Sunday, April 11, 2010

Mattatuck Trail - Todd Hollow Rd to Reynolds Bridge




The hike began at the parking area at the end of Todd Hollow Road. This appears to be US Army property.






After a brief roadwalk the trail re-enters the woods and follows a brook that empties into a pretty good side beaver pond. More geese and turtles than beavers though.







A while later the trail begins to climb and then exits the army property near this marker. Its now in Mattatuck state forest.







Near one of the ridges we ran into this rock formation that reminded us of the Inca stonework we saw in Peru.





We had lunch at Brophy pond. Very pretty spot, too bad it had been trashed by the partiers. This large quartz boulder was nearby.



After a walk on Wilton Road we re-entered the woods and climbed to a view point over looking the Naugatuck valley. Nice open rocks with a lot of cedar trees.





The trail then dropped down to Watertown road for another short road walk before a last climb in the woods on a very poorly planned section of trail. It climbed straight up and then right back down to the road for no apparent reason.
We did see a lot of blooming trout lillies along the trail.


Sunday, February 28, 2010

Mattatuck Tr - Marino Pond to Todd Hollow Rd



Louise, Al and I spotted a car at the Todd Hill Rd PA and then drove over to Marino Pond. This is where we finished up on our last walk on this trail. We'd had some wet snow on Friday and it was even wetter now. Looked like about 4" on the ground. The first part was along the road until we turned onto the nature preserve. The path had not been walked on so it was a bit sloppy at times.



Saw these nice icicles on the bridge over the stream just above Buttermilk falls.




Here is Buttermilk falls. The trail follows right along the stream and then right down beside the falls. A bit treacherous in wet snow. After another bit of road walk we got back into the woods. A lot of the trail here was open because so much water had run down it during the previous days melt! As you can see from the map this climbs up to a ridge and then drops down the other side to the closed portion of Todd Hollow Rd. We were on the lookout for something labelled on the map as Eds Big Pebble. But we got to the road and saw nothing worthy of the name.
This nice cascade was right there however.




It was a quick road walk out (through very wet snow) to the car. Right at 2 hours and about 5.7 miles according to the walk book.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Mattatuck Tr - Southern end

Louise and I decided to hike the southern most section of the Mattatuck Trail today. It was pretty cool (teens to twenties) and there were a couple of inches of crusty snow on the ground. The southern terminus is in Petersen Memorial Park in Wolcott.



Our plan was to hike to Wolcott Rd and then do the roadwalk back to the park.



The trail initially follows the Mad River and is very pretty. It looks like it also might be quite wet at times. Fortunately it was mostly frozen for us.



The trail eventually leaves the river, crosses a power line cut and then climbs up to an area that looks like it has views off the the right. However this turns out to just be the town transfer station. We had a nice lunch at the height of land before dropping down to Spindle Hill Rd (notice the stove, nice hot noodles for lunch, yum).



At Spindle Hill Rd Louise decided she'd had enough fun so she did the road walk back to the car and I continued on to Marino Pond.
The trail initially climbs back up to ridge and then cuts behind one of the local McMansions. It looks like it gets pretty wet in here too. Eventually the trail goes through a modest ravine which had some very nice icicles.



The trail then wrapped around to another cleft on which side was Indian Jack's cave (seen below)



From here the trail climbs to the ridge. There is a short side trail to a nice view. Not much to see today, but probably very pretty in the fall.



From the the trail trends mostly downhill to Marino Pond where Louise was waiting.




The hike was 3.6 miles with the side trail and took 2:45 including a relaxed lunch. Probably a bit slow due to the crunchy snow.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Hancock Brook and Whitestone Cliffs Trails

These two trails are located near the Jericho trail in Waterbury. There is a connector between the Cliffs trail and the Jericho trail.








The Hancock Brook trail starts off in a gravel quarry which is a bit off putting but quickly settles down into a woods road along Hancock Brook. It has been raining the last few days so the water was moving along pretty well.






There is a railroad line along the brook on the other side and some pretty impressive rock retaining walls were built to stabilize the slope. The line was quiet except for one truck riding the rails removing blow downs.




The trail stays pretty level just above the brook and at the base of a steep climb which was littered with rocks. Some interesting caves had formed in the talus.





Eventually the trail climbs steeply up a poorly stabilized slope (re-route due to owner issues?) and then returns on the ridge above the brook. There are a couple of nice lookouts up on top. Mostly looking across the gorge or south towards Waterbury.




