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May 29, 2006

Whose Land Is It, Anyway?

Laura and I took another weekend in the woods, putting a few more high peaks under our belts before we bolt for the West Coast. We hiked in once again through the dreaded Ausable Club. This time was a little bit curious...we got off to a 5:00pm Saturday start on the south loop, planning to hike up the Bear's Paw peak and camp somewhere in the saddle of Bear's Paw and Dial. Reality, of course, decided to make things murky enough for us to break the law again.

Dial.jpg
Our camp: the top of Dial Mountain

I don't condone camping on the tops of mountains. It's illegal in a lot of ways: camping above 4000' is expressly prohibited in the 'dacks, for example. In our defense, our map showed that all the land that these mountains are on was DEC owned and operated, but the trail markers were that of the AMC. AMC rules prohibit camping anywhere on the trail. Had our maps shown the right thing (or had the trails been marked properly), we probably we wouldn't have taken the view. Also on the plus side, we slept on a rock, didn't use a tent, and so I think our environmental impact of camping was lower here than it would have been in the saddle. Plus, lying awake for a few hours watching the Milky Way turn and shooting stars fly was worth the risk.

We got a 5:30am start and headed to Nippletop, the next mountain in our set.

Gothics-from-Nippletop.jpg
Laura figuring out what we're looking out from Nippletop. In the background (left to right): Gothics, Armstrong, and the Wolfjaws.

I suppose it goes without saying what was oh-so-good about doing the peaks mentioned above.

We continued on to Colvin, taking a bushwhacking trip to find water on the way (travelling off-trail in the High Peaks is hard work, involving clambering over dead trees, falling through dead trees, and falling off of mossy rocky cliffs. I wouldn't recommend it to the faint of heart).

Ausable-from-Colvin.jpg
Lower Ausable Lake and the Ausable Club from Colvin

Curious thoughts about eminent domain entered my head as I gandered down at the Ausable Club again -- why on earth *is* there a golf course in the middle of a nature preseve again? Alas, it's hard to fight money.

Another three peaks down, Laura and I hiked out Sunday night, to real meals and a real bed. Before we got home, though, we had to finish the scientific portion of the trip: better miles per gallon. To anyone that uses the argument, "hybrids don't get good mileage on the highway," I present a bit of contradictory evidence: the photo below shows our round-trip distance plus total average MPG to and from the Adirondacks (driving on I-90 to Rome, and then to the 'dacks via Route 28/28N).

Gas-Mileage-Civic-Hybrid.jpg
373 miles at 60.1 MPG is not a bad average through the mountains
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