Ensign Cowell Shelter to Highway 16 in Waynesboro

Day 3
Thursday March 31
Ensign Cowell Shelter to Highway 16 in Waynesboro
12.4 miles  

We were up at 6:15 and leaving the Shelter by 7:45.  The path got somewhat more rocky after leaving the shelter.   We crossed a stream with a 2-board bridge  then we rock-hopped across another stream where Wait-up got his boots wet. 

There was about a mile of steep switch-back climb up to Raven Rock Shelter.  Then it was a slow rocky descent from High Rocks Trail down to Pen Mar Park.  It was about two miles of rocks with no ground to step on at all.  Foot pain!

 Then we reached the Mason-Dixon line!  This site, marked by a stone monument and a crudely constructed sign, signifies the historical survey line that separates Maryland from Pennsylvania, surveyed by Mason and Dixon 1763-67.

 
Somewhere along here, it dawned on one of us that we had parked our car at a spot about 5 miles from where we had originally planned and that was going to add that distance to our hike today.  We had our heart set on only 12.4, not 17 miles!   The shuttle drivers we knew lived too far away to have them come to us for only a 5-mile drive, so we did some brainstorming.  I am a member of a women’s Facebook hiking group so I decided to put up a post asking if anyone lived in the area who could give us a ride to our car from Highway 16.  Luckily and surprisingly, someone does and she agreed to meet us!  At 4 o'clock we made it to Highway 16 and had a short wait before Nancy and her husband arrived.  She was a trail angel.

 After three days and two nights in the woods, we were ready for a hotel bed and a shower and, of course, a good meal.  We drove to Greencastle Comfort Inn where we spent the night.

 

Ensign Cowell Shelter

















Rocky Run Shelter to Ensign Cowell Shelter

Day 2
Wednesday, March 30
Rocky Run Shelter to Ensign Cowell Shelter
15.7 miles
It was a cold night last night.  We had our 40 degree sleeping bags, fleece liners and bivy sacks. Wait-up wore his thermals and stayed warm; I didn't wear my thermals and I stayed cold.  Rocky Run Shelter, built in 2008, is a very pretty shelter with a pine wood floor and a sleeping loft so it will sleep up to 16.  We enjoyed having it to ourselves. 
Today’s trail showed us that Maryland has some rocks too (as well as Pennsylvania).  Several sections of the trail were very rocky, making the walking hard especially by the end of the day when my feet are bothering me and blisters are appearing. 
We saw lots of Civil War history today, including the Reno Monument, the spot where Union Major General Jesse Lee Reno and Confederate General Samuel Garland, Jr., were wounded mortally in the Battle of South Mountain, antecedent to Antietam, and the Stonewall Regiments Monument.  We passed through the Washington Monument State Park and came to the first monument to George Washington, a bottle-shaped structure built in 1827.  The observation deck on top of the monument reportedly provides magnificent views of the surrounding countryside.  Unfortunately, we were unable to enter due to construction of some sort going on.
 A pretty covered footbridge crosses I-70.
 
At 5 o'clock p.m. we reached Ensign Cowell Shelter. Phillip beat us there and already had his hammock hung, along with lots of other people.  The shelter appeared to be quite full, so we sought out a tent pad on the hill in front of the shelter.  Wait-up backtracked .2 miles to the water spring box, which we had bypassed on the way in.   The water in the spring box was not flowing so he went back to the road to get water from the running spring.
 
 
 
Rocky Run Shelter

Rocky Run Shelter

Reno Monument

Washington Monument

View behind Washington Monument

View behind Washington Monument







I-70 Footbridge

I-70 Footbridge

View from Annapolis Rock

Annapolis Rock


Annapolis Rock

Rocky trail in Maryland

Rocky Trail in Maryland

Harpers Ferry to Rocky Run Shelter


Day One
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Harpers Ferry to Rocky Run Shelter
15.4 miles

Ah, we are in Harper’s Ferry again!  Ready to head north across the Potomac River Bridge into Maryland and beyond.  A year ago we hiked into Harper’s Ferry from the south, completing a 239 mile hike from the James River Foot Bridge. 

Harpers Ferry, West Virginia
 Last night we stayed at the Comfort Inn in Hagerstown, Maryland and was pleasantly surprised to find a LaHacienda Mexican Restaurant located beside the hotel.  We have several LaHacienda restaurants in our home town area and they are some of our favorites.  Of course, there turned out to be no connection with this one, but the food was very good and the service was excellent.
 This morning we left the Comfort Inn with the intentions of driving to PA 16 and leaving our car there for three days.  We had been trying to check on the safety of the parking areas and had some question about this one, so at the last minute we decided to change our plans and drive to another parking area located within a park.  The problem with this change escaped us at the moment but gave us a little problem at the end of the three day hike, making our last day about 5 miles longer than intended.  More about that later. 
 
Mark Cusic, who shuttled us last year on our last little section up to Harpers Ferry, picked us up. It was good to see him again.  He's a very nice, friendly guy and knowledgeable of the trail in this area.   We feel that he is reasonable in his rates, charging us $45 to go from Old Forge Road Picnic Grounds to Harpers Ferry.
 
On our drive down, Mark pointed out Washington Monument up on the mountaintop.
Mark dropped us off at Harper’s Ferry near the Potomac River Bridge and we started walking at 8:45.  It was so exciting to go across bridge and the West Virginia/Maryland state line once again, but this time we kept hiking on the other side of the bridge along the old C & O Canal towpath.  The first 2.8 miles of the AT in Maryland follows this path between what is left of the canal on one side and the Potomac River on the other. 
 
 The hiking was very pleasant with easy terrain along the canal waterbed just as was promised in the AT guidebook.  It was uphill to Weaverton Cliffs and then to the ridgetop. At 12 o'clock noon we had lunch at the Ed Garvey shelter.  We had done 6.3 miles in 3 hours.  After the shelter, the trail along the ridge top was wide and flat. 
 
We went through Gathland State Park where we had a humorous experience.  There was a life-size cutout figure of a man in front of a building and from a distance he looked like he was alive.  Wait-up, as he was walking toward the man, called out, “Hey, do you know if there is a water faucet close by?”  He couldn’t get the man to answer him.  I laughed so hard when I came up behind him and realized he was talking to a cut-out figure of a man.  The park and its two Civil War museums were not open at this time of year, but we did get to see the War Correspondents Monument, which was constructed in 1896 and stands 50 feet high and 40 feet broad with plaques relating Battle of South Mountain history. 
 
 Some parts of the path today were somewhat rocky, but there was plenty of foot space between the rocks, so it was not torturous.  There were a few ups and downs from the gaps but they were not too long and not too steep.  Overall, it was a very pleasant hike. 
At 6 o'clock p.m. we reached Rocky Run Shelter. Philip, AKA Early Light, from Boston had beat us to the shelter. He had his hammock hanging nicely between two trees. He told us he was also hiking to Delaware Water Gap, but this is the last time we would see him on the trail.  He left us behind the next day.
 The weather was cold and windy today and tonight when we stopped walking we got pretty cold.  In spite of the fairly easy terrain today, by the end of the 15.4 miles my feet were hurting with the bottom of the foot pain that I have experienced on our last couple of hikes that I was hoping would not return.