign, which was almost buried. By my math, that makes 10-12 feet of snow. Of course all that snow puts you higher than the scrub and gives some really nice views you wouldn't get in summer.


Mount Hight
When we got to Carter Dome, it was pretty obvious that the Wildcats would be out of reach. We were definitely tiring, and the drop and re-climb into and out of Carter Notch would not be fun. Plus I wasn't certain we could make the ski area by dark. I knew the Wildcat Ridge Trail was broken out, but it is still steep and rough and I didn't want to negotiate it with headlamps. So our consolation prize was Mount Hight, a peak which I delighted in last June, except this time there weren't any bugs. It offers the best views in the range. The only negative was it was mostly bare rock, which isn't very kind to the snowshoes. We stayed for a bit, and then got prepared to slide down the Carter Moriah Trail - the only stretch today that was steep enough to slide. It was still slow sliding due to the softness of the snow, but it was fun anyway. Soon we were at Zeta Pass for the third time today. After that, it was a fairly quick trek back down the Carter Dome Trail and Nineteen Mile Brook trails to wrap up the day.


All photos here

Tim
 
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Nice job!

Great pictures, especially of the Presis! In one of them, I think you caught a gnome standing in the trees in the lower left corner of the shot. :eek:

We had a similar experience in Sawyer Road parking area last weekend as you did at 19MBT.

KDT
 
Just a few more photos...

Bikehikeskisurf in the Nineteen Mile Brook parking lot:
jimmycarter01.jpg


Bikehikeskiitch taking photos of snow fleas while OldMan starts to itch:
jimmycarter02.jpg


Bikehikelugecurl doing his impression of his favorite Office Space character:
jimmycarter03.jpg


Bikehikesprucetrap finds a very deep spruce trap:
jimmycarter04.jpg


OldMan and Bikehikediscodance make their way to Middle Carter:
jimmycarter05.jpg


When the clouds lifted off Middle Carter, Bikehikecurlluge looked like he wanted to go back. OldMan and I didn't.
jimmycarter06.jpg


Ascending Carter Dome from the north is indeed a different in winter:
jimmycarter07.jpg

jimmycarter08.jpg


We also went to Mt. Hight. I'm scared of Heights:
jimmycarter12.jpg


Bikehikeslidefall had some successful sliding:
jimmycarter10.jpg


OldMan, on the other hand, seemed to be stuck in place:
jimmycarter11.jpg


While I was on the summit of Carter Dome looking at the somewhat rare views to the south, Bikehikecheerpunt asked, "What's the significance of tomorrow," to which I replied, "I don't know, what," to which he responded by giving me a big shove and yelling "spring forward!"
jimmycarter09.jpg
 
Well organized TR Tim, and a darn good read! Also enjoyed your photos which showed some “flea-ting” glimpses of your experiences along the way.
 
Well, there is the serious part of the TR, and then there is the inane part which seems to coincide with hiking with Rocket21.

There were many age discrepancy jokes in both directions, discussion of serious topics like Gilligan's Island (we prefer Mary Ann to Ginger; although there was an age joke tossed out about Lovie ;)), and "Whatever happened to Gary 'whatchyou talkin' 'bout Willis?' Coleman?" And of course lines from Office Space and Michael ("you can call me Mike") Bolton. No trip with Rocket21 would be complete without some Three Stooges ("Spring forward".) It would appear that Rocket21 hikes and watches TVland. If you have seen his life anywhere along the trails, please return it to him, postage due. There were discussions of both popular music (in particular that which was popular before one of the three of us was born) and its obscure opposites.

Tim
 
Nice TR Tim. This was a great hike... but snow fleas? I'd never seen snow fleas before and after taking a macro shot and zooming in, yikes! Suddenly I'm feeling itchy.



We had some great views of ex-presidents, including Jeremy's pretty good Nixon impression.





We ended the day on Mt Hight where the views were amazing.



Garmin GPS: 13.7 miles, 5876 ascent, 9:18 elapsed, 1.5 mph average
 
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