Mt. Allen Jan. 24

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  • Neil
    Admin

    • May 2004
    • 6129

    #1

    Mt. Allen Jan. 24

    The Big One That Got Away
    If you don't like long TR's hit the back button now!

    I’ve read trip reports and threads about people coming home empty handed as far as getting the summit goes, so I knew my turn would come eventually. Yesterday was that day. Hindsight has coldly and objectively revealed most of the factors that led to us turning around and I think I’ll write those down on my gear list that I print up and verify every trip.

    I’ll spare you the details of the drive down on Saturday night in a snowstorm because the next morning was so much more interesting. It was just after 6am and Dominic and I were on our way to the TH when we saw somebody walking along the road. As I whizzed past Dominic yells out, ‘It’s Doug’! At least he too made it through the storm but what the heck was he doing there? Well, in the middle of nowhere, in the middle of the night, in a snow storm between Long Lake and Newcomb his alternator belt broke. Talk about lucky being able to limp into Newcomb where he parked, climbed into his sleeping bag and calmly read until he figured we’d be on the road. We spent an hour with the snowplough guys in their garage trying to find a replacement belt but no luck. So with one dead car abandoned in Newcomb we arrived at the TH at 7:45.

    Man, were we a bunch of wimps! or was it cold? The wind was howling and luckily, we didn’t have a thermometer with us. We did all the preparations to go, including signing out, with the car heater blasting away. I was determined to follow my own advice and was wearing a very light synth shirt only under my gore-tex which made the simplest TH stuff like getting the skis down from the roof rack seem like a huge chore.
    Once we got going and were out of the wind we of course warmed up quite nicely. We were skiing and I was having wax trouble. There was 4 inches of fresh, cold dry snow and now I remembered that in those conditions your ski bases only contact the very sharp snowflake points with lots of empty spaces in between those points. On went the softer blue wax with a longer pocket and the improvement was immediate. After Lake Sally the trail goes through some open land with mature birches. The grey skies were breaking up, Redfield stood ahead and the fresh snow was blowing in the stiff breeze. I felt absolutely great as I powered through the fresh snow. Underneath it was very icy so it was a good thing for the new snow. We made good time to the turn-off and there we switched over to snowshoes which killed 20 minutes. I suppose you could debate the merits of approaching the mtn. on skis. Do you spend the time saved by skiing changing over? My ski boots are a little sturdier than average and I snowshoed up Phelps with them which saved time on the switch but it was too cold for that this day so I switched boots as well. They were already in the snowshoe bindings so I just slipped into them.

    Anyway, we pushed fairly hard and followed the home made yellow discs that showed the way on the already easy to follow herd trail. It didn’t look like anybody had been on it this season but it was a cinch to cruise on. I kept checking my watch and we were looking good for the summit…when all of a sudden the yellow disc road ended. We were just beyond the height of land and about to drop down to Skylight brook a half mile away and had been cruising on what we thought was the trail when we realized we’d lost it.
    And here we made our first and most important mistake. I suggested it to Doug, and Dominic thought about backtracking, but we were pushing hard to make up for the late start (we began at 8 which for a Jan. trip up Allen is late in my books). Backtracking would have cost us 20 –30 mins. whereas if we picked up the trail we’d be flying.
    The second error was made before the start of the trip. In retrospect, we were depending on the trail to get us up the mtn. However, the trail was an untravelled herd path trail in winter through open hardwood forest and yet we never though to pre-determine compass bearings, load waypoints into a GPS etc.
    We decided to cut due north in hopes of crossing the trail but after a while we realized we were climbing the lower slopes of Redfield so we stopped and pulled out the map and the GPS (yeah, we had one but with no waypoints in it). I had a home made lat-long ruler stapled to my map and with that proceeded to pull a waypoint for Allen’s summit off of it.

    The unit said we were about a mile and a half due west of Allen, the snow was firm and the forest was open so we motored thinking we were best to forget all about the trail. We went fast and sure enough we got to where we could see Allen. The coordinates were bang on which made me feel pretty good. (Try manipulating a freezing cold map in bare hands measuring precisely tenths of seconds with a home made paper lat/long ruler while snot runs out of your nose and your damp shirt sucks the heat out of your body. It can be fun if the sun is shining and your with the right people!)
    Our plan was working perfectly until the bush got real thick and our forward rate of progress (velocity made good) dropped to almost nothing. We were at what we thought was the east branch of Skylight when we decided to enter another waypoint for where the herd trail crosses the brook and the GPS pointed 500 feet downstream! That was the result of heading north towards Redfield looking for the trail earlier on.

