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Photo by Carl Heilman
II |
| Those who make it to the top of Hadley
Mountain, whether by skis or snowshoes, are rewarded with one
of the best vistas in the southern Adirondacks. |
2 paths to bliss on Hadley
There's more than one way to enjoy a mountain.
Below are two accounts of the same journey on the same day, atop
differing footwear.
By Phil Brown When we got to the
top of Hadley Mountain, the weather was nearly perfect: blue skies,
little wind, mild temperatures. Below us, Great Sacandaga Lake lay
stretched out in the sun. Looking north, we gazed at row after row
of snowy mountains all the way to the High Peaks. Obviously, the guidebooks
don’t lie when they say this summit offers one of the best vistas
in the southern Adirondacks. I couldn’t
wait to leave.
The whole way up I had been admiring the deep
powder along the trail and in the woods and imagining the ski back
down. I had hiked up Hadley a few times in warmer months, but I
never thought about skiing it until Tony Goodwin recommended the
trip in his new book, Ski and Snowshoe Trails in the Adirondacks.
Goodwin rates Hadley as an intermediate ski
when conditions are right. Since more than three feet of snow had
fallen within the past two weeks, including a foot or so just a
few days earlier, we figured we couldn’t ask for better.
I actually started feeling sorry for Mike
Jarboe, one of my companions on this weekday adventure. The poor
guy was on snowshoes. He would not have the opportunity to glide
silently among the trees, floating on powder, or rocket down the
trail in an adrenalin rush. Luckily, Mike didn’t know what
he was missing. The one time he went skiing, at a resort decades
ago, he was drunk and quit after one precipitous run down the novice
trail.
People sometimes debate whether skiing or
snowshoeing is more fun. Of course, there’s no right answer,
but I found it interesting that my other companion, the photographer
Carl Heilman, chose to ski Hadley even though he used to make and
sell snowshoes. Score one for the skiers.
The trail begins ascending right away, so
Carl and I stuck skins on the bottom of our telemark skis in the
parking lot. Although the route is fairly steep, gaining 1,525 feet
over 1.8 miles, we had to herringbone in only a few spots. Most
of the time we walked uphill just as if we were wearing extra-long
snowshoes (the nap on the skins prevented us from slipping backward).
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Photo by Carl Heilman
II |
| The authors approach Hadley’s summit. |
At the very start, we passed through a small
grove of hemlocks, but after that we saw few conifers of any kind.
The hardwood forest is quite open, perhaps as a result of the fires
that ravaged the slopes of Hadley in the early 1900s. (A fire tower
built in 1917 still stands on the bare summit.) With the leaves
off the trees, we could see mountains behind us soon after we began
the climb.
Despite the recent snowfall, the trail was
well packed down. Evidently a number of snowshoers had been up Hadley
over the weekend—a testament to the popularity of this 2,675-foot
peak. And not only snowshoers: Carl and I couldn’t stop ogling
the ski tracks winding through the woods.
We climbed steadily for the first mile before
reaching West Mountain Ridge. Hadley is the middle and highest of
the three summits on the ridge. We now enjoyed views on both sides
as we traveled on a gentle grade. Hadley’s summit loomed straight
ahead. We still had about 500 feet of ascent to go. The trail took
a couple of sharp turns and then steepened as it climbed to the
summit ridge. We stopped while Carl took photos of Great Sacandaga
Lake glinting in the sunlight.
The tower on Hadley has been restored. In
summer, you can enjoy views from inside the cab. In winter, the
cab is locked, but you can still go up the steps for a 360-degree
panorama. Many people, however, will be satisfied with the views
from the ground.
Among the well-known mountains visible from
the summit are Pharaoh, Crane, Gore, Blue and Snowy. On a clear
day, such as the one we enjoyed, you can pick out the High Peaks
about 50 miles to the north. Carl pointed out, on either side of
Crane, Algonquin Peak and the Great Range. Mount Marcy, the state’s
highest peak, was hidden by Crane. If you didn’t know any
better, you’d swear there was nothing but wilderness as far
as the eye could see.
