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View Full Version : The NH Winter 48 in About a Week


ferrisjrf
01-26-2010, 12:12 AM
Companion to this thread (http://www.viewsfromthetop.com/forums/showthread.php?t=34005).

If my beautiful prose ain’t your thing, here’s the good stuff:
- Pics from days 1 and 2 (http://www5.snapfish.com/thumbnailshare/AlbumID=3729176014/a=103376502_103376502/)
- Pics from days 3 and 4 (http://www5.snapfish.com/thumbnailshare/AlbumID=3729790014/a=103376502_103376502/)
- Pics from days 5 and 6 (http://www5.snapfish.com/thumbnailshare/AlbumID=3730249014/a=103376502_103376502/)
- Pics from days 7 and 8 (http://www5.snapfish.com/thumbnailshare/AlbumID=3729902014/a=103376502_103376502/)

If you don’t do Snapfish, you can use the following info for access:
Email: 1person@live.com
Password: 1person

Videos:
Hale, 1/18/10 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JsiDt3VuJtk)
Garfield Ridge Trail, 1/19/10 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nau14nXjUYc)
Carrigain, 1/20/10 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGgj7351848)
Bondcliff, 1/21/10 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCv9KV3kRCk)
Bondcliff (another view), 1/21/10 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNluGge5f0Q)
Guyot, 1/21/10 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_H118nm9OiE)
South Twin, 1/21/10 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJ8qfPCWVcU)

Saturday, 1/16: On the trail towards Isolation at 6:20AM. It went quickly. The way back was weird. I felt like some kinda loser celebrity from a reality TV show, meeting tons of people on the trail, all of whom seemed to know what we were up to. It got our spirits up, but it felt odd, knowing how far we were from our final destination.

Wildcats → Moriah went pretty smoothly. Mats had some cramping issues as we headed up Carter Dome, but pushed through that pretty well. Moriah was a bit of a challenge, partly unbroken, in the dark…but Stony Brook went fast, and I think we all felt pretty good when returning to Cruddy’s place.

Sunday, 1/17: Prezzie Traverse. We looked at this as one of our easy days, and it went pretty well. Great weather to Washington, low visibility thereafter. Easy moving, though. Snowshoes all day. The most time consuming part was getting through the small piece of unbroken trail just north of Jackson. After finding the huge blowdown on the north end that was screwing everyone up, we had a pretty easy job, until we got to within a ¼ mile of the bogs. That’s when we just resorted to crawling on our bellies under all the bent over fir. Fun stuff.

Monday, 1/18: Waumbek, Cabot, Hale. All pretty uneventful. A little trail breaking, but not much. We had Gillian and MEB with us for Hale, which was very cool.

Tuesday, 1/19: Garfield, Franconia Ridge, Owl’s Head. Started real slow, as Mats and I both had some foot issues. I was using Mats’ Kahtoola Flight Deck snowshoe system for the first time, and had to perform some trailside surgery on my trail runners to get things to work smoothly. Once performed, though, we were on our way. After Garfield, Ryan and I had a pretty easy time until we reached tree line…and maybe 20ft visibility. Getting to Little Haystack took a while, but after that, we cruised pretty well along the ridge. The wack down from the Liberty/Flume col (the Roing Route? ;)) didn’t go quite as fast as when we’d done it in daylight, but we were on Lincoln Brook Trail within about 1.5 hours, so not bad. The Owl’s Head climb was slow. The descent was fast. The walk out sucked. Went to the “new” summit. Late night.

Wednesday, 1/20: We made quick work of the Willey Range before heading over to Carrigain. We took a while between hikes, mostly eating and drinking. Reached the Carrigain summit right at dark, but the out was quick and painless. Early night!

