Monday, April 30, 2018

Began physical therapy for the left ankle...  hoping for the best and quickly at that.

Continuing to track my "peaks", or at least "high points" along the trails I cover.

April's High Points:
  • Stony Hill, McLean Refuge, Granby, CT
  • "Nick's Hill", West Suffield Mountain / Metacomet Ridge
  • Bartlett Tower Hill, Tariffville, CT
  • Pinnacle, Penwood State Forest, Bloomfield, CT
  • Skyline Overlook, Somers, CT
  • Rattlesnake Hill, Somers, CT
  • Minnechoag Mountain, Hampden, CT
  • Copper - Peak Mountain, Metacomet Trail, Granby, CT
  • Hart's Pond Hill, Agawam, MA
March's High Points:
  • Hatchet Hill, Granby, CT
  • "Nick's Hill", West Suffield Mountain / Metacomet Ridge
  • West Suffield Mountain, Metacomet Trail, Suffield, CT
  • Perkins Mountain, Somers, CT
  • Skyline Overlook, Somers, CT
  • Rattlesnake Hill, Somers, CT
  • Minnechoag Mountain, Hampden, CT
  • Stony Hill, McLean Refuge, Granby, CT
February's High Points:
  • Skyline Overlook, Somers, CT
  • Goat Rock and Lookout Point, Hampden, MA
  • Minnechoag Mountain, Hampden, CT
  • "Nick's Hill", West Suffield Mountain / Metacomet Ridge, Suffield, CT
  • Hill 880', Hampden, MA
  • Pine Mountain, Hampden, MA
  • Perkins Mountain, Somers, CT
  • West Ridge, DAR State Forest, Goshen, MA
  • Walnut Hill, Williamsburg, MA
  • Copper - Peak Mountain, Metacomet Trail, Granby, CT
  • West Suffield Mountain, Metacomet Trail, Suffield, CT
  • Merritts Hill, Williamsburg, MA
January's High Points:
  • "Nick's Hill", West Suffield Mountain / Metacomet Ridge
  • Bald Mountain, Shenipsit State Forest
  • The Pinnacle, Shenipsit State Forest
  • "Balanced Rock Hill",  Shenipsit State Forest
  • "Bent Birch Hill", Shenipsit State Forest

Sunday, April 29, 2018

Back out to McLean due to smoother running surface compared to most of the trails in the area.  My ankle is about the same as it has been, even after the run yesterday, so that is encouraging.  

Waited to just afternoon to avoid the on-and-off rain this morning, and managed a decent 6.7-miles at 5.5-mph.  


Saturday, April 28, 2018

The left ankle is still not right, but with my physical therapy beginning on Monday, and nine-days off of running, it was time to do something.  I went to McLean on a sunny, seventy-degree day, and avoided large hills.

The Bad News is that the ankle is still very stiff and tender.  The Good News is that it didn't seem to make anything worse than if I didn't run at all.  I imagine that is a start.

4.3-miles at a comfortable 5.5-mph pace.


Friday, April 27, 2018

On this day in 2006, I completed a Metacomet Marathon with my dog Tippi;  it was just us.  By 2005, most of my running turned toward exploring and mapping routes through the forest of Western Massachusetts and North Central Connecticut, with an emphasis on picking out ways to connect big tracks of land, and turn them into runs of marathon length.

Tips taking a look toward the quarry in West Suffield, Connecticut.

This run began in Sunrise Park, Suffeld, Connecticut and flowed south through Penwood State Forest in Bloomfield and Simsbury, Connecticut.  We spent 6:27:00 completing a little over 28-miles or so.  This was my 31st marathon completed, and Tippi's 7th.
 
Hueblin Tower in the distance; we would be turning around just prior to it.

Notes:  A great day;  started out 50 degrees at the 9:45 A.M. start time.  I believe it reached 70 degrees during the day, with most of it in the mid to upper 60’s.  Sunny and blue sky entire time, with a bit of a nice breeze every once and a while.

Tippi taking a look back off a ledge.

Much of the route is a ridge trail, with weather beaten trees still standing.

Tippi at the finish, ready to eat and rest.
  
 The Route we managed in April of 2006.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

MAGIC MOMENTS

(Originally written October 1st, 2000)

Magical moments during trail races happen less than often for me.  During simple training runs, the magic flows like water from a faucet.  Usually not at races though.  The one exception is the Dunbar Brook Trail Race, luckily allowing this ever slowing trail runner to live in the past, once a year, every year.

