Sunday, March 27, 2016

Easter You Need To Decided On A Day


It is Easter...well that is what the calendar says. Don’t get me wrong I have nothing against Easter. As a kid I loved to color and hunt eggs and get Easter Baskets with candy. I also remember some wonderful family Easter dinners. At one time Easter was a least third maybe even second on the holiday calendar. While I know it is still important to some, but for me it might not even be in the Top Five of my holiday list. I think on of the main reasons is they keep moving it around. This year it was in March, but just two years ago it was in mid-to-late April (420 to be exact). 

Lamb roast from 2014.

So, I think they just need to find one day for Easter let’s say in early April. I know, I know all of the religious stuff, but that is just my opinion on how to make it more popular. Hey I am not the only one who thinks this. It is better than what Pete, my hiking rabbit, would do and get rid of it all together (he hates Easter). Anyway, Deb and I had a nice Easter dinner. Since Dad and Terry decided to stay in Virginia we scaled back the dinner. We had lamb steaks (mine with schezuan pepper rub) roasted potatoes with onion and carrots and green beans. Since I have been sick no wine, just grape juice. So I hope everybody had a nice Pagan Fertility Day.

Our dinner

Lamb steaks

Roasted potatoes

Dinner...

...& desert

It Is March & That Means AT Thru-Hiking Season & Another Leave No Trace Blog


Well, it is March and that means it is Thru-hiking Season on the Appalachian Trail (AT). While this is an annual event, something else has also and that is a Wood Booger rant about trash on the trail. In 2014 I wrote one in mid-March on litter that I found out hiking. Last year I wrote not one, but two blogs after encountering trash on the trail and reading of people leaving food out for hikers unsecured (you know from bears). Anyway, it is 2016 and I wondered how long it would be before I had to come back to this subject and I didn’t even make out of March.
I was reading a story on the Appalachian Trails Facebook page that said people at Mountain Crossing (in Georgia) had already hauled out 300 pounds of trash from the AT in the Neel Gap area (which includes Blood Mountain). Just let that sink in 300 pounds!

Picture from Appalachian Trails

I know on two of my AT hikes in February I hauled out half bag of trash (I carry a small garbage bag these days) and this was before thru-hiking had really got rolling (it doesn’t get to East Tennessee until early April). On my last trip out to the Humps I thought I might have made it without having to carry out any refuse, but in Yellow Mountain Gap I picked up a plastic bottle. Oh, but that wasn’t the best thing...no someone had tossed a sleep pad just off the AT, this was the largest item I have packed out to date. I get tried of having to say this and I know it is not every AT hiker, but remember there are not any people paid to pick up after you. Maybe your mommy does that at home, but it doesn’t work that way in the woods. So, remember, like I said last year, pack your shit out and Leave No Trace!!!! I don't know if these blogs make any difference, but they make me feel better.+

Friday, March 25, 2016

Tray Mountain From....


This is the last in my series of From....Blogs on the Georgia Giants, Tray Mountain. Coming in at 4,430 feet it is the second tallest mountain on the Georgia Appalachian Trail (AT), just 28 feet shorter than Blood Mountain. It also makes up what I call the Triple Crown of the Georgia AT (the other two are Springer & Blood Mountains). Being an AT mountain makes it special, but the other thing that does (IMHO) is it is more remote than the other Georgia Giants, Brasstown Bald, Blood Mountain and Rabun Bald. You can drive up a long and rough Forest Service Road to Tray Gap and hike a mile up. The other drive is 2.5 miles to Indian Grave Gap, which has a creek forge and then over a four mile round-trip hike. Most people hike to the top of Tray from either Unicoi Gap or Andrews Cove Campground, but they are over 10 and 9 miles respectively. I hiked to the top of Tray Mountain in April of 2014 and went up via Andrews Cove and the AT. There is something unique at the summit as there are three U.S. Geological Marker. So here is a From...for the last of the Georgia Giants.

