Thursday, September 3, 2009

Mt. Frissell, Part 2

I had more photos from the hike to Mount Frissell so am posting the second half here. They are more or less in chronological sequence, so these hopefully will represent the second half of the hike. You may notice the look of fatigue on the dogs faces. If there were pictures of me, you'd notice my crippled hobbling.

Here's Fergus saying, "Can't we go any faster?":

And Seamus is saying, "Did we just come from way up there?":

"We're going that way!" "No, we're going that way!":

"I think of myself as the canine Tarzan of the mountaintops":

Here, we're headed back up to the top of Round Mountain. The dogs are ahead of me and probably wondering why I'm hobbling:

Birches, oaks and scenery:

Seamus lags behind. It doesn't happen often, but sometimes he stops to check out a really interesting smell:

Distant lake and mountains:

"I'm tired, Dad. I need to rest.":

"I don't need a rest. Let's run and play:"

The top of Round Mountain:

Seamus couldn't decide whether to go over or under the log. Finally, after Fergus and I had gone well past the log, Seamus decided to hop over it. I suppose he'll get this all figured out with more hiking experience:

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Mount Frissell, Part 1

I had 4 days off of work and lots of home chores to accomplish. But I was absolutely determined to do some hiking. Now that Casey and Wally have hung up their hiking shoes so to speak, it's just me and the poodle pups. So on Wednesday I took off for a trail to Brace Mountain in western Massachusetts. I hiked it a couple of years ago from the New York side but hoped that this trail would be easier. It wasn't.

Anyway, let's start with Seamus and Fergus struggling up a steep rock face. You can tell that Seamus is straining:

Now I've certainly had enough experience to know better, but I was fooled once again by this trail guide. It promised only a 479 foot elevation gain. Hey, not bad. I can do that. I was quickly reminded how deceptive that can be when at only .4 miles, the trail begins a steep 300 foot ascent of scrabbling up rock that moves one only .2 miles farther along the trail. Then it descends 200 feet, then up a few hundred feet, then down a few hundred feet. You can see where this is heading. The 479 feet was a net gain. And then there would be the return trip, with everything reversed.

I reached the first peak, Round Mountain, and it had a lovely view of Mt. Frissell, our next peak along the trail (notice the deep valley between them and imagine the descent and ascent to reach the next peak):

But the views were great and the dogs were happy:

Fergus proclaims himself "Cockapoo Of The Mountain":

Seamus would like to be "Poodle Of The Mountain" but he's a little too tired to care:

And then we began the descent into the gap between mountains:

Riga Lake in the distance:
Seamus is too tired to continue and Fergus joins him for a rest:

But continue they did, and with great enthusiasm:
Being the only person on a mountaintop on a beautiful day, accompanied by a couple of happy dogs is my idea of bliss:

Seamus is either way ahead or way behind at this point. I don't remember which:

We reached Mount Frissell and quit there. After all, we had to make a return trip all the way back the way we'd come:

Imagine Seamus and Fergus yodeling here. Or maybe singing "The Hills Are Alive":

There were so many species of scrub oaks that I took lots of photos by which to identify them when I got home. But the only oak species I could match to the photos were those which could not possibly live in this part of the country. So I deleted the pictures and decided to I'd just enjoy the beauty and leave the identification to someone else:

On the shoulder of Mount Frissell:

Happy, well exercised Seamus:

Scrub oaks and Riga Lake:

Well, we did make it back to the car. The dogs were tired and both of my big toenails turned purple and painful from descending those steep rock faces. But still it was a grand outing. If you click this photo to enlarge it, you'll see Fergus taking in the grandeur of the scenery. Or is he wondering why Dad is taking so long to catch up?: