North and South Kinsmen day hike
Bits
- Photos: Photo gallery
- Trail: Mt Kinsman Trail, Appalachian Trail (out and back)
- Trailhead: Mt Kinsman Trailhead, Rt 116, NH
- Mileage: 9.9 miles
- Hiking time: 4.5 hours hiking, 6 hours on trail
- Weather: 20 degrees to 50 degrees, clear, sunny, calm
- Conditions: Packed snow on the way up, needing only microspikes. A little muddy at the end on the way down.
Journal
Brian, who had been watching the weather, somehow talked me into going on a mid-week day hike up in NH. In retrospect, I probably wasn’t that difficult to convince.
The idea was to go up and visit the North and South Kinsman peaks, since we’d had to skip them on our last attempt back in November due to dangerous conditions. I plotted a route up from the west side of the ridge this time so that we could see entirely different terrain.
In our usual pandemic hiking mode, we drove up separately early in the morning, meeting at the trailhead at about 8:20. I was a little late since I’d detoured via the Moon Diner in Lincoln…. couldn’t resist picking up some treats for our lunch on the summit.
(Sigh. Yeah. We have a “usual pandemic hiking mode”, and don’t even have to talk about it at this point. For the record: the US just hit the year-long mark, and we’re not out of the woods yet.)
We headed up around 8:30, packing snowshoes just in case we ran into surprise snow conditions. Or in case we went off-trail again.
I really enjoyed the hike up, even though it was the usual tough New England straight-up-the-fall-line slog. The snow was easy to hike on with microspikes, the air was crisp and clear. We stopped a few times to shed layers as we generated heat. About 2 hours into the climb, we crested the Kinsman ridge onto the AT, with an amazing view out over the Whites to the east.
We stopped for a few photos, then headed south briefly for our first summit on North Kinsman. From there it was another 30 minute down and back up through a saddle to the South peak. We looked around for a while, soaking it all in, then had lunch on the rocks at the top. Brian brought hot chocolate, coffee, and vacuum-packed hot water, so we celebrated our two more 4000er summits with mochas.
After a bit of hanging out, others showed up… probably eight people and a few dogs. It was fine, they were friendly, but it wasn’t quiet and solitude either. We headed out to clear out the space.
There was no rational way to make a loop out of this trip, even by cutting through the woods (too steep), so we took the same trail back. We moved quickly, occasionally stopping to knock sticky warming snow off our microspikes. Mine came off a few times (bad fit on my boots) so I just took them off. We flew down the mountain, making crazy good time because the snow-covered terrain was softer than the usual roots and rocks.
We detoured a bit on the way down to Bald Peak, which gave us a fantastic view of the western scenery and a nice rock to sit on for a bit.
From there, it was a fast down hill through the melting snow, remaining ice and appearing mud. It was 50 degrees by the time we were back to the parking lot, which was crazy. We had enough time to change into t-shirts and to make it back into Lincoln for smoothies.
Spectacular day.