No matter how unhurried I have been running up to this point, Monroe State Forest helps lift the weight from my shoulders and allows me to run like I once did, years ago.  Well, it at least affords the appearance that I am attaining that speed.  Over nine years of participating at this event, I have never had a "bad day" here.

I imagine that there are reasons why I am "lucky" at Monroe that I haven't thought of.  It might just be coincidence, or me being more lenient on what constitutes a "good day" this far into the trail-racing season.  Something I can point to, though, are the following positives.

Peak Foliage.  The Columbus Day weekend is just incredibly beautiful in western Massachusetts, and that intensifies along the Mohawk Trail.  Peak Foliage abounds.  Glances upward from the path reveal unmatched splendor in the form of colors that appear surreal.  The splattering of red mixed within the more abundant yellow-orange is so incredible decorating the trees that it would appear more in place within a painting, not nature.  

Time of year.  The coolness of the air temperature is a relief from the typical heat and humidity double feature normally present for our events.  It is refreshing to gulp in a big chunk of air towards your lungs and actually have the lightness and crispness of cold air fill up both compartments fully.  More oxygen into your lungs means more oxygen into your bloodstream, which means more oxygen to your brain, so you feel better.  And when we feel better, we run better.

This combination of fall color and cooler air temperature make autumn ideal for a "fast" race.  One for the eyes, and the other for the heart/lung combo.  Both are suited for the mind.  Which leads me towards ~

Daydreaming. With the abundant colors hanging from nearly every tree in the forest, it's easy for me to lose track of running.  I believe it helps if you can keep your mind occupied on something other than running, while running.  I usually like to let my thoughts drift wherever they want to go.  If I can attain this drifting state, then fatigue usually leaves me alone during these stretches. The golden yellow orange hue that burns into the back of my mind from the surrounding leaves tint everything towards a feeling of being outside myself.  It is almost like watching a movie of someone else running.  It allows for the fall color scheme to end up taking my breath away, and not the effort of running.

Terrain.  The Monroe State Forest contours lead me into a rhythm that is beneficial to maintaining a steady pace, and this helps give the appearance of a "good" run.  The first five and a half miles or so is basically uphill, and if you maintain a slow steady beat up the climb to Spruce Peak you can find yourself topped out and feeling great before you know it.  The simple "step in front of the next" effort it takes us all to climb this extended piece of landscape really simplifies the act of running.  One foot falls and the next rises slowly off the back to re-take the lead of the last footfall and over and over again basically at the same time and distance intervals, almost hypnotizing me to the point of forgetting this is an effort.  An assembly line for my two feet.

Negative Splits.  Once you make the top of the climb, the remaining 5 miles or so is downhill, and runnable.  This means the second half of the event is hopefully going to be faster than the opening half.  Think of all the races you have been in; how many can also offer this option?  Finishing up the last half of a race with a negative split has to make you feel good, regardless of your ending time.  Playing tricks with your mind is good while trail running and racing.  Nothing tricks my mind more when trailrunning than a faster / easier second half of a course, especially if the whole section is runnable.  Monroe allows each of us a quicker return trip home from Spruce Peak, building our momentum like an avalanche flowing down a mountain.  

Closure.  For many years, Monroe / Dunbar Brook was the finale of the trail racing season in New England.  While the season extends a bit further now, as events have expanded and been added, for many of us Monroe / Dunbar Brook is still the "end".  We may even participate at another event afterward, but our racing season ends once we cross the finish between the pines along the Deerfield River.  Knowing that many people are "wrapping it up" after this one contributes to a little quicker pace.  People seem so joyful at this event, trying to capture some of that past glory called "speed", it just rubs off.  It appears we all want to "go out" with a "bang".

It could be argued that there is nothing any "more" special about this race than others.  But as I howl across the short open sections under the buzzing power lines, it feels different to me.  I imagine leaving a wake of dust, crumpled leaves and fellow participants behind.  I silently call loudly ahead to those I trail, never actually catching any.  My inner shouts of emphasis are heard throughout the valley below.  The joy rings true, it doesn’t ever matter where I finish.  I feel vindicated, a trail runner for another season.  I have explored another magic moment at Monroe.

{October 19, 2000}

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Music 2018...

Effort #18, Another Day, a Galaxy 500 cover.  Just me and the guitar, trying my best.

Tuesday, April 24, 2018


I caught this video online featuring Mr. Kreisberg which is pretty interesting...

Monday, April 23, 2018

Still suffering with a bothersome left ankle, so  not much to report as far as activity goes.

I have begun to read a new book, by Glenn Kreisberg, "Spirits in Stone... the Secrets of Megalithic America".


Sunday, April 22, 2018

Bothersome left ankle; no run but yes to some yard work!

