Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Eliza Brook Shelter to Franconia Notch
8.8 mile
We thought yesterday was hard!! We are so glad we didn’t try
this mess after 3:00 yesterday – we would have never made it to the next
shelter. I have never seen such steep
mountains and hard-to-maneuver climbs and descents! We met a man who had slept overnight at a
most unlikely place on the mountain. He
was descending South Kinsman Mountain going south and said he ran out of
daylight yesterday and had decided it would be unwise to try to go down in the
dark even using his headlamp. He had
pitched his small tent in a notch between the rocks right on the downward path.
He was a seasoned hiker, a hunting guide
from Maine.
We reached Kinsman Pond Shelter at 12:30 and then went on to Lonesome Lake Hut where we ate potato soup, a cheese quesadilla and maple
cookies. This hut is one of eight huts accessible only by
trail in the White Mountains operated by the Appalachian Mountain Club. They
have no heat or showers, use alternative energy sources and composting
toilets. They have bunks for hikers and
serve a very fine dinner and breakfast for overnighters. They are not cheap, but many thru-hikers take
advantage of their work-for-stay opportunities to get a good meal although they
have to sleep on the floor.
Crossing Cascade Brook proved to be a little tricky. We went upstream to find a shallower place to
cross and didn’t realize that the brook split, so when we got to the other
side, we couldn’t find the trail. After
searching for some time, another fellow came along and crossed downstream and
was able to help us locate the trail. We
had to go back across where the stream split to get to the other side. Then came Whitehouse Brook which didn’t
present a problem before we got to the road and called Mike from Liberty
Springs Hotel to pick us up.
We talked briefly
about their plan to hike Mt Moosilauke tomorrow. We shared our opinion since we had already
done it. But to them the 9.5 was
considered a NERO (near zero) day.
Two hikers checked into the room
beside us and we got to know a little about them over the next couple of
days. They were hiking for an AARP
campaign, sponsored by Gold Canyon Heart and Home, called “Disrupting the Aging
Model.” A 71-year-old man named Mike Fegan started the
campaign with the intention of completing a Triple Crown Challenge of 8,000
miles on the Applachian Trail, the Continental Divide and the Pacific Crest
Trail. Somewhere back on the A. T. he
had fallen and hurt his shoulder, so Silver Streak took up the walk in his
place. WOW joined up with him along the
way. We found out that WOW had already done some of the PCT and was
planning to finish it up after completing the A. T. before going back to
Australia.
At our age, we identified with their campaign.
YouTube of Kinsmans
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