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Mt. Wachusett via Westside Trail

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Where: Mt. Wachusett When: March 11, 2026 With: Solo Another "I need to get on a trail" hike. I'd missed an opportunity to go north to NH yesterday, so a short ride & hike at Wachusett was in order. I've been eyeing this hike for a week or so, and had the Westside trailhead parking already set up in my phone's navigation. I tossed my snowshoes into the car and off I went. The parking area was muddy, but plowed, and a truck was already there. I eyed the trail, trying to decide if it was worthwhile bringing the snowshoes. Then I noticed someone coming down the trail (the truck's owner). I asked him and he said there were some sections of deeper snow up above, so I kept the snowshoes lashed to my pack and started the climb. The trail was dirt and ice to start, and the Hillsound spikes I was wearing were helpful. There was a short, steep, rocky climb right away, followed by a more level section with a good amount of snow. It had the remnants of a snowshoe mono...

Duck Pond trail

Where: Duck Pond Trail When: March 8, 2026 With: Solo I was determined to not let this winter end without at least one more XC ski trip. After many years with little/no snow at all, we had an oversupply this season. So much, in fact, that skiing on ungroomed trails was almost impossible. A group of us packed down some trails after one of the first significant storms, and I got out to ski on those. Then another storm came through and all of our hard work was buried. Propelled by an upcoming Trails Club walk, I walked the Duck Pond trail at Hopkinton State park in snowshoes, just to check the conditions. The trail started out as a packed footpath - a bit rough at first, then fine - before turning into a snowmobile track. Wide, smooth, well packed down. That lasted until an intersection where the trail split off from the snowmobile track. The trail after that was unbroken. Somewhat reluctantly, I set off on it, breaking the path with my snowshoes. I lost the route a couple of times, but f...

Tales of Desolation

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Desolation Shelter, January 1996 Desolation Shelter was a small lean-to shelter built by the Appalachian Mountain Club in 1949. Set deep in the Pemigewasset Wilderness ("The Pemi") of New Hampshire's White Mountain National Forest, it stood near Stillwater Junction. Long ago, logging railroads had met up at that spot, and their abandoned rail beds now served as trails to the site.  Dick Carden Clearing Desolation Shelter Site, 1949 When I say the shelter was set deep in the Pemi, I'm not exaggerating.  The shortest route, going up and over Mt. Nancy from the east, was 8.1 miles long. Coming through Carrigain Notch, also from the east, avoided the climb over a mountain but added another half mile. Following the Pemigewasset River from the west was a 9.3 mile journey. From the south, via Cedar Brook, the route was 12.2 miles. And coming in from the north, via Zealand Notch and Shoal Pond, was a 13.5 mile hike. I cite all of this because, despite its remoteness,  I visit...

Crow Hill

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Where: Crow Hill, Leominster State Forest MA When: December 24, 2025 With: Solo Crow Hill, just east of Mt. Wachusett, has been on my radar for some time. It has cliffs used by rock climbers and military groups for training, and I've looked at the trails nearby for mountain biking. A recent post by an AMC group of their hike there brought it to mind again, so when I felt the need for some trail time, I had my destination set. There was some familiarity as I approached and pulled into the Rocky Pond parking lot. I'd been here before, snowshoeing with a neighbor many years ago. There was only 2-3" of snow on the ground today, so snowshoes weren't needed this time, but I pulled on microspikes before setting off. My plan was for a loop route suggested online, climbing up and over the Crow Hill ledges before returning on forest trails back to the parking lot. I was the first traveler on the Sawyer Run Trail, putting fresh footprints in the snow. I could've bare-booted i...

Mt. Wachusett loop

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Where: Mt. Wachusett When: December 4, 2025 With: Solo I was in need of some trail time, but a long ride/full day trip to the White Mountains wasn't in the cards. A quick run over to Mt. Wachusett was in order. A storm earlier in the week had dropped about a half a foot of snow, and I wasn't quite sure what to bring for traction so I brought both spikes and snowshoes. There were about half a dozen cars at the Echo Lake Trail trail head when I arrived, mostly parked along the road. I checked out the snow depth and figured I'd be okay with microspikes, but carried the snowshoes anyway, just in case. After a quick chat with other hikers who'd just arrived, I set out for the short (half mile) walk down the road to the Harrington Trail. The trail showed signs of travel, but only boots...no snowshoes. I slipped the spikes on and began the hike. The snow wasn't especially packed down - it seemed like only a few folks had walked the trail since the storm - but the snow was ...

The NH 48

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In the summer of 1985, at the end of my first week-long vacation from Meditech,  I hiked what's known as The Pemi Loop . I wasn't aware that the route had any special significance...it just looked like an interesting loop to spend a few days walking. Sometime on the first day, I summited Bondcliff, one of  New Hampshire's 48 4K peaks , and I went on to top seven more 4Ks on that hike. Like the Loop itself, I wasn't aware at the time that those peaks were regarded as anything special.  In the years that followed, I climbed more of the 4K mountains, but not as part of any effort to get all 48. I found a mention in these reports from 1991 of specifically "bagging" a 4K peak ( West Bond ) and another in 1999 ( Galehead ), but it wasn't until 2018 that I really began focusing on the list, following  a group hike up Mt. Eisenhower  that brought my peak total to 20. I'd recently retired and I got inspired.  My first priority was three "orphan" peaks...

Owlshead

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Where: Owlshead (4025 ft.), Pemigewassett Wildness, Lincoln NH When: August 26, 2025 With: Solo After a 40 year journey climbing the 48 NH 4000 Footers, finally there was just one left - Owlshead.  Originally planned as a multi-day hike, for a number of reasons I decided to claim it with a day trip. I was out the door at 5AM and at the Lincoln Woods parking area on the Kancamagus Highway by 7:30. It had been the starting point for many of my adventures in the past, but I haven't been back there since 2003. I was on my way within minutes of arriving, crossing a suspension bridge over the Pemigewassett River to get to the Lincoln Woods trail, which runs along a former lumber railroad bed.  When I'd first walked it 40 years ago, it was named the Wilderness Trail. It followed the river upstream 5 miles to the Bondcliff Trail, then crossed the river on a second suspension bridge and continued another 4 miles upstream to  Stillwater Junction Things have changed since then. The ...