Thursday, 1/21: Bonds, Zealand, Twins, Galehead. This day provided some of our best views. The Bonds and Guyot were gorgeous. Zealand…well, it was Zealand. South Twin to North Twin was a little tricky, picking our way through all the snow laden trees. We met Mats on our way back to South Twin, and hiked the remainder of the day with him. Sunset from the Twins was amazing. Galehead proved to be more challenging than expected, as there were a couple spurious paths. Once we got on the right one, though, it was a pretty quick ascent. Then came one of the most annoying outs of the week. Gale River Trail sucked…bad. We were happy to get back to Beaver Brook and into a warm car.

Friday, 1/22: Cannon went well. Then we ran into our first real challenge. We saw that the Cannon Balls appeared to be broken out, so we decided to head over to the Kinsmans that way. It ended up that the tracks, after going over the first Ball, turned north, where skiers had been skiing some glades out that way. So we had to decide whether to go back to where we’d come, head down to Lonesome Lake, and back up Fishin’ Jimmy…or continue on over the Balls. We made a decision to break trail. Ryan broke the whole way.

When we reached packed trail a couple hours later, I told Ryan that he should go on ahead of me. I knew he’d be able to get the Kinsmans, Osceolas, and Hancocks, and still get out at a reasonable hour, if he went balls-out. I knew that it would take me until probably midnight. And I knew we had a big day on Saturday. So the decision was made, and he went ahead. It was weird to hike solo for the remainder of the day, after spending so many hours with Ryan (and Mats), but it was cool, as I saw him and Rebecca on East Osceola later in the day. Osceola provided another amazing sunset. I got home early, and enjoyed the company of Mats and Dr. D for a while, before greeting a stoned-looking Ryan (led by Rebecca), fresh off the Hancocks, at around 10PM.

Saturday, 1/23: Moosilauke was beautiful, as usual, with the perfectly graded Gorge Brook Trail providing a great warm up. Charles met us near the Lodge, and skied back with us while we plodded along in our snowshoes. We then raced over to Tecumseh, and made quick work of that. Charles and Drewski met us on our way down, and we laughed our azzes off, as Charles tried to tele down WV on edgeless BC skis, and Drewski used his sled to fly down the mountain.

Charles then skied down Livermore Trail with us until Scaur Ridge, where we parted ways. About ¾ up Scaur, we met Mats and Rebecca coming down. After a brief update on trail conditions, we were on our way. I was feeling pretty fresh, with the extra rest I’d gotten the day before. Ryan was a little tired, but still didn’t have a problem keeping up. Tripyramids were fun, if a little slick in spots. Rollins Trail descending Whiteface was probably the low point of the night for me. Conditions were a little less than ideal, but not terrible. We dropped our packs at the Dicey Mill intersection, and plodded our way up to Passaconaway. The summit was very emotional for both of us, and we shared a special moment where we farted simultaneously right at the summit, causing both of us to shed a tear.

After returning to our packs, we packed up our snowshoes, and took off running down towards the trailhead. We slowed a couple times on some of the small uphills, but it was mostly a good run all the way to the end…where Mats, Rebecca, Gillian, and Dave Bear were waiting for us…with food and beer! We didn’t get back to Twin Mountain until nearly 2AM, but when we did, we enjoyed an(other) awesome dinner provided by Christine (Chinook Trail).

Sunday, 1/23: Got up at about 7:30AM. Cleaned and packed up the cottage. Had a couple more beers. Hit the Hancocks trail around noon: myself, Ryan, Gillian, Rebecca, Kim, Hui Yeng, and Mike. Mike had brought 2 Swiss Bobs, so I had a wicked fun descent with the sled and an axe. It was more work than boot-skiing, but it was more fun too, and certainly more fun for everyone to watch.

