Last weekend we went hiking to Holt Peak.
First, as usual, we went to Haute coffee in Concord, MA on the way. A cup of coffee in the morning of Saturday is a good start of weekend. This place has great pour over coffee.
Coffee comes with beaker and warmed mug. The beaker is enchanting for me as a scientist.
Then we headed for a trailhead.
The sign at Trailhead |
To go to holt peak, we walked through Wapack trail, as you can see the sign in the picture left. This trail goes to North Pack Monadnock, where we hiked last weekend (wrote a blog here at https://himebackpacker.blogspot.com/2019/03/north-pack-monadnock-mountain.html). This Wapack trail connects Mount Watatic in Massachusetts and North Pack Monadnock in New Hampshire. Wapack is named after Watatic-North Pack.
Holt peak where we hiked this weekend is in the middle of Wapack trail. Just 4.6 mile out and back short hike with 1100 feet elevation gain.
Last weekend, the area was covered with snow. The entire hike we had to use microspiks. Now jut 7 days later, snow has melted a lot. The first half of the way to Holt peak was almost all snow free as you can see picture below.
In this picture you can see many New England-ish things.
First is a trail sign. Trail marks are on the tree in New England. I had never seen this in California. You can see yellow triangles on the tree. This matches with the mark at trailhead sign. The picture above, next to the letters of wapack trail, there is a yellow triangles. In that way, on the trail, if you see yellow triangles you know it is a wapack trail.
Next is a fence made of rocks. In New England, I see this kind of rocky fences a lot. They are from a long time ago for protection from enemies or boundary from neighbors. There might be a farm here. Then these fences are abandoned.
Another NewEngland iconic thing is rocky trail. Last portion of the trail in the picture, which is a little uphill, is rocky. A lot of trails are very rocky in New England. Due to this, same 1 mile is harder in New England, compared to California.
Finally, trees. There are many, many, MANY trees in New England.
Wapack trail to Holt Peak |
icy portion |
The last 0.5 mile to Holt peak was icy (picture in the right). We put our microspikes. Maybe next weekend, no need to have microspikds. The end of winter is actually tougher than middle of winter, because snow is icy and slippery. If snow is soft and puffy, it is easier to walk.
Then I thought that the trail reached the highest elevation, because I saw downhill forward. I asked Mr.N if it was the peak. Mr.N has an app AllTrails. He looked up map with GPS and said that that area was a peak. Ummmmm. I didn't expect that the peak was in the forest. Oh well. This is another New England thing. I looked around and found a small trail going side. I went there and found a sign of Holt Peak. Yay :) It was like a treasure hunt. The good thing now is there is space to sit down. Until last week there was all snow and no place to sit down and eat or take a break. We sat and had sandwich and banana. From next weekend we can sit down and take a break anywhere on the trail. I am excited about that.
Holt Peak |
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