The upper trail rejoins the lower just before returning to the quarry. Its listed at 2.8 miles and took me about an hour and a half.




The Whitestone Cliffs trail is right off of Rt 262. It has a pavilion near the start which might be related to the nearby Boy Scout camp. The trail follows woods roads until it begins to climb to the cliffs where it splits. I took the right hand branch (counterclockwise). After a scramble to an open ridge it drops down to a nice waterfall.





The trail then drops back down to a very soggy area that has had a lot of damage from ATVs. There was also a lot of trash, probably washed in from Rt 262. Eventually it winds back around past a large pool/swamp to another climb up onto a ridge.




At the top of the ridge is a nice open area with views. Unfortunately the views are of Rt 8 although the Naugatuck river is in the foreground. The view of the top itself is nicer.




A bit further along the ridge I found this wasp nest which was hanging at waist height. Luckily it had been abandoned for the season.




From there it is a steep slippery drop back down. Eventually you wind back around to the base of the cliffs the trail gets its name from.




From there it was only a short walk back to the trail jcn and then the parking area. Listed at 1.7 miles it took about an hour to walk.










Monday, October 26, 2009

CFPA Rock Workshop on the Metacomet Trail

The CFPA held its fall workshop in Penwood State Park . The workshop was to re-construct a set of stone steps on the Metacomet trail from the 1940s. A crew from the Ragged Mt preserve showed us how to use grip hoists to move very large pieces of rock.

We parked near Lake Louise which was very pretty with its fall colors.


From there it was a short walk to the bottom of the stone steps. A section of the trail had been "rediscovered" when a very large blowdown was removed (bottome right in the picture).

We set up a series of griphoists to move very large pieces of rock into place.


After a bunch of work we were left with this lovely staircase.








Sunday, October 4, 2009

Jericho Trail, Waterbury CT

We had a lot of rain yesterday but it was clear and the trees were changing so it looked like a good day to hike. There are a series of blue blazed trails in Waterbury and the Jericho is the longest at 3.4 miles. It runs mostly north south and is quite sporting with a number of steep climbs. It also has some nice ravines and caves. The only view on the trail is pretty closed in when the leaves are on the trees.


We parked near the southern terminus on Echo Lake road. The trail climbs steeply to the ridge and then runs along some cliffs with partial views south.

It then stays relatively level for a while crossing several wet areas which were over run by newts. On the way back it was frogs.



Shortly thereafter we began a descent into a rocky ravine. It was quite steep both going down and coming back up. On the way back up we traversed midway along a cliff face.


We continued to climb until we reached the high point, 810', where we stopped to cook up some noodles for lunch. There are views here in the winter, but not much to be seen now.
From there we dropped down into another ravine. There was a shelter cave near the top. Many of the rocks showed a lot of quartz with mica inclusions.


We then dropped down to Jericho brook and followed it west for a while. The trail crosses it at a point that is probably easy normally, but with all of the rain it was a bit tricky. The trail then follows woods roads through an area that burned in the 80s. Eventually we passed another large shelter cave and reached the end of the trail at a junction with the Mattatuck trail. It was obvious there was a nice view just a bit up that trail so we headed up. Nice open rock face with views north and east.
We returned the way we had come with only a slight detour when we missed the turn off of one of the woods road (you can see it on the track). This lead to a short bushwack and a tricky crossing of Jericho Brook. Otherwise the trip back was uneventful. The hike was about 6.8 miles and took us 4:20 including half and hour for lunch. It dumped rain on the drive home so we got quite lucky.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Naugatuck Trail

We spotted a car at the route 42 parking area and drove around to the CPL near Andrasko road. The route looks like this in Google Earth:
Initially the trail goes on an old road along route 8, but after about 0.5 miles it turns into the woods and climbs up to the ridge. There we found the first of the letterboxes we were looking for (first of the Justice League series).

The forest was quite open and there were a lot of ferns.

Eventually we reached the turnoff for Spruce Knoll, which also had several letterboxes hidden nearby.

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From here we continues along the ridge, often in open forest.
After finding several more letterboxes we took the side trip to Beacon Cap. This is an open area with a large glacial erratic. The only views we had were from the top of this rock. Once I was on top I discovered a large X marking this spot. No idea why.

From here it was a relatively short walk on to the route 42 parking area. The hike was about 6.1 miles all told and took about 4 hours. The pace was limited by finding a total 7 letterboxes.
The trail is in good shape, but except for the top of Beacon Cap there aren't any views.