We arrived at the trailhead at around 7:10am. Sunny was very eager to be on the move as usual. I was taking too long for him and he yelled at me as I was taking one last picture of him before setting off. My plan was to hike out to Five Mile and back to the tune of 6.5 miles, about the same as doing the traverse, but with more elevation gain.
Car to Brown
We were really moving the entire hike. AllTrails clocked us at a 25 minutes per mile pace which is really something for a ridge hike with no real flat approach. By comparison, our Seymour hike clocked in at about 27 minutes per mile with a very long flat approach, while we hiked the Dix Range with a 35 minute pace.
Brown to Huckleberry
Looking across the col between Brown and Huckleberry is similar to the view between the mountains on the Southern Tongue Range. The entire range kind of curves around the lake (well, the lake conforms to that curve, but you know what I mean). As such, the ridge bends West between each peak, so you can easily be bamboozled into checking your map for a difficult change in elevation. In reality, the trail is very well-designed. It doesn't often force you to lose more elevation that you need to. Particularly up here on the Northern part of the range, it stays pretty true to the ridge top with a little wind-block on the West side.
Sunny did form snowballs on the tops of his toes, but between his pads remained snowball-free thanks to his recent haircut and Musher's Secret. I still picked these off a few times during our hike. They really don't seem to bother him much when he's running through the snow; they're really only bothersome on hard-packed surfaces.
Five Mile
The steepness of the elevation gain along the ridge is far more managable than on the Southern part of the range. There's some effort, of course, and I did stop a few times to catch my breath, but it was quite an easy hike. As I said, we were flying. The only real steep section was climbing up to the summit of Five Mile. The views up there are poop.
For the entire hike, I wore my synthetic base layer, un-lined hiking pants, a synthetic tee, a light jacket, and this coif hat thing I got for Christmas. I added hand warmers to my gloves and I was perfectly warm the entire time, only changing into my puffy for the long break at the lean-to on our return trip. My heavy mittens have remained unused, but they're in the pack just in case.
Today, GPS insisted we hiked 8.78 miles with 1677' of elevation gain with a moving time of 3hrs 50 minutes. I'm not sure how accurate the mileage is, but I sure felt fast today. It was nice to get home early and relax before taking Quinn to hockey practice.
Despite the lack of unobstructed views, this was a great hike. I really enjoyed being up on elevation in the woods and I was happy to get some elevation exercise in, but without a lot of extreme steepness. I may return to this range again another Winter.
Sunny and I are now both Lake George 12sters, however we just need Buck in order to achieve the Winter 12ster. We're very much looking forward to doing that soon.