A trail to take your breath away
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Photo by Paul Grondahl
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| Tony Goodwin maps out his proposed trail. |
Goodwin proposes a long path over 20 summits
By Paul Grondahl
Tony Goodwin’s short, powerful legs are
churning up a steep, 1,000-foot trail to Brown Mountain in the Tongue
Mountain Range above Lake George. Perspiration dapples his wind-burned
brow. Yellow and orange maple leaves rustle in the wake of his battered,
split-at-the-seams leather hiking boots.
Atop an overlook summit on a brisk and stunningly
clear late-autumn morning, Goodwin pauses to shed a layer of clothing,
catch his breath, sip cold water and drink in this sumptuous view
of “the Queen of American Lakes.”
“There’s nothing better than being
on a trail on a day like this,” says Goodwin, 52, of Keene,
a former schoolteacher who has made his living in the Adirondacks
for the past 25 years by maintaining trails, promoting cross-country
skiing and writing guidebooks.
Goodwin is an avid hiker (he climbed the 46
High Peaks by age 11) who expects a reward equal to his effort.
“If I’m going to spend a lot of hours and exert a lot
of energy hiking a trail,” he says. “I want the payoff
of a great view at the end of the climb. I think it’s human
nature to want to reach the summit. Why? Because it’s there.”
Nowadays, Goodwin—who maintains the
35-mile Jackrabbit Ski Trail as executive director of the Adirondack
SkiTouring Council—is floating the idea of creating a new
long-distance Eastern Summits Trail that would traverse nearly two
dozen mountaintops across 80 miles of the eastern Adirondacks.
Goodwin’s proposed route would begin
in the Tongue Mountain Range at Lake George and continue north through
the Pharaoh Lake Wilderness, Hammond Pond Wild Forest, Dix Mountain
Wil-derness, Giant Mountain Wilderness and Jay Mountain Wilderness
before making a sharp dogleg right at the end to its terminus at
Poke-O-Moonshine overlooking Lake Champlain. Summits covered would
include Pharaoh, Owl Pate, Niagara, Camels Hump, Bear, Rocky Peak
Ridge, Giant, Owl Head Lookout, Knob Lock, Hurricane, Jay, Death
and Bluff.
Roughly 90 percent of the proposed trail—from
Tongue Mountain to the Jay Mountain Wilderness—is on public
land. Only the last section to Poke-O would require new acquisitions
or easements. Also, its route, while not as remote and wild as parts
of the Northville-Placid Trail, would include just eight road crossings.
One minor challenge is how to cross a narrow section of Paradox
Lake. Impractical to create a lengthy detour around the lake, a
solution could be as simple as leaving a few aluminum rowboats on
either side and relying on the honor system. But above all, the
Eastern Summits Trail would reward a moderate hiker with incomparable
views along the whole way, including from the highest points, the
summits of Rocky Peak Ridge (4,420 feet) and Giant (4,627 feet).
“Now, look at this; here’s what
I’m talking about,” Goodwin says, pausing atop a bare
rock ridge of the Tongue Mountain Range Trail between Brown Mountain
and Five Mile Mountain. It’s a two-sided spectacle. Gaze to
the southeast and the scenic Lake George Narrows and a necklace
of emerald islands glisten in the late-morning sun. To the northwest,
the hills roll out like waves that wash past Catamount, First Brother,
Second Brother, Third Brother, Little Stevens, Stevens.
.jpg) |
Photo by Carl Heilman |
| The Eastern Summits Trail would begin
in the south on Tongue Mountain overlooking Lake George. |
“There’s something so wonderful
and expansive about being able to see for miles and miles, from
mountain to mountain,” Goodwin says, comparing it to an ocean’s
sense of vastness.
Goodwin, author of Guide to the High Peaks
and Classic Adirondack Ski Tours, both for the Adirondack
Mountain Club (ADK), considers his proposed summits trail an alternative
that will help reduce heavy use in the High Peaks and attract those
who seek the high ground and relish the sweeping vistas not found
on the 120-mile lowland route of the Northville-Placid Trail (the
only true, long-distance trail in the Adirondacks). Goodwin believes
a summits trail would draw a healthy mix of hikers, from families
with young children looking for a moderate weekend journey to seasoned
backpackers hankering for the adventure of a weeklong end-to-end
marathon. The creation of trails to the summits of several currently
trailless peaks would open these areas to intermediate hikers for
the first time and would foster a variety of additional day-hike
experiences.
“A trail that draws hikers away from
the High Peaks and guarantees good views is definitely worth considering,”
says John Sheehan, a spokesman with the Adirondack Council. “Our
only concern would be the amount of tree cutting necessary to make
trails and to make sure any new trails are properly constructed.”
