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Photo by Phil Brown |
Brian Mann hugs the
shore along a wild stretch of the Osgood River. |
Osgood as it gets
By Phil Brown
You’re never far from the madding crowd
as you paddle down the Jones Pond outlet to Osgood Pond. It just
feels that way.
The outlet is the first leg of an enchanting
canoe trip that has a little bit of everything: meandering streams,
big ponds, small ponds, even a few old canals. It makes for a curious
blend of wildness and civilization. You’ll be tailing a pair
of mergansers on an untamed river one moment and passing a presidential
retreat the next.
Here’s something else to whet your curiosity:
In a 1988 report for the Adirondack Council, ecologist George Davis
lists 38 sites in the state-owned Forest Preserve that he regards
as “outstanding examples” of natural communities—and
you can see two of them on this trip.
I did the 11-mile paddle in late April 2003
with Brian Mann, a reporter for North Country Public Radio. You
can shorten the excursion by six miles or so by skipping the Osgood
River, but you’ll be cutting out what I regard as the highlight
of the trip. In any case, you’ll need two cars—one at
the put-in at Jones Pond north of Gabriels, one at the takeout at
Church Pond in Paul Smiths.
We slipped into the water at a small camping
area on the northern shore of Jones Pond. Since the opposite shore
is bordered by Forest Preserve, the pond looks quite wild from this
spot, but as you move out on the water, you’ll notice a few
houses on the eastern shore. If you turn around, in fact, you’ll
see a bright-yellow house on a hillside that sticks out like a sore
thumb. My advice is not to turn around.
In a few minutes, we started down the outlet.
It twists and turns on the edge of a deep marsh crisscrossed by
channels. This is home to herons, bitterns, ducks, red-winged blackbirds
and numerous other birds. In his report, Davis notes that this marsh
of cattails and bulrushes “provides the greatest wetland fauna
diversity known in the Adirondack Park.”
This part of the outlet stays close to the
road, so you may hear a car go by. Presently, you’ll pass
under the road and find yourself entering a narrower stream that
winds through an evergreen forest. You may have to navigate around
a fallen tree, paddle over a few beaver dams and, if the water is
low, climb out and haul your canoe after you. It was on this stretch
that we saw our first pair of common mergansers. They were swimming
maybe 30 yards ahead of us. As we got near, they took flight and
disappeared. After we rounded a bend in the river, there they were
again, swimming up ahead—and the whole scene unfolded once
more.
We reached Osgood Pond in about 45 minutes.
The water was slightly choppy on this breezy day. If you’re
going to the Osgood River, bear right toward a point with a small
building. From a distance, the structure looks like a gazebo, but
as you get closer it reveals itself as a Japanese teahouse with
glass walls. It belongs to White Pine Camp, where President Calvin
Coolidge summered in 1926.
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Map by Nancy Bernstein |
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Beyond the point, the lake narrows as it funnels
into the Osgood. Just before entering the river, we saw a loon dive
and resurface. The river is wide enough at first to afford a view
of 3,300-foot Debar Mountain, one of the major peaks of the northern
Adirondacks. For about two miles, the shoreline on the left is a
spongy mat of moss, sedges, shrubs, black spruce and insect-eating
pitcher plants—a boreal ecosystem that Davis says “reminds
the canoeist of the Canadian muskeg.” This is the second of
the exemplary communities, and it, too, is rich in birdlife.
You can meander about three miles downriver,
where passage is blocked by a small, manmade dam of boulders and
downed trees. Paul Jamieson, author of Adirondack Canoe Waters:
North Flow, reports that hardy souls occasionally continue
beyond the dam, bushwhacking through the woods, until reaching the
lower Osgood after another three miles. Thence they paddle to Meacham
Lake. Bill Frenette of Tupper Lake, who made the trip several years
ago, confirms that the Osgood vanishes temporarily in between the
two navigable sections. “The river came to a beaver flow and
disappeared into a sinkhole, much like a drain in a bathtub,”
he tells us. “I had to hunt around to see where the river
resumes.”
If you’re like most people, you’ll
turn back at the dam. Make sure on the return to bear right at the
confluence of Blind Brook. Paddlers have been known to continue
straight here and go up the brook. Upon re-entering Osgood Pond
and passing the teahouse, head southwest toward a point and a neighboring
island. You may notice several camps scattered along the southern
shore, but unlike the house overlooking Jones Pond, they blend well
into their natural surroundings. After rounding the point, angle
slightly left to enter a quiet bay. Then swing right to find the
entrance to a narrow canal at the west end of the bay.
Jamieson notes that the canal was dug by hand
around 1900 so summer residents of Osgood Pond could paddle or row
to St. John’s Church for Sunday services or to Paul Smith’s
Hotel for dinner. Passing beneath the canal’s evergreen arches
is a charming experience. The canal leads to Little Osgood Pond,
which takes only minutes to cross. A shorter canal leads to Church
Pond and the takeout.
DIRECTIONS:
Church Pond is located just off
NY 86 about 0.2 mile east of NY 30 in Paul Smiths. Park off to the
side of the dirt road near the dock. From Church Pond, drive less
than a mile further east on NY 86 to County 31 (Brighton Town Hall
is on the corner). Turn left and go 2.5 miles to the Jones Pond
put-in on the right. |