Nun-da-ga-o Ridge
Soaking up the scenery and serenity
of the Soda Range
By Dick Beamish
Looking for a laid-back jaunt along streams,
through the woods and over a mostly open ridge? A hike that offers
some of the best views of the popular High Peaks, yet is well removed
from the crowds that frequent them?
Try this six-mile loop in the Soda Range, starting way up on East
Hill above Keene, where you begin and end the trip at Crow Clearing.
The name Soda Range supposedly comes from the early settlers who
burned hardwoods on these mountainsides to produce soda ash, from
which they made soap. The more romantic name for the ridge we’re
heading for is Nun-da-ga-o, said to be Indian for “hill of
the wind spirit.”
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Map by Nancy Bernstein |
Rachel and I decide to do the route counter-clockwise,
to put the two-mile approach to Weston Mountain behind us early
in the day and enjoy a short, more dramatic finish later on. Signing
in at the trail register, we see that two other hikers preceded
us an hour-and-a-half earlier. We cross a brook and head toward
Hurricane Mountain, the firetower peak that reigns over this pocket
of the Park.
After a mostly level mile, we reach the Gulf Brook lean-to where
the Hurricane trail forks right. We go left and follow along one
and then another stream, arriving at the outlet of Lost Pond in
about 20 minutes. Rachel, in the lead, keeps running into new spider
webs strung across the narrow trail, quick reconstruction work considering
that others had passed through here less than two hours before.
We investigate the outlet end of the pond, where beavers had long
ago backed up the water with a dam that is now so grown over you
can’t see the sticks that formed the original structure. With
water flowing through rather than over the obstruction, it’s
clear why Lost Pond is a lot smaller now than when our USGS topo
map was made 23 years ago—and why it will be a truly lost
pond one of these days unless the beavers get busy again.
At the other end is the lean-to with an Adirondack Mountain Club
plaque dated May 30, 1955. It reads: “Dedicated to our beloved
friend Walter Biesemeyer—The peace of heart and mind he found
in the wilderness will be forever shared by those who lift up their
eyes unto the hills.” Another plaque below it adds: “And
in memory of his grandson, David C. Bailey, 1969-1995.”
On the way up East Hill toward the trailhead we had passed the Mountain
House, where Marion and Walter Biesemeyer hosted Adirondack Mountain
Club members over the years, including, back in the winter of 1947,
my father and mother and me. My family had recently moved to Albany
from New York City, and this visit was my introduction to this part
of the Adirondacks (and also to cross-country skiing). I remember
being quite envious of the Biesemeyer children and the idyllic life
I imagined they lived in these mountains.
In a notebook in the Lost Pond lean-to, the first of the year’s
nine entries so far began in mid-June with Peter Fish of Keene:
“Brought register book in doing trail side cutting and insect
slapping alternatively—not really winning on either. On to
Weston.” Pete was the state’s High Peaks ranger until
his recent retirement, but luckily for us and all others who pass
this way, he keeps hiking and clearing trails. Though he has climbed
Mount Marcy more than 500 times, it’s known that the much-lower
Soda Range is one of his favorite haunts.
Another register entry catches our eye: “1st visit this season,
Nundagoa Ridge trail is clear and beautiful.” Signed Anne
Bailey. Is she the mother of David, daughter of Walter and sister
of the boys whose lifestyle I admired 54 years earlier? (Yes, it
turns out, she is.)
The trail up Weston Mountain passes through a forest in transition
from sun-loving white birches (pioneers that follow a forest fire)
to shade-tolerant balsams that brush gently against us on both sides
of the path. Finally we begin to ascend in earnest—we are
on a mountain at last—and soon reach what appears to be the
3,195-foot summit, the highest point on the Nun-da-ga-o Ridge. And
what a view! From the open ledges we look out and up at most of
the 46 High Peaks, from Rocky Peak Ridge in the south to Whiteface
and Esther in the north. Nearby, Hurricane dominates the southern
horizon and blocks out Giant, which will emerge as we progress along
the ridge. Below us is Lost Pond, with the light green bogs encroaching
around the edges.
While lunching on Weston we watch a hawk circle overhead and listen
to the serenade of hermit thrushes below. Their music will accompany
us most of the way. After lounging for an hour or so—today
we have vowed to stop and smell the flowers—we follow the
trail into a shady, luxuriant depression between Weston and the
next vantage point. Though unmarked and lightly trodden, the trail
is easy to follow. But when Rachel looks back she can hardly see
me amid the ferns and other vegetation; she imagines we’re
wandering through a lush rain forest.
Then up into the open sunlight again, where the dry reindeer moss
covers the ground like snow. Suddenly we meet two hikers coming
toward us, an elderly man and a somewhat younger woman who smells
strongly of citronella, the pre-DEET bug repellent whose nostalgic
aroma reminds me of canoe camping with my father.
“If we get lost,” says the man, “it will be easy
to find us. Just follow the smell.”
When they ask if we like the hike, we wax effusive. “Beautiful
trail,” says Rachel. “Incredible views,” I enthuse.
“Don’t use up your adjectives,” the woman tells
us. “It just gets better as you go along.”
More vistas—there’s Giant now, to the right of Hurricane,
and farther back Dix Mountain with its distinctive slides, Nippletop
with its unmistakable summit, the old buddies Colvin and Blake,
the Great Range from Lower Wolf Jaws all the way up to Marcy, Big
Slide with its Half- Dome-like profile, the Cascade, Porter and
Blueberry massif, the green ski trails and chalky slide-scars on
Whiteface. Down below is the Ausable Valley, and on ahead is the
rest of the curving ridge.
At another opening we can look the other way across Lake Champlain
to Camel’s Hump in the Green Mountains. And there’s
the Jay Range only a few miles to the northeast, another ridge hike
that’s high on our list of things to do. Far to the north
is Lyon Mountain, from whose summit the city of Montreal is visible
on a clear day.
The trail dips into another saddle, where we startle a family of
ruffed grouse in the dense foliage. We count 12 birds wildly dispersing,
one, two and three at a time, in all directions. A winter wren,
one of many we hear along the trail, breaks into its long, trilling,
warbling song. I put the binoculars away and catch up with Rachel,
who has reached the next promontory and stretched out on a ledge,
her head resting on her backpack, contemplating the clouds. Eventually
we move on, down toward our starting point, with a short side trip
of 0.2 miles to the summit of Big Crow and another million-dollar
view for 50 cents worth of effort.
Nearing the parking area we exchange greetings with the only other
people we’ve seen all day—two hikers on their way up
to Big Crow. No doubt about it, the Soda Range is one of the best-kept
secrets in the Adirondacks. We vow to return on a cool, clear day
in late September or October, when the views will be even better
with the fall colors.
Send your comments to:
Rick Fenton, NYSDEC, Region 5,
P.O. Box 1316, Northville, NY 12134 or phone him at (518) 863-4545.
You also can e-mail suggestions on any tract of state land in
Region 5 (the eastern two-thirds of the Park) to r5ump@gw.dec.state.ny.us.
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