‘Hiking’ Category

An app for the Adirondack High Peaks

Posted on: December 29th, 2011 4 Comments

You and a friend finally reach the summit of Gothics, take in the glorious view, and begin to wonder what the names are of all the peaks around you. So your friend whips out an iPhone and starts tapping the screen.

Is he calling the local forest ranger for answers?

Not if he has installed the ADK46erNow app on his phone. Developed by Keith Kubarek, an enthusiastic Adirondack hiker, the app uses the phone’s GPS system to help people identify peaks in the viewshed of any of the forty-six High Peaks.

Adirondack 46er app for iPhone

46er app for the iPhone.

The app also contains basic facts about each of the High Peaks, including elevation and the feet of ascent and mileage from trailhead to summit; a logbook for keeping track of the peaks you’ve climbed; and links to the current weather at your location or at any of the High Peaks.

The program can be purchased for $4.99 at the App Store on Apple’s website. The hitch is that you must own an iPhone. I don’t, but I was able to download the app onto my iPod Touch to test the features in the office. Without the phone’s GPS capability, however, I was unable to use the app in the field.

The app’s home page has four options: “My Log Book,” “ADK 46er Now,” “High Peaks,” and “Weather.” The coolest feature, the electronic peak-finder, is found under the ADK 46er Now rubric.

If you select this option, your current GPS coordinates appear at the bottom of the screen. Three new options also appear: “Map,” “360° View,” and “Summit Stamp.”

For the peak-finder, select 360° View. The screen turns into a clear window with a red vertical line running down the middle. It’s as if you’re viewing the landscape through the phone’s camera. When the red line bisects one of the High Peaks in the vista, the peak’s name appears at the bottom of the screen. The function can be used not just on summits, but whenever you have a good view.

One shortcoming is that the app can identify only peaks within a five-mile radius. So if you’re on Mount Marcy, for example, it won’t tell you that the big mountain ten miles distant in the southwest is Santanoni Peak. Kubarek tried using a ten-mile radius, but the phone’s screen became too cluttered. He says he may give users the option of adjusting the viewing radius in a future version of the app.

You can get a better sense of how the peak-finder works by clicking this link to the developer’s website.

Other features include:

  • Summit Stamp. When you reach the top of a High Peak, it records the date and time of your ascent, the current weather, and your GPS coordinates.
  • High Peaks Sorter. It allows you to order the peaks by name, height, feet of ascent, or round-trip mileage to the summit. By selecting a summit, you can view it in a satellite image or on a topo or terrain map.
  • Map and Compass. You can pinpont your location on topo or terrain maps. The compass function is activated by tapping the circular logo on the home screen.

For an overview of all the features of ADK46erNow, click here.

Kubarek says he expects to add new features this year, including one that will allow hikers to e-mail trip notes and Summit Stamps to their friends and family. Those who purchase the app now will be able to update it for free when the new version comes out.

 

Review of La Sportiva Karakorum boots

Posted on: November 14th, 2011 1 Comment

A few years ago, I was asked to test a pair of La Sportiva Karakorum boots. They’re cool-looking boots, but they struck me at first as almost too rugged for ordinary hiking. I wondered what use I could put them to in the Adirondacks. Then it hit me: slide climbing.

La Sportiva bills the Karakorums as lightweight mountaineering boots, and that makes them ideal for scrambling up the rock slide paths that scar many of our High Peaks.

La Sportiva Karakorum boots

La Sportiva's Karakorum boot

The Karakorums also are great for hiking on Adirondack trails in early spring, when you’re likely to encounter mud, snow, ice, you name it. The boots are waterproof, and their stiff soles can accommodate crampons.

I have worn the Karakorums on a number of hikes, but the three that stick out are my ascents of the Eagle Slide on Giant Mountain, the Placid Slide on Whiteface Mountain, and the Trap Dike on Mount Colden (followed by a descent of Colden’s Southeast Slide). These were tough, all-day hikes, but at the end of each one, my feet still felt comfortable.

Experienced climbers know the approach is often harder than the ascent of the slide itself. If you don’t believe it, click here to read the account in the Adirondack Explorer of my ascent of the Placid Slide. We bushwhacked for a few hours up a streambed, hopping from one slippery rock to another.

