Tedious is a great way to describe those trails !I am truly amazed that there isn't an incident like this every weekend on trails like Osgood, a truly tedious path. I was on a really tedious trail last week on Medicine Bow Peak in the Snowy Range. Brutal boulder "hopping" during the final summit push. And this is at 12K feet. They don't use yellow paint out here to mark the rocks, just the occasional cairn. Long's Peak is the exception.
So what we need is a modern day J Raynor Edmunds, of Edmonds Path fame. He designed trails for walking not leaping, lunging, balancing or bopping.I hiked Watson Path over Madison on my way to the Hut last Sunday evening (Valley > Watson). In addition to saying "I'm not ever taking Watson again" (which I've said before but there I was), I was thinking how it's a wonder there are not multiple ankle/leg injuries every day up there. Madison, Adams, and Jefferson (and others) have pretty wicked footing.
A few years ago I had the opportunity to climb Ben Nevis in Scotland, and was amazed at the quality of the treadway on the lower half of the mountain. It has a real pleasure.I've read he enlisted the help of European stone masons to craft pathways in rocky areas to make the locomotion enjoyable rather than grueling.
Indeed. If I recall, the vertical ascent on that route is well over 4500 ft to Madison with all the ups and downs.Howker Ridge is a very interesting approach to Madison if you don't mind all the ups and downs. Early on, the Bear Trap is a unique formation. I believe the 4th Howk is about the same height as Pierce. A less traveled approach.
If anyone forwards this story to my wife, I’ll hunt them down and get all A-Team on them. I’ll never hear the end of it.
So what we need is a modern day J Raynor Edmunds, of Edmonds Path fame. He designed trails for walking not leaping, lunging, balancing or bopping.
I've read he enlisted the help of European stone masons to craft pathways in rocky areas to make the locomotion enjoyable rather than grueling.
My kinda guy.
I agree.The Westside Trail is a great example.
Indeed. If I recall, the vertical ascent on that route is well over 4500 ft to Madison with all the ups and downs.
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