    By now it was close to one o’clock and we had a stiff 2000 foot icy climb between us and the summit, plus we had to take care of Doug’s car and Dominic had school the next day. Our new goal became to find the herd trail and go home so down we went bushwhacking. At one point I mentioned to Doug that if we found the trail (and that was a big if for me, GPS or not) that I didn’t see why we couldn’t lose it again and that our snowshoes had just left a perfect bread crumb trail back to the herd path. Hey, I might be dumb once on a trip but I ain’t gonna do the same thing twice! So, at 1:15 with a mixture of relief and regret we chucked in the towel and did an about face. The sky was perfectly clear and at 2:00, when we had hoped to be begining our descent, we reflected on what the views would have been like..

    When we got back to the yellow discs we realized they ended where the trail crosses from private to public land. We figured out easily where we should have gone (kinda like a true or false question when you know which choice is false). So if you go and do Allen in the near future don’t follow our tracks beyond the private land. Bear right and go down to a gulley. The trip back was fantastic, lots of warm sunshine and big peaks to admire. I timed the switch over to skis and it took 20 minutes but was well worth it because the trail descended 250 feet (net) to Lake Jimmy and we glided beautifully in our morning’s tracks. We had dynamite views of Allen, Redfield, Cliff, Colden (we thought) and Adams. With the sun in our faces and the wind at our backs there was no better place to be. Near Lake Sally the one-day-shy-of-full moon rose over Popple Hill and we had great views of the Santanoni Range. ‘Views from below’, huh Doug?

    We noticed three parallel slides on Santa, the leftmost one was very long and steep but the Ermine Brook slide wouldn’t have been visible from there would it? When we got to the car at 5:30 we were completely whacked and we hadn’t even climbed the mountain! It was very, very cold back at the car.

    The only thing I wondered was if some hard core people would have gone for the summit anyway and not cared about descending Allen with headlamps and getting back to their car at ten. There's no way I was doing that especially with my 16 year old son along with me. Perhaps if it was in March and a lot warmer out.
    The best, the most successful adventurer, is the one having the most fun.
  • lumberzac
    Beware of the Lumberzac
    • Apr 2004
    • 1730

    #2
    Sounds like you made the right call by not pushing on.
    A man needs to believe in something. I believe I'll go hiking.

    http://community.webshots.com/user/lumberzac

    Comment

    • shaggy
      Shaggy
      • Sep 2004
      • 115

      #3
      Neil, there is just something about you and allen. I don't know if it is your favorite or not, but I am laughing now (with you) because I always see you talking about allen more than any mountain. Let me know if you are going up it this summer because I would like to join you and hear more of your Allen Tales.

      shaggy

      Comment

      • redhawk
        Senior Resident Curmudgeon
        • Jan 2004
        • 10929

        #4
        If you look in the dictionary under "masochistic", you'll see Neils picture!!
        "If future generations are to remember us with gratitude rather than contempt, we must leave them more than the miracles of technology. We must leave them a glimpse of the world as it was in the beginning, not just after we got through with it." Lyndon B. Johnson

        Comment

        • Neil
          Admin

          • May 2004
          • 6129

          #5
          Originally posted by shaggy
          Neil, there is just something about you and allen. I don't know if it is your favorite or not, but I am laughing now (with you) because I always see you talking about allen more than any mountain. Let me know if you are going up it this summer because I would like to join you and hear more of your Allen Tales.

          shaggy
          Shaggy, I'm going back ASAP before we get a big dump of snow. Now I know exactly where not to go! I'm also going this summer but I don't know when, likely in June so there'll be lots of black flies.
          The best, the most successful adventurer, is the one having the most fun.

          Comment

          • Rivet
            Likes to hike
            • Feb 2004
            • 626

            #6
            Maybe he's trying to be the next Richard Bern...

            http://www.birdheadstudios.com/html/bern/bernmain.htm
            My hiking blog

            Comment

            • Skyclimber
              SAFE CLIMBING
              • Dec 2003
              • 1086

              #7
              Personally I believe you did the right choice in turning back. That last 1000' or so feet from Allen's Falls can take 3-4 hours alone in Winter. With the added compound of Artic Weather, being 1:00 in the afternoon, left you no time for error of margin, especially had someone were to be injured.
              I personally would had backtracked to find the markers, as sometimes it's easier to do that, than crash through spruces and balsams.
              You have alot of determination to had climbed yesterday. My hat goes off to you.
              BTW How did Doug make out with his truck? Also your story was awesome, very well written.
              "It is easier to become a Forty-Sixer than to be one. The art of the being is to keep one's sense of wonder after the excitement of the game is over."

              Paul Jamieson Class of '58

              Comment

              • hillman1
                skiing demi-god
                • Nov 2003
                • 558

                #8
                The town of newcomb rocks. Read about it over on general backcountry at vftt. Those guys fixed my car in thier heated garage, let me use the phone, and then washed my car. I thought it was a great hike even without the summit. The weather turned out great. It was very cold, but the skies were a crisp blue. I now think a winter bushwack from allen to redfield wouldn't be that bad...actually thats a lie, but a man needs a dream...