Now for the real fun. Mike left the summit
ahead of us while Carl and I took off our skins and prepared for
the descent. We dropped down to the summit ridge and then, to avoid
a steep section of trail, entered the woods and traversed back and
forth in knee-deep powder. Cutting graceful telemark turns, Carl
seemed at home in the woods. I got back on the trail and headed
straight down. Unfortunately, I kept going straight when the trail
turned right—it would be the first of several falls.
Carl and I coasted down the trail along West
Mountain Ridge before re-entering the woods. Our skis whispered
through the snow as we glided between the trees. We wandered quite
a ways and ended up above small cliffs. I found a ramplike opening
in the rock that led back to the trail. Carl went his own way.
The rest of the time I stuck close to the
trail, drifting into the powder whenever I needed to slow down.
The mountain is steep enough that if you don’t watch your
speed, you’ll soon be barreling out of control. Fortunately,
the old jeep trail is wide enough to allow you to make turns or
snowplow.
My hairiest moment came as I rounded a bend
and saw a man, woman and dog coming up the trail. The dog looked
ready to charge, but the owners called him off. I veered into the
powder and passed them without incident. The woman smiled broadly
as I went by and turned to watch me. She seemed astonished to see
a skier on the trail.
Yes, you have to keep an eye out for people
and dogs as well as rocks and trees when you ski down a mountain
trail, but once you get the hang of it, the experience on a good
day is thrilling and on a great day sublime. Carl and I had a sublime
day on Hadley.
Mike had a great time snowshoeing, by the
way. Poor guy doesn’t know what he’s missing.
By Mike Jarboe
I’ve never seen the sky so blue. At least
that’s what went through my mind as I caught glimpses of the
great azure expanse above me while tumbling through the snow down
Hadley Mountain.
I will tell you straight up that I am a flatlander,
and I’ve never had any use for winter sports. Played hockey
for years till my ankles gave out, but that’s an indoor game.
My idea of winter sports is cranking up the treadmill in the toasty
warmth of the health club while watching the off-track betting channel.
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Photo by Carl Heilman
II |
| Mike Jarboe takes a giant step for middle-aged
mankind on Hadley Mountain. It was his first winter ascent of
a summit—but not his last. |
When offered the chance to go on a snowshoeing
expedition up Hadley Mountain, a 1,525-foot climb, I had to give
it a little thought. I’d never been on snowshoes. In fact,
I never even understood the point of snowshoes. Tennis rackets on
my feet? Why do that? And my only mountain climbing experience was
conquering Jay—if you can call it conquering—with two
guides virtually holding my hand the entire way up and down. And
that was on good old dirt, not on slopes buried in white powder.
But the guides from that trip—Explorer
Editor Phil Brown and Adirondack photographer Carl Heilman—would
join me on the Hadley expedition, and I figured they’d serve
me well again. I agreed to go.
The first sign of trouble came when Phil called
a day before the trip to make sure I would be outfitted in a manner
befitting an Adirondack adventurer. He asked if I had good boots.
Um, no. I didn’t have any boots.
Long underwear? No, why would I have long
underwear? I can usually make it from my car into the house without
hypothermia setting in, and that’s about as long as I usually
spend outside between November and March.
A fleece? Well, I wouldn’t even have
known what a fleece was if my wife hadn’t given me one for
Christmas a couple of weeks before.
I foraged in the basement and found a pair
of snowboarding boots owned by my son. Phil helped me get the rest
of the gear together, and by the time we arrived to meet Carl at
the trailhead, I felt like a genuine Adirondacker.
Carl and Phil were going to ski the trail.
This astounded me. How could someone climb a mountain on skis? I’d
had enough trouble walking up Jay. My only experience on skis was
a forgettable incident as a young man fueled by alcohol, testosterone
and a desire to impress a young woman: A disastrous attempt at downhill
skiing ended in pain, humiliation and a miserable trip home without
the object of my fancy.
Phil’s and Carl’s skis looked
like instruments of speed and grace. Carl helped me put on the snowshoes,
which he’d crafted himself out of gleaming ash. Beautiful
creations they were, but not built for speed. I looked at the skis
and back at the snowshoes. This trip, clearly, would be a tortoise
vs. the hare affair, and I knew I was not going to be one of the
hares.
My son’s boots, at size 13, were a half-size
too large, but that seemed insignificant as I was strapped into
shoes that would put the prints of Bigfoot to shame. Suddenly, my
feet were about size 34.
