Thursday, May 27, 2010

First peak conquered: Mt. Chocorua!

For those who don't know, Jeff and I have set a goal for this summer: hike to the summit of Mt. Washington this summer! Its summit is 6,288 ft., so I realized that I need to get into better shape by hiking some of the lower-elevation-but-still-extremely-challenging peaks in the White Mountains. So last weekend, for our first in the series of hikes on tall peaks, we decided to hit Mt. Chocorua!


Mt. Chocorua is a mere 3,475 ft., but the elevation gain is something like 2,700 ft. Soooo....yeah. It's pretty sharp looking from the distance, and I knew it would be a tough challenge. I haven't hiked anything that steep since I lived in Alaska.

The trailhead is right off of the Kancamagus Highway south of Conway. The lower elevations are gorgeous via Champney Brook Trail. We crossed a lovely stream and hiked next to it while under thick green tree canopy, soft pine needles cushioning the walk.

Champney Falls is at approximately 1/3 of the way up, with a series of falls and small cold pools of water perfect for Zoe and Shelby to wade into and cool off.

We continued upwards, me getting a bit grouchy because my knees were bothering me from the steepness of the trail and hard-packed earth being so unforgiving to my joints, plus I was breathing pretty hard. Ugh! I am not in good enough shape yet. But after a series of switchbacks, there was an opening in the spruce trees and we could see Mt. Washington in the distance. It still has snow on it!

The Three Sisters peaks were to our left via the Middle Sister Trail as we ascended and soon we hit the intersection of Piper Trail near the top. A sharp right turn took us to the ridgeline and onward to bare rock, allowing amazing views of all the high peaks.

Wow!! What a view. The dogs were really thirsty and we sat down to immerse in the scenery and mountain air.

Lots of black flies still out, but gorgeous weather made it well worth the hassle. Some teens had hiked to the peak with their skateboards and were doing tricks on the summit. That's dedication! I should bring my banjo next time..

Check out the 360 view!



Overall, it took us about 4.5 hours to go 7 mi. or so...and I was VERRRRRYYYYY sore the next day. Very proud, though. There are folks up here who hike all mountains taller than 4,000 ft., there are something like 48 such peaks. I have a lot of work left to do before I hit my goal! Ahhh, but for now, it's time to relax...

Monday, May 3, 2010

zip it!

I present to you proof that I jumped from multiple platforms very high off the ground, despite being exceedingly scared of heights, and ziplined over treetops in the White Mountains!! More in-depth thoughts on this and the manifestation of life's lessons to come later. Now for the fun!

Brave and ready for action, thanks to the "pump you up" music playing in the check-in building. Rocky theme song, Will Jenkins and I meet your challenge!

I could use a little Captain in me for liquid bravery, where is the flask? We are VEERRRRRYYYYY high up off the ground, yikes!! Don't look down, group!

The event was a much-belated birthday gift for the adventurous man himself:

*nervous laughter* This thing is safe, right?!

Walking across another one of those scary swing bridges, probably 200' above the ground! On our way to the 80' line drop that felt like free fall, and when the line bottoms out and the tension grabs, you zip straight across the notch reaching speeds of 40-50 mph!! Thumbs up from the folks on the tree perch, ready for takeoff.

Jeff took some videos, check them out!!



I earned the nickname "Mary Poppins" due to my prim and proper position in the harness -- look how straightbacked I am as I fly! I need a parrot-topped umbrella that talks. :-) You can move to observe 360 degrees of granite, mountains, birch and pine trees around you by rotating the carabiner.



I'll post another video soon of Jeff dropping backwards on the 80' free fall.