Saddleback and The Horn, ME (on Appalachian Trail)Harlan W. S. |
This trip involved much different terrain than most of my adventures in the West. While visiting relatives in the East, I returned to the woods of my youth, and the Appalachian Trail (AT). The Saddleback area intrigued me; though rather gentle and barely over 4100' at the highest, there are extensive near- and above-timberline areas.
People from the West often get the idea they could rip off mile after mile of the AT in a day, because after all, it's just a trail with rare class 2 stretches. I hope these pictures (which don't include black flies and mosquitoes) make one realize what the AT is like in a relatively dry period. By GPS, it was ~14 miles RT; but the GPS averages over the many tight turns. By guidebook, it was about 15 miles. I did the RT in 5h 30m, with substantial stops to smell the hemlock.
From Waterville, I took Rte 137 to Rte 2 and Rte 4, thence the AT parking lot. Though that road trip is only ~68 miles, the roads are local and have many slow zones in towns. |
24k GPS map. The accumulated gain at days end is ~4200' |
The trail starts off nice, but soon gets like this. The boulders rarely move, but are moss-covered, and the trail routinely consists of boulder hopping; you really can't take your eyes off your feet. |
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In wetter times, these split-log bridges keep you out of water. |
This is the trail in a dry but rocky stretch; I'm looking uphill. |
These rungs (on a 30 degree slope) seem unnecessary in dry times, but when water is flowing, the rock becomes very slick. |
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View S past Eddy Pond; ~3700'. |
More view S, now ~4000'. |
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A small pond near the summit. |
View N toward the 2nd hump of the "saddle". |
View W. |
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N to The Horn. |
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On Horn, back S to Saddleback. |
W. The development is a ski area an the W side of Saddleback. |
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NE from The Horn. |
Heading back to Saddleback; Class 2 over by the white AT paint splotch. |
On Saddleback Again, view N. |
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Wood Sorrell. |
A lot of the trail involves this sort of terrain -- you try to balance on the slippery logs, jump from log to rock to log, and occasionally take a soaker when a log turns out to be floating. |
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Run and jump and jump. Your lower legs may be filthy at day's end. |
Ethel Pond. |
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The roots can trip you up and give a good tumble. |
Many NE streams were channelized between rock walls, to provide better flow for mills. |
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