Carl explained that the snowshoes would distribute
my weight over the snow so that I wouldn’t sink deeply. My
only experience with anything similar was watching a young genius
at Woodstock who, when confronted by a slippery stretch of mud,
tied two flat plastic crates to his feet and went gliding over the
muck like a champ.
My mother always told me to pick my feet up
when I walk. A drill sergeant once gave me the same advice, but
not quite as lovingly. This advice came to mind as I quickly found
that when you don’t pick your feet up while shod in snowshoes,
you fall down. OK, Mom, lesson learned at last. And from my prone
position, a tortoise’s-eye view, I watched as Carl and Phil,
the hares, ascended with little trouble.
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Map by Nancy Bernstein |
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When I came to a fallen tree, Carl told me
to step on the log with one foot, balance myself and hop over. Gingerly,
I placed my left snowshoe on the tree and felt it glide forward
over a thin veneer of ice. And I fell down again. So I hopped over
the tree in a standing broad jump. And I fell down.
On a steep section, Carl showed me how to
herringbone, a maneuver skiers use when going uphill. I aped his
gait, pushing my feet out at crazy angles, and made some good progress
on the incline.
“This ham-boning really works,”
I said proudly.
“Herringbone,” Carl said,
and that was the last time this flatlander tried to sound like I
had any idea what I was doing.
After about 20 minutes, the tortoise found
himself tripping and falling less and less. The hares kept up their
graceful ascent. But even they fell down a few times, and I realized
that falling down is an integral part of any outdoor winter sport.
The trick is to get up in once piece.
On a relatively flat ridge near the summit,
I decided to try running. Or what passes for running in the hardy
outdoorsman’s equivalent of clown shoes. I usually run about
7 miles per hour on my daily jogs. On the ridge, I was working just
as furiously and going 2 miles per hour at best before I fell down.
Hadley’s summit fairly glowed when I
saw it. What a beautiful sight on a beautiful winter’s day!
Great Sacandaga Lake, its frozen surface laced with snowmobile tracks.
Baldhead Mountain, about seven miles due north. Gore Mountain, its
ski runs clearly visible in the distance. And the Green Mountains
off to the east. I wondered if Ethan Allen had outfitted his troops
with snowshoes before they set out to help win our independence.
“Little bony up here,” Carl
said as he walked across the top near the fire tower. I tramped
over to see what he was talking about and wound up on ice-coated
rock, which sent me clattering out of control toward the mountain’s
edge. Bony means no snow over rock, I reckoned, as I brought myself
under control before taking an awfully long tumble.
Going down would be easier, I figured, and
to some extent I was right. But downhill meant faster, especially
for the skiers. Carl and Phil gave me a big head start, and the
Adirondack re-enactment of the tortoise and the hare fable continued.
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Photo by Carl Heilman |
| Explorer editor Phil Brown gets the ski
bum’s rush on Hadley Mountain. |
After our trip, Phil said he felt sorry for
me as he watched me plod down the mountain on snowshoes while he
and Carl glided on their skis. Nonsense. I felt sorry for them as
they rocketed down at speeds that commanded all their attention
just to keep from slamming into a tree. That meant they didn’t
have the leisure to enjoy the surroundings as much as I did.
Another thing I like about snowshoes: I could
not get lost if I tried. I have a terrible sense of direction and
don’t dare venture into the woods without someone to lead
me out. But the ridiculously large snowshoe prints provided a trail
even I couldn’t miss.
Since orienteering was no problem, I began
chugging along at such a clip that I found it difficult to keep
my snowshoes out of each other’s way. That’s when I
took my longest tumble of the day, rolling down the mountainside,
azure sky above, snow below, over and over. I lay silent for a minute
afterward and enjoyed the quiet. The wind whipped up and shot through
the beech trees. The stubborn dried leaves responded with a symphony
of sound as a lone raven laughed at me in eerily appropriate accompaniment.
I righted myself. Soon, with a twin schuss,
the hares caught up to the tortoise. The race would be a draw, or
at least that’s what I would call it.
Would I do the snowshoe thing again? Most
definitely, despite all the time I spent prone and wallowing in
the white coat on the side of Hadley. For once, both the tortoise
and the hare won. |