....Tray Mountain

April 23, 2014: U.S. Geological Marker #1

April 23, 2014: U.S. Geological Marker #2

April 23, 2014: U.S. Geological Marker #3

April 23, 2014: Summit

April 23, 2014: Southwest Vista

April 23, 2014: Brasstown Bald & Northwest Vista

April 23, 2014:  North Vista

April 23, 2014: AT Outcrop (0.1 Miles)

....Tray Gap

April 23, 2014: Tray Gap Sign (0.43 Miles)

April 23, 2014: Parking Area (0.44 Miles)

...Appalachian Trail Near Tray Gap

April 23, 2014: First Outcrop (0.63 Miles)

April 23, 2014: Second Outcrop (0.64 Miles)

....Indian Grave Gap

December 18, 2014: From the AT just above the Parking Area (1.8 Miles)

....Rocky Mountain

December 18, 2014: From the AT (2.6 Miles)

....Brasstown Bald

October 17, 2014: Observation Deck (8.8 Miles)

....Cowrock Mountain

October 17, 2014: Main Outcrop (11.3 Miles)

....Yonah Mountain

February 5, 2015: Main Rock Face (11.4 Miles)

....Wolf Laurel Top

October 17, 2014: North Vista (12 Miles)

....Blood Mountain

March 21, 2015: North Vista (15 Miles)

....Pinnacle Knob

December 11, 2014: Rock Outcrop (19 Miles)

....Rabun Bald

November 11, 2014: CCC Tower (25 Miles)
....Sawnee Mountain

October 4, 2014: Indian Seats (47.5 Miles)

....Devil's Courthouse (BRP)

October 8, 2013: Summit Overlook (56.5 Miles)

Thursday, March 24, 2016

A Change In Seasons: Summer & Winter In The High Country Of GSMNP


It has been quite a while since I have done a Compare and Contrast Blog on A Change in Seasons on a particular hiking place, the last time was October of 2014 with one about the Roan Highlands. This time it is the High Country of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP), and to be specific the stretch of the Appalachian Trail (AT) from Newfound Gap to Charlies Bunion and back. I first hiked this incredible section of the AT back in June of 2015. The trail then was almost at high summer. The second trip was just last month when I hiked a snow covered winter trail. I have to say the contrast was stark but both were beautiful in their unique ways. Oh, there will be a couple of photos in the summer half from my day at Clingmans Dome and Newfound Gap from June of 2013.
So, it is time to bring this blog out of mothballs for A Change of Seasons in the high country of the Smokies.

Newfound Gap

June, 2015: Famous overlook

February, 2016

June, 2015: View from...

...overlook in February, 2016

Hazy view of Mt. LeConte in summer...

...clearer in the winter

June 2015, North Carolina vista...

...& in February, 2016

State-line sign in June 2013...

...in winter almost three years later

Trailhead this past June...

....now February 2016

AT To The Sweat Heifer Creek Junction

June, 2015: Headed up the green trail...

...now with ice in February

June, 2015

February, 2016

Ridge-line vista in summer...

...& winter

AT tree in middle of trail in summer...

...now winter

June, 2015: Two white blazes...

...same spot with snow

Just boots here...

...now crampons maybe needed

Summer...

...winter

Another summer vista...

....winter view

Sign at junction....

...now with snow

Sweat Heifer Creek Junction To Boulevard Trail Junction

June, 2015

February, 2016

Summer tunnel...

...still there in winter

Green of summer...

...snow of winter

At the Boulevard Trail junction in June...

...back in February

Boulevard Trail Junction To Ice Water Springs Shelter

June, 2015

February, 2016

Sign points the way in summer...

...& winter

The shelter in June...

...now living up to the name of Ice Water

June vista at the shelter...

...now in February

From Ice Water Springs Shelter To Charlies Bunion

June, 2015

February, 2016

The trail in summer...

...now winter

Where I am headed on both trips....

...Charlies Bunion

Trail cuts a green path...

...now through the snow

Big tree in summer...

...& winter

Hazy of summer...

...clear of winter

Sea of green...

...now white

Final stretch to the Bunion in summer...

...& winter

Charlies Bunion & Fodderstack

Whether summer...

...or winter, watch those kids!

Summer path to the Bunion...

...& the winter

Standing on the Bunion in June...

...sitting in February

June, 2015

February, 2016

From Fodderstack above the Bunion in summer...

...& winter

Charlies Bunion To The Boulevard Trail Junction

Headed back in June...

...& February

Green

White

Summer path...

& winter

Path up in June...

...& February

It was slick in June...

...but it was in February

Summer

Winter

Back at the Boulevard Trail junction...

...now with snow.

Boulevard Trail To Newfound Gap

June, 2015

February, 2016

Tree on the trail in summer....

...& winter

Mowed grass...

...snow

Summer AT

Winter AT

Trail tree...

...eight months later

Back to the Gap in summer...

...& winter

Bonus AT Headed South From Newfound Gap

June, 2013

February, 2016

Green of summer

White of winter

Trail is beautiful in summer...

...or winter