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Bothersome left ankle;  no run.

Friday, April 20, 2018

Music 2018...

Effort #17, Motorcycle Preacher Man.  My partner in the Road Warriors for Christ delivers an original composition.

Thursday, April 19, 2018

TEMPTATION

(Originally written October 1st, 2000)

"...Harden not your hearts, as in the provocation, in the day of temptation in the wilderness."

Hebrews 3:8

It was one of the few perfect days for a trail race this season.  The air was dry, cool and bright.  A recurring light breeze tickled my face whenever it was needed most.  Everyone out on the Breakneck course appeared glad to be there.

It made my decision at mile ten or so a simple one.  I had recently been passed easily by a team of two running in unison fast and steady.  

"Wasn't there a third?" I asked, as I had thought I noticed another member with them originally.

"There was… ", came the reply, along with some laughter.

The cockiness in the answer bothered me.

Minutes later, I knew the difficult right turn off a wide logging road was approaching.  I could sense these two were about to jog past this single-track trail without notice.  The temptation was strong to let them go, allowing them to end up in never never land.  I watched them climbing beyond the turn as I approached it myself, still feeling tempted to let them go…

When I was finally at the turn, I gave a simple shout to the wanderers.  They came back and preceded to pass me again.  I was thanked, and it made me happy that I called back the two faster fellows.

Fighting the lure of allowing the speedsters to go off course was tougher than running the entire race.  I feel fortunate that I was able to avoid this temptation.  Allowing fellow racers to go off course within my sight would have failed me.  I certainly can see the parallels between making a simple decision in a trail race, and everyday life decisions.  I was taught once that if you can get in a habit of doing all the little things, then the big things aren't as much a chore.  

Calling the men back was one of those little things.  Applying this lesson to the rest of my life is the important piece to the puzzle.  I believe that I did the right thing; and I aspire and strive to get to a point someday where no decision is needed.  I need to progress to a level where the right decision is done without thought, automated.  Until then, I imagine I will continue to feel little tricks of temptation occasionally, and hopefully I will be able to continue to choose the correct path.

As for the outcome of Breakneck 2000, I may have finished behind the two hurried runners in the standings; but in my personal race the outcome had me ending a winner on this day.

{October 1, 2000}

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Wuzzam and I were back in the Hills of Hampden, doing the Simon's Skyline 7.7-mile loop for the 3rd consecutive week.  Temperature was right at, or just barely above 50-degrees, with some sun but not too much.  The flat sections (what there are of them) were very wet and slippery due to Monday's snow and rain.

I felt pretty strong for the run, even with the bad footing, and completed this week's attempt at 1:34:42.  I believe Wuzzam was 1:30 faster as well, so we did just fine.

Taking 15-minutes off last week's time was much better than I expected.  I felt I could get under 1:40:00, but I also felt that it would be a challenge and difficult.  The sections of running were very good today, but the while the climb up 880' was a bit easier, Pine is still very, very hard (and slow).


Tuesday, April 17, 2018

I had a return to my eye doctor, to check on the recovery from Shingles, as well as have my first ever eye exam.  

There was very good news on both items, as the right eye is irritated more than any lingering effects of having Shingles in that location; and as far as the eye exam went, I was given an "outstanding" grade on my eyes and vision.  It looks like eye glasses are still a bit off for me, doc wants to see me back in 2-years.

Monday, April 16, 2018

Music 2018...

Effort #16, On Some Faraway Beach.  Roughed in version of a Brian Eno dream set to music.
Music 2023...

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Planned for an early start to beat the rain, and since it's been since last November that I ran "in" Penwood State Forest, I had my choice.  Parked at Wintonbury Road and began the tough climb to the ridge heading south, sticking to the blue blazed Metacomet (or New England) Trail.  

Made it to Gale Pond and the main parking area for Penwood, and it made me think about 2014 when I volunteered as a CFPA Ridgerunner at this location.  Once out of the parking area I took the alternate route (it is Yellow & Orange throughout) back north.  Noticed on my GPS that I had averaged 3.4 mph for the section to Gale Pond, which is on the slow side.  Made up some speed on the way back, the Yellow/ Orange trail is "smoother" and less rocky than the Metacomet, and completed the 6.5-miles in 1:34 (a 4.1 mph average).  I was very satisfied with my 1st run at Penwood for 2018!

As a bonus, this ended up being my first 30-mile week for running miles in 2018.  Interestingly, this was the same point last year for this mark (15th week of the year).  I am hopeful that I can continue being healthy, fit and strong going forward.