                Comment

                • Mavs00
                  I am the sith
                  • Nov 2007
                  • 46

                  #9
                  Sounds like a picnic . We actually added a couple miles to our summer Allen hike by a slight "detour" as well. You're not the first to roundabout that one. By the way, lets hope the next Allen party reads ADKForum or VFTT, or else someone's gonna by swearing like a champ at you dudes when the little snowshoe trail just STOPS.

                  I give you guys credit. Glad all turned out well with the trip (i.e. your all safe) and that Doug got his care taken care of.
                  "I can feel your anger. It gives you focus. It makes you stronger. " Supreme Chancellor

                  Comment

                  • redhawk
                    Senior Resident Curmudgeon
                    • Jan 2004
                    • 10929

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Neil
                    (Try manipulating a freezing cold map in bare hands measuring precisely tenths of seconds with a home made paper lat/long ruler while snot runs out of your nose and your damp shirt sucks the heat out of your body.
                    OHHHHH. I Love it when you talk dirty!!!
                    "If future generations are to remember us with gratitude rather than contempt, we must leave them more than the miracles of technology. We must leave them a glimpse of the world as it was in the beginning, not just after we got through with it." Lyndon B. Johnson

                    Comment

                    • Neil
                      Admin

                      • May 2004
                      • 6129

                      #11
                      Hey Doug! I'm glad everything worked out fine with your car. I was sure those guys were going to be there for you if you needed them. But wash your car?! That's amazing!
                      The car trouble you had made me think about the importance of my vehichle. Someone said on Mavs' site that their single most important piece of winter gear was their car. Even though mine runs well and starts first time every time it has a lot of miles on it. I'm going to have it checked from stem to stern. We only had the one car at the TH yesterday and if it hadn't started we'd have been in very deep Giardia vector. I'm also going to carry sleeping bags all the time.

                      BTW It just came to me that every time we do a hike I always write the TR, so next time you get to do the honors.
                      The best, the most successful adventurer, is the one having the most fun.

                      Comment

                      • hillman1
                        skiing demi-god
                        • Nov 2003
                        • 558

                        #12
                        You always get home quicker than I do and beat me to the post. I bought extra belts too. Those guys at the garage were incredible. That same guy that showed us the belt selection stopped eating his lunch to help me out. They stated clearly that this was not even close to the first time they helped hikers in this capacity. I think they have earned the term "trail angels", even though they are not really on the trail. Thats the term the AT thru-hikers use for people that help out with "trail magic" which is really just hooking up people in need. That guy also told me that had he known I was only going to plattsburgh and then back that I could have taken his car. The other guy said he could have had the part delivered in under two hours. They were literally in a contest to see who could help me more. Washing my car took check mate though. They definitely saved the day. Next time up there, I'm staying at aunt pollys and going to get to know more locals at that bar. Especially the bartender... :drink:

                        Comment

                        • Kevin
                          **BANNED**
                          • Nov 2003
                          • 5857

                          #13
                          Wow, the entire day was an adventure.

                          I learned the fine art of backtracking when heading up to Times Square at night last August. I got turned around (there's actually a lot of places to do that early into the ascent), and instead of initially backtracking I pushed on, nothing. Whipped out the GPS (one of the few times it came in handy). Showed my next waypoint had me on course, and the compass reading was dead on. but I stood before trees and a dead-end trail. Well, after 20 minutes of milling around I follow the trail back for 5 minutes and wouldn't you know it? I took a left instead of right/forward.

                          I swore that from that moment on I would first backtrack for 10 minutes and see if I can pick it up. Since then I've had several occassions where backtracking saved me time/effort.

                          Regardless, you wouldn't have made Allen that day. And were I in your party I would have suggested backtracking, but would have also seen the sense in your plan take a bearing and whack our way back to the path. Point is -- you made all the right choices because you made it out and had some good things to say about the trip.

                          In preparation for tomorrow's hike I have drawn a route in my gps with 25 waypoints to the top of Macomb. I've done this despite being with several people who've hiked this route. If you have the technology, why not use it - always!

                          Comment

                          • Willie
                            46er #5193W
                            • Nov 2003
                            • 240

                            #14
                            Originally posted by hillman1
                            Next time up there, I'm staying at aunt pollys and going to get to know more locals at that bar. Especially the bartender... :drink:
                            Hmmmmmmmm. I'm always looking for a new watering hole. And I'd like to hear you guys tell this tale next summer at Aunt Polly's after a few pints.

                            Comment

                            • Skyclimber
                              SAFE CLIMBING
                              • Dec 2003
                              • 1086

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Kevin

                              In preparation for tomorrow's hike I have drawn a route in my gps with 25 waypoints to the top of Macomb. I've done this despite being with several people who've hiked this route. If you have the technology, why not use it - always!
                              Tell us all about yours, Joe, Doug's hike to Mill Brook to Macomb. Dying to know the details.
                              "It is easier to become a Forty-Sixer than to be one. The art of the being is to keep one's sense of wonder after the excitement of the game is over."

                              Paul Jamieson Class of '58

                              Comment

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