Tally on damaged gear:
- 1 pair MSR Denali Ascent snowshoes (1 binding broke)
- 1 pair MSR Denali Evo Ascent snowshoes (both bindings broke)
- 1 pair MSR Lightning Ascent snowshoes (1 binding cracked)
- 1 pair Microspikes (torn rubber)
- 1 pair EMS softshell short gaiters (ripped by Lightning Ascent snowshoe)
- 1 pair TNF Storm Peak boots (surgical “repairs” prolonged their life, but we lost the patient)

Huge, huge, huge thanks to:
- Mats; who put this all together, and is probably the nicest guy I’ve ever met…even if he likes weird music ;-)
- Ryan; who I didn’t want to kill after 200+ miles (and who motivates me to push harder than I ever would on my own)
- Gillian, Rebecca & MEB; who did lots of cooking and preparing…and dealt well with our tiredness, stupid inside jokes, and weird smells
- Cruddy Toes; for the amazing hospitality for our first 3 nights
- Charles (Youngblood); for providing great motivation on that final day
- Mike and Ginny; for providing food and drinks, and a place to stay last night
- Kim & Hui Yeng; for the beers at the end of our Prezzie Traverse, and on the Hancocks
- Whatever forces control the weather. We owe you!

And much respect to Frodo, Stinky, Tim, and Cath...all of whom set the bar pretty high, making this kinda thing all that much more fun. I'm sure we wouldn't have pushed as hard as we did, if we hadn't had the motivation provided by the spirit of competition.

I apologize if I forgot anyone or anything. It was a long week. Great time, though, and I’d do it again in a heartbeat. A Hut-to-Hut attempt might have to suffice for now, though.

Jason

SoloJoe
01-26-2010, 12:46 AM
Jason,

Kudos to you, Ryan Farmer, and Mats Roing for a phenomenal team effort. I've never met any of you but, like many people, I sat on the edge of my seat each day for the past week and a half :D while following your quest through vftt updates. The three of you are an inspiration to many, many hikers and outdoor enthusiasts. :tup:

Tecumseh in 1:20? The Osceolas in 2:30? Amazing. I hiked all three of those peaks last spring, with ideal conditions, and can't even imagine booking those times, let alone having to break trail in the process. You and Ryan deserve special credit for completing the odyssey and recording what both are unbelievable overall times.

Again, congratulations to all three of you! It's an accomplishment for the ages.

And kudos as well to Stinkyfeet and Frodo for setting the original mark six years ago.

Joe

Snickers
01-26-2010, 07:17 AM
Congratulations Jason!!

Having had the pure pleasure of winter hiking with you, your sheer determination is inspiring!! You rock dude!! :)

I am very happy for you Jason!! :kiss:

I will look at all the pics tonight. Guess I need to check out VFTT every now and again to see what crazy stuff you are up too.

Thanks for posting here!

Happy Trails - Cindy

Rik
01-26-2010, 08:11 AM
As I said on that other site, well done gentlemen.

Eric
01-26-2010, 08:34 AM
Wow, amazing Trip Report. Regardless of the damages to the MSR, will you continue to stick with them, or look to a different brand?

Great how the Prezi Traverese was the easy day.. Well done:tup:

ferrisjrf
01-26-2010, 09:52 AM
Regardless of the damages to the MSR, will you continue to stick with them, or look to a different brand?

That's gonna depend on the response I get from MSR regarding replacing the bindings. Both the Denalis had lots of miles on them, so I can't really bitch too much about them breaking. And even after they broke, we used the Evos on another couple "small" hikes, and they worked, so it wasn't totally catastrophic.

The Lightnings had a lot less miles, mostly because I know how weak they are to begin with, and I don't use them much anymore. Personally, I'd never buy another pair of Lightnings. They were good when I used to hike mostly in CA, but not so much for the northeast.

I'll probably get the bindings replaced, and continue to use the Denalis on a somewhat regular basis, especially for stuff where I expect to encounter short stretches of icy conditions.

However, I really liked the Kahtoola Flight Deck system, after using it for an extended period. I used the (now discontinued) FlightBoot overshoe, over my TNF Storm Peak mid-cut trail runners. With long days, I tend to get toe pain from most other snowshoe bindings. That was a complete non-issue with the FlightBoot system...and they kept my feet crazy warm and dry...without the need for gaiters. I'm thinking about getting some more of those FlightBoots before I can no longer find them.