The Karakorums truly excelled on the gnarly approaches. The Vibram soles gripped the stone, the stiff cuffs offered support on uncertain terrain, and the leather/rubber exterior kept my feet bone dry despite lots of walking in the water.

The Trap Dike is easier to get to than either slide, but it’s a more difficult climb—a class 4 in the Yosemite Decimal System. It involves ascending two waterfalls in a narrow chasm. Again, the Karakorums were perfect for this terrain. Some people may want to bring rock-climbing shoes for the steep new slide near the end of the dike. Likewise, I usually switch to climbing shoes for the Eagle as well.

The Karakorums do have a place in the Adirondacks, but I wouldn’t say they are useful only for slides and stream bushwhacks. They’d also be great for arduous backpacking trips where you are hiking long distances with a heavy pack.

Review of Kahtoola Microspikes

Posted on: November 4th, 2011 No Comments

If you do much hiking in early winter or spring, consider investing in a pair of Microspikes. They’re ideal for traveling on trails covered in hard-packed snow and ice.

In the shoulder seasons, the trails often lack enough snow for snowshoes but are too slippery for plain boots. In such conditions, you need to augment your traction. Crampons are one solution, but they often are overkill on hiking trails.

Kahtoola Microspikes

Kahtoola Microspikes sell for $59.

Made by Kahtoola, Microspikes weigh just 11.4 to 15.6 ounces, depending on which of the four sizes you buy. They consist of a tough elastic band (red or black) attached to a steel chain with small steel spikes (three-eighths of an inch long). Just stretch the band over your boot and go. Microspikes are compact enough that you can easily carry them in your pack until they’re needed. They sell for $59.

I have been very happy with my pair of Microspikes. I’ve used them numerous times to hike little Baker Mountain in Saranac Lake on my lunch hours (elevation gain, 900 feet). Often, I’ve passed other hikers struggling on the trail and trying not to slip. I’ve also used the spikes on longer hikes with excellent results.

Though designed with winter in mind, these mini-crampons are perfect for those in-between seasons, early spring and late fall, when trails are slippery but lack enough snow to warrant snowshoes. They allow you to continue hiking longer into the fall and begin hiking earlier in the spring.
My one complaint: Microspikes don’t fit well over telemark boots, but this is not a flaw that will concern hikers.

Review of ‘The Other 54′

Posted on: November 4th, 2011 1 Comment

What’s a mountain climber to do once he or she has summited the Adirondack Forty-Six, the Catskill Thirty-Five, and the Northeast 115? Create a new list, of course.

And so we have the Adirondack Hundred Highest—the obsession of hard-core hikers who don’t mind surrendering a few pints of blood in their quest to stand atop the region’s tallest mountains.

The Hundred Highest includes the forty-six High Peaks first climbed by Bob and George Marshall and their guide, Herb Clark, in the first quarter of the last century. All of these peaks now have marked trails or obvious herd paths, so climbing them is not as difficult as it was in the Marshalls’ day.

The Other 54 by Spencer Morrissey

'The Other 54' sells for $18.95.

Not so with most of the other fifty-four of the Hundred Highest. Thirty-nine of these peaks lack trails. Climbing them entails bushwhacking up streambeds, scrambling over or under fallen trees, and pushing through phalanxes of spruce that guard the summits. Those who undertake such a trek can expect to be poked, scratched, bruised, and bitten. It’s not for inexperienced hikers.

In 2007, Spencer Morrissey wrote a guidebook titled The Other 54 for adventurous souls aspiring to join the Hundred Highest club. He estimates that only forty or so people have done all the peaks. Those who qualify can request a patch from the Hundred Highest website.

Morrissey sold all 2,500 copies of the first edition of The Other 54 and has just come out with a second edition, which he published under his Inca-pah-cho Wilderness Guides imprint (the name derives from the Algonquin name for Long Lake, Morrissey’s hometown). It remains the only guidebook available to bushwhacking the pathless peaks.

The second edition updates trail conditions, describes several additional routes, and corrects many misspellings and grammatical errors (full disclosure: my son was the copy editor). In an improvement over the first edition, Morrissey arranges the chapters (one per peak) geographically rather than by the heights of the summits. This makes it easier to plan multi-peak treks. He could have made things even easier, though, by dividing the book into regions and including locater maps.