View south toward Talcott Mountain from the Pinnacle

View south off the alternate path

Old weathered trees

Also, on this day in 1996, I was fortunate to run the 100th Boston Marathon. It was my 10th marathon completed, in a time of 3:24:14.

Saturday, April 14, 2018

Possibly the nicest day of the year so far.  I thought McLean would be fun, and I rambled through 7.9-miles at a comfortable pace.  There were an abundance of people enjoying the woods, many with their dogs, which makes me happy.

Start / Finish at Canton Road parking area


Friday, April 13, 2018

Back to the Skyline Loop including some of Hamden's Hills today, with temperatures climbing into the '70's.  Wuzzam was ready, and I fitted him with Tippi's old radio/gps collar so that I could "see" his progress on my Garmin Astro 320 (actually, this was in case he wandered at a turn, I'd be able to see it).

I guess that I was so worried about Wuzzam that I missed a turn at around 6/10 of a mile and put an additional 3/10 on the run.  Other than that, we did really well, and Wuzzam found his way.  I cut briars around mile 6, which will be a big benefit as the year moves on, and we hopefully continue working on this course.

The climb up Pine is really a brute;  I took the more "right" path this time, and it looks to be a little longer and no easier.  At the end of the day, I had run 1:49 for 8-miles, which was a huge improvement from last week's 2:10 for 7.7-miles.  I'll take it.

From the little spur on 880, looking east


Thursday, April 12, 2018

Metacomet Trail from Route 20 to the Boy Scout Camping area, 2-miles out from the trail-head.  I did not get rained on, and I managed four good miles on my legs.  All in all, a great afternoon.

Looking south toward the Heublein Tower

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

SOLITUDE, HEMLOCK AND A FRIEND

(Originally written April 26th, 2000)

Mountain Road splits the rocky Metacomet Trail in two at the top of West Suffield, with the majority of people following the path south towards the cliffs and views of Old Newgate Prison.  I usually choose the closed down section heading north to the Massachusetts border; the once continuous trail now regulated to dead-ending in the back of someone's yard.

There are plenty of options for trails close to my home, so why do I keep following this same path day after day, week after week, year after year?  This is a question I am sure many of us ask ourselves as we plod along a familiar trail over and over.  I don’t think the answer is a simple one, or even one single answer.  At least it isn't a single answer for me.

I guess that few others travel this route make it appealing to me.  The "other side" has a lot of traffic; hikers and mountain bikers have discovered its attraction.  I like the solitude of the woods, the quiet.  It is nice to be alone, and this short section of trail allows that.

I also choose this path because it holds a section of hemlock, a dark cavernous stand of trees that have so far avoided being cut like many of the others in Connecticut.  The way they deflect the sunlight from reaching the forest floor intrigues me.  The soft needles at their base lining the trail cushions each step.  Their size places me back decades for the brief moment I race through their natural hallway in the forest.  By the time I arrive each day at this section about a mile and a quarter into the trail, I have usually emptied my mind and daydreaming starts, my favorite moment of any run.  It is what I try to capture on each outing.

Another more intimate reason for enjoying this path is it helps me remember a friend.  It was here, along this section of path, from 1993 to 1998 I would run into Nick walking his labs, anywhere from a few dogs to a dozen.  3 or 4 times a week, 52 weeks a year, close to 5 years worth.  There were plenty of days when we just said a quick "hello", and passed each other.  There also were days when I would stop running and finish the miles hiking and talking with him.  Over time we became friends, two guys taking their dogs out into the woods each day.  I like to think that we shared some of the same reasons for sticking to that route.

Nick passed away unexpectedly in late summer of 1998, but every once in a while I bump into one of his sons walking the dogs along the trail.  It makes me smile to see one of his family members looping around the mountain over the same 3.5 miles he did thousands of times.  A real hit of sunshine, regardless of the weather.  Mostly though I don’t see anyone, but I know that Nick is still walking that ridgeline every day.  It is something I can feel.  He is still alive in the dirt, the trees, and the quiet sounds of the forest.  He left an imprint in that section of forest, at least on one person.  I continue to travel alone along the same path I had for a couple years shared with a friend, paying my respect.

Seasons change, I change, even the woods here change due to logging.  The routine for me hasn’t changed yet, though.  I have my reasons for looping along the abandoned Metacomet Trail on Mountain Road, West Suffield.  My choice comes down to solitude, to hemlock, and to a friend gone.  One is welcomed, one is trying to survive, and one is missed.
{04/26/00}

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Music 2018...

Effort #15, Cotton Crown.  Going back to Fort Worth, Texas in 1988 with the Reverend as The Road Warriors for Christ.  A quiet Sonic Youth interpretation.