The only downside of that system, to me, is that it makes using normal crampons a little cumbersome, because you'd have to remove the overboots to do so. So if you're expecting conditions where you'll want crampons from time to time, it's probably not terribly practical.

Ideally, I'd love for Kahtoola to resume manufacturing the FlightBoot, and to devise a standard 10/12 point crampon that could be used in conjunction with them. For me, that would be an almost perfect system.

Dunbar
01-26-2010, 11:11 AM
You jerk.

Here I am in PA, sitting at my desk, working on my thesis, and you gotta go and post something like this. That's just cruel.

Nevertheless, I guess what you guys did was kinda cool. I guess I'm kinda impressed.

ferrisjrf
01-26-2010, 05:34 PM
You jerk.

Here I am in PA, sitting at my desk, working on my thesis, and you gotta go and post something like this. That's just cruel.

You'll be done with school before you know it, and get a job where you get 6 weeks of vacation a year, weekends free, be able to afford all the sweet gear that you want, and retire to Keene Valley by the time you're 50.

And I'll be a poor, semi-employed, trail-bum...wearing the same broken MSRs and patched clothing that I've been wearing for the last 4 years.

If you're looking for a roommate in 20 years when you move to KV, let me know. Will break trail for room and board...and beer.

JoeCedar
01-26-2010, 09:29 PM
Congratulations, Jason and companions, for a fantastic accomplishment.

I'll put it on my list for my next life.

Maria
01-27-2010, 07:08 AM
Congrats Jason and companions - pretty darn impressive :tup:. Glad to see you're kind of staying in shape since you left the flatlands of Westchester.....

billandjudy
01-27-2010, 07:58 AM
Was following your progress on VFTT...Truly amazing Jason:tup:

the_swede
01-27-2010, 01:33 PM
Amazing. I bet as Jason finished he said "time to head up to the Adirondacks now for a double Great Range traverse."

jwellford
01-28-2010, 06:49 PM
Excellent work guys!

ferrisjrf
02-11-2010, 08:48 AM
Regardless of the damages to the MSR, will you continue to stick with them, or look to a different brand?

That's gonna depend on the response I get from MSR regarding replacing the bindings.

I'll probably get the bindings replaced, and continue to use the Denalis on a somewhat regular basis, especially for stuff where I expect to encounter short stretches of icy conditions.

I got my snowshoes back yesterday. MSR had them for 1 or 2 days...so with shipping, I was without them for 14 days. They replaced all 4 bindings free of charge.

I'm heading to the Adirondacks tomorrow night for the long weekend. I'll be bringing my MSRs and the Kahtoolas. Looking to test the Kahtoolas on some Adirondack terrain, but I'm sure the MSRs will get some use, too.

TFR
02-11-2010, 09:53 AM
I got my snowshoes back yesterday. MSR had them for 1 or 2 days...so with shipping, I was without them for 14 days. They replaced all 4 bindings free of charge.

I'm heading to the Adirondacks tomorrow night for the long weekend. I'll be bringing my MSRs and the Kahtoolas. Looking to test the Kahtoolas on some Adirondack terrain, but I'm sure the MSRs will get some use, too.
So, with another week or 2 of effort, you could bag the SSW115 pretty soon, right? :twisted:

looncry
02-11-2010, 07:24 PM
I got my snowshoes back yesterday. MSR had them for 1 or 2 days...so with shipping, I was without them for 14 days. They replaced all 4 bindings free of charge.

I'm heading to the Adirondacks tomorrow night for the long weekend. I'll be bringing my MSRs and the Kahtoolas. Looking to test the Kahtoolas on some Adirondack terrain, but I'm sure the MSRs will get some use, too.

warmer temps should be a plus. Take pics for those who can't get out. Looncry:)