The summits trail is not a new concept. It
was included in a 1996 report by ADK called “The Adirondack
Park Non-Motorized Recreation Plan.” Goodwin worked on the
committee that drew up the report, but the genesis of a summits
trail is at least four decades old and probably older. In the 1930s,
Bob Marshall, a pioneering champion of wilderness, discussed a long
trail in the Adirondacks that shared a similar focus on high ground
and great views. Goodwin says he picked up on the concept from his
former neighbor, Carolyn Schaefer, wife of the late Adirondack preservationist
Paul Schaefer. In the 1960s and 1970s, she ran an outfitter company
in Keene and sought an easier route for backpackers as an alternative
to the rugged trails in the Mount Marcy region.
Goodwin resurrected Schaefer’s plan
after a 25-year hiatus. The summits trail proposal is just one entry
in the non-motorized recreation plan submitted by the ADK—which
amounts to a kind of hiking wish list. “Five years ago, after
the plan came out, a lot of people told me it was very interesting,”
Goodwin says. “It had support, but as is so often the case,
it was pretty much dropped after that.”
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Map by Nancy Bernstein |
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Now, though, as the state Department of Environmental
Conservation (DEC) is drawing up unit management plans (UMPs) for
the Adirondack Park, the timing is critical for renewing a discussion
of the summits trail idea. “This is absolutely the time to
be discussing and weighing that proposal,” says Neil Woodworth,
the Adirondack Mountain Club’s counsel and deputy director,
who worked on the ADK plan with Goodwin in 1996. “It’s
complicated because it involves multiple UMPs, but it deserves to
be on the table right now.”
While the ADK has not taken a formal position
on the summits trail, Woodworth likes the underlying concept. “We
should be providing more recreation opportunities in Wild Forest
areas,” says Woodworth. Yet he adds that he and others have
reservations about bringing more hikers to the trailless tract of
the southern Dix Mountain Wilderness. “There are some beautiful
peaks in there, and they are not that well-traveled,” he said.
“I’d hate to see them overrun.” He also notes
that it’s one of the few places left in the greater High Peaks
region where hikers need route-finding skills to explore the wilderness.
“If you mark a trail through there, that experience will be
lost,” he said.
Goodwin concedes that the trail would attract
more hikers to that region, but he argues that the state needs to
provide more alternatives to the High Peaks. In any case, he doubts
that the peaks in the southern Dix region will get the crowds seen
on such popular peaks as Marcy, Algonquin and Cascade. “They’re
not 4,000-foot peaks,” he said, “and although their
views are nice, they are not quite the equal of the High Peaks.”
ADK prepared the report on non-motorized recreation
as part of a larger DEC report on recreation in the Park. Because
DEC never finished its report, Woodworth said, the club’s
report has remained dormant. “At some point we may update
it and release it on its own,” he added.
Without ADK’s support, the summits trail
is not likely to become a reality. There are other hurdles as well.
One is that the state is short on cash as a result of a lingering
recession and the fiscal crisis that followed the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks. “We don’t have a dime from the state for stewardship
money,” Woodworth says.
And then there is the question of who will
organize and carry out the trail construction. Goodwin has the experience
through the Ausable Club’s Adirondack Trail Improvement Society
and the Jackrabbit Ski Trail, but says he’s already stretched
too thin as fund-raiser, promoter and trail-maintenance supervisor.
“It strikes a responsive chord in people, but it would need
a major commitment of state money and volunteers’ time,”
he says. He figures the summits trail could be built in five years
with high energy, iron resolve and “a few hundred thousand
dollars.”
Goodwin’s idea is one that excites the
doyenne of Adirondack guidebook authors, Barbara McMartin. “This
is a nice way to increase public access to these summits,”
she said. “The eastern Adirondacks has more than its fair
share of bare-topped mountains with magnificent views.”
As we stop for lunch on the Tongue Mountain
Trail, Goodwin reclines on a sun-warmed rock overlook near Five
Mile Mountain and eats a sandwich. Mostly, we chew silently and
marvel at the view of Lake George unraveling at our feet far below.
Goodwin pauses between bites at one point and shakes his head in
disbelief. “Can you believe the view?” he asks. “I
rest my case.”
Feedback wanted
What do you think of the idea of an Eastern
Summits Trail? Now’s the time to put in your two cents, while
the state Department of Environmental Conservation is preparing
unit management plans for the Adirondacks. You can learn more about
this and other UMPs here.
Send comments to Karyn Richards at DEC:
E-mail: r5ump@gw.dec.state.ny.us
Postal: NYSDEC, Box 296, Route 86,
Ray Brook, NY 12977-0296
Phone: (518) 897-1211
The Adirondack Mountain Club’s position
likely will be influential. To let the club know your opinion, send
written comments to:
E-mail: ADKinfo@adk.org
Postal: 814 Goggins Road,
Lake George, NY 12845
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