Day Six
Saturday, October 1, 2016
Unionville, NY (Lott Road) to Vernon, NJ (NJ 94)
11.8 miles
Saturday, October 1, 2016
Unionville, NY (Lott Road) to Vernon, NJ (NJ 94)
11.8 miles
Friday afternoon, I started calling around to find someone
to take us back to the trailhead. Our
Hiker’s Companion listed a guy named Ron at High Point Country Inn who said his
charge would be $30. I called Port
Jervis taxi and when I asked how much, she said she didn’t know for sure but it
would be $2 a mile. When I said how many
miles, she said “Google it.” Ha ha! So I did, and it was about 9 miles. I figured it would certainly be less than $30,
so I scheduled them to come out on Saturday morning at 7:00 to pick us up. When it was not there at 7:00, I called
again. The lady said, “You’ve got to
give me a minute here, I have to get people to work first.” Wow!
So in a few minutes the taxi pulled up.
The driver said if I had not called this morning, they would not have
sent anyone because the dispatcher thought it was a prank call. I could tell she was not familiar with the A.
T. because both times I called, she said, “You want to go to the Appalachian
Trails?” When he called someone else to
find out the charge, she immediately said $25.
He said the first lady should have known that. So, anyway, it did turn out to be less than
$30 that the other guy was going to charge, but not exactly $2 per mile
either.
The first 5.4 miles of the trail were non-rocky going around the Wallkill National Wildlife Preserve then along a nice boardwalk. Not too bad up to Pochuck Shelter, then after the shelter it is rocky again until county Road 517 where another long .7 of a mile nice boardwalk starts again.
The first 5.4 miles of the trail were non-rocky going around the Wallkill National Wildlife Preserve then along a nice boardwalk. Not too bad up to Pochuck Shelter, then after the shelter it is rocky again until county Road 517 where another long .7 of a mile nice boardwalk starts again.
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Wallkill National Wildlife Preserve |
It rained today and we stayed wet all day in spite of our
ponchos. Wet socks make for miserable
feet. Wait-up slipped on a wet boardwalk
and fell for the third time this trip.
We were looking forward to visiting Heaven Hill Farm in
Vernon and maybe trying to stay at the St. Thomas Episcopal Church Hiker
Hostel. Today was supposed to be the
last day they took hikers in. Before we
reached the road crossing, we passed two men and a young boy and asked them how
far we were from the road where Heaven Hill Farm is. They told us we had missed
it, it was behind us! They talked about
the yummy donuts they had purchased there before they started hiking. Oh my, how disappointing.
We trudged on down the hill, trying to settle in our mind
that we would not be at a hostel tonight and we would not get a treat from
Heaven Hills Farm. Before long, we went
through a cow pasture on a boardwalk and saw lots of cars parked up ahead on
the road. We thought there must be some
kind of festival going on. When we
reached the road, we looked to the left and we could see Heaven Hill Farm just
a little ways down!
Hallelujah! We had not missed it after all. We went down to the farm and ordered up some
ice cream. We asked the clerk how far
down the road it was to the hostel and she indicated it wasn’t far down, told
us that it was illegal to hitchhike but that many hikers did it anyway, and
gave us the number for Vernon taxi.
Back out on the road we stuck out our thumb and were passed
up by several cars. We looked in our
book and found out it was 2.4 miles to town.
We then called Vernon taxi and found out he was out of town (just a one
person taxi company). We gave up and
trudged on up the hill on the trail planning to set up camp before we climbed
the foreboding looking mountain in front of us.
It was Wawayanda Mountain, what the local people call “Stairway to the
Stars.”
Several folks were still coming down from the mountain as we
went toward it. Just as soon as we
could, we left the trail and went into a little cedar thicket to set up our
tent, unseen from the last few passersby. We didn’t have a tall tree to hang the bear
bag from and if there had been one, he surely could have gotten to our food
bag. It was only just 3:00 p.m., but we
were ready to quit for the day.
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