Most chapters include at least one black-and-white photograph. All include a topographical map showing the various routes to the summit. In the first edition, all the maps were grouped in a color gallery at the back of the book. The current layout is more convenient, but the tradeoff is the maps are black and white. 

One odd feature is that Morrissey repeats directions unnecessarily. In the chapter on Lost Pond Peak, for instance, he describes four routes to the summit, all starting on the same trail at Adirondak Loj. Instead of providing the driving directions once, he repeats them at the start of each route description. Likewise, sections of the route descriptions are repeated. It’s like déjà vu all over again.

Given the author’s enthusiasm and sense of humor, it’s easy to forgive the book’s shortcomings. Besides, whatever its flaws, The Other 54 is essential equipment for Hundred Highest aspirants.

A more serious criticism (whether justified or not) is that the book will lead to environmental degradation on summits that are now pristine, just as the Forty-Sixer craze led to the creation of herd paths.

“You simply can’t have thousands of people doing this, or even hundreds, and hope to maintain the resource or wilderness qualities of this place,” says Jim Close, an avid hiker who has climbed the Hundred Highest himself.

Since the Marshalls, more than seven thousand people have climbed the Forty-Six. They were rewarded with grand vistas on most of the summits. One wonders how many of these hikers would have wanted to endure an arduous bushwhack up Sawtooth No. 5 for a glimpse of the horizon through the trees.

Lows Lake paddlers’ map

Posted on: November 4th, 2011 2 Comments

The folks at Raquette River Outfitters know Lows Lake well, having guided trips there for years, and now they’ve put their knowledge down on paper—water-resistant paper.

In 2011, the Tupper Lake shop published a marvelously detailed color map that includes just about all you need to know for day trips and longer excursions in the Lows Lake region. It sells for $12.95.

The topographical map encompasses the entire length of the Bog River, from its headwaters near Clear Pond and Bog Lake, through Lows Lake and Hitchins Pond, and on to its mouth on Tupper Lake. State land is shaded green, while private land is white. Carry trails are red, and hiking trails are black. Other things shown include rapids, waterfalls, campsites, and dirt roads.

Lows Lake and Bog River map

The map of Lows Lake and Bog River sells for $12.95.

Flip the map over, and you find a wealth of information about campsites, hikes, put-ins, state regulations, and the region’s history—in essence, a miniature guidebook.

Paddlers who plan to camp at Lows Lake will appreciate the detailed descriptions of the campsites. Here’s what the map says about campsite 18: “Low, dry, beautiful open site with mature white pines. Popular site has a small grassy field to the east, a privy, a peninsula beach and windy westerly exposure. Can fit several large tents. Looks west.”

Obviously, Robbie Frenette and Ann Fleck, the owners of Raquette River Outfitters, are intimately acquainted with this gorgeous lake. But there is another paddlers’ map already on the market: the Adirondack Paddler’s Map, published by St. Regis Canoe Outfitters in Saranac Lake. Why do we need another?

In a word, convenience. the Adirondack Paddler’s Map covers a much larger region and consequently is four times the size of the Lows Lake map. Frenette says many paddlers who are just visiting Lows Lake find the bigger map unwieldy. Another advantage is that the Lows Lake map is larger scale and thus able to show a bit more detail.

One interesting note: if you compare the two maps, you will see significant differences in the shape of Lows Lake. Frenette says this is because his map-maker—Cushman Design Group in Vermont—used satellite imagery in drawing water bodies. “The shoreline is real accurate,” he said. “It’s not just taken off old maps.”

For example, the Adirondack Paddler’s Map shows Tomar Pond as a bay on the south side of Lows Lake, with a wide entrance. Frenette’s map shows it as more of a separate pond with a narrow outlet. A satellite photo on Google Maps suggests that the new map is more accurate.

Frenette plans to collaborate with Cushman on at least three other maps of similar design, including one that shows Little Tupper Lake and Lake Lila. This could be used in tandem with the Lows Lake map by paddlers making a forty-five-mile loop that includes Little Tupper, Lila, Lows, the Bog River, and Round Lake. Another map will show the Oswegatchie River and Cranberry Lake. This map, too, could be used with the Lows Lake map by paddlers traveling in a long loop. The other map will cover Long Lake and the Raquette River.

 

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