Monday, April 9, 2018

Out to the Metacomet after work, Phelps north for 3.6-miles.


Sunday, April 8, 2018

Today would tell us whether the fieldwork I'd been putting in would be a success or not;  an actual start to finish attempt would be made on the old Skyline 8-Miler from the late '90's early 2000's of K.S.  (aka the Wednesday Night Run).

Wuzzam was game, and the short story is we successfully completed the loop without going off track.  The only difficult part was immediately from South Road to climb 880...  a short section was difficult to see after the brook crossing, and then just before the real climb starts deer and/or turkey had disturbed the ground cover so severely that we could not see any sign of the old trail.  We reconnected within twenty or thirty feet both instances.

Wuzzam has been concerned about his climbing, especially as he has Wapack End-To-End on the near horizon.  We counted 5-climbs in this loop:

1) Initial climb from the start to top of Skyline Lookout
2) Minnechoag Mountain
3) 880
4) Pine Mountain
5) Backside of Skyline from South Road

We've got some briers to cut out just prior to South Road, but other than that the course is in good shape.  It is much more open than what we remembered from 18 - 20 or so years ago, logging and development have taken a bit of a toll.  It will be interesting to see what it looks like once the leaves come out.

At a "new" clearing, with a mass of white birch in background

Wuzzam at the marker tree

Top of Hill 880'

Climbing to the top of Pine Mountain


Saturday, April 7, 2018

The sun came out by noon, but temperatures remained only around 40-degrees.  I thought about a longer run, but settled on the Metacomet section between the north end of Penwood (Wintonbury Road), and Tariffville.

Totaled 4.6-miles, with some side paths on the return.

View south

Bartlett Tower

Old Chimney Remains (no longer on the blue blazed Metacomet)

Friday, April 6, 2018

FANFARE FOR THE WARRIORS

(Originally written April 1st, 1999...  so some of this no longer is accurate)

I have participated in each 7 Sisters Race since 1992. I’ve had some excellent finishing times and also some not so excellent times. That doesn’t really matter much. Honestly, it has been the struggles that I recall with the most clarity and detail. Those were the years when the finish line looked best. As "Big Man" Stan recently said about a completed excursion on this course, "…because it was beautiful doesn’t necessarily make it pretty".

I believe that once you experience a little success at 7 Sisters then the difficult times need not be looked upon as "bad ones" but merely steps to regain that magical moment from once or twice before. What I have been taught is that we don’t have to be at our best to enjoy this race year after year. Participating should be plenty, and for knowing this I am thankful.

Other pieces of information I have learned from this event are…

This is the only day of the entire year that Race Director Fred P smiles. That should be a clue to what you are getting into. 

Haven’t run 7 Sisters before? Best of all is knocking this one out for the first time. I believe many trail racing memories I retain tend to be from the first attempt I had at a course. That is the feeling I wish to re-experience each time I show up. Cross the finish complete with that wild-eyed look pouring out of me like Bogart first viewing Bacall in Key Largo. It’s all in the eyes. Each of us may feel it elsewhere, but the truest indication of success will not be told on the scorecard but in the eyes of each finisher. The windows of the soul allow everyone a glance to into your contentment that day. 

Worried about being slow or finishing at all? Take strength in that the more time spent trying to complete the Sisters will be that much more time you will be able to go way inside yourself and explore those emotions that normally scare the shit out of you. 

The possible range of finish times will be almost 4 hours for this 12-mile race. The winner will most likely be < 2:00 and the final participant finishing somewhere between 5 and 6 hours. This is for a twelve-mile race. 

Since 1992 only 23 men and 4 women have dipped under the 2:00/2:30 six pack challenge. If you start to dig into this stuff though, you’ll realize that only 13 different men make up those 23 occasions. Each of the ladies has been different however. These are not good odds. 

Listening to many first time entrants relate their experiences, I believe that those who venture in from a background of hiking tend to enjoy this course more and keep coming back. The "SlugRunner" is a prime example. Those of us who are used to walking and are not obsessed with time seem to be able to accept this style of "running" easier than those who only want to blast through  

If you finish this race, no other course in the Grand Tree circuit will be "intimidating". Some may be too much distance, but for shear difficulty this is as hard as New England gets. You will be loaded with confidence after completing this one. 

I used to try hard at this race and attempt to run as much of the first hill as possible. It would take me about 8 minutes to reach the top of Bare Mountain. A couple years ago I started to walk this section entirely. This took me 12 minutes. When the race starts and you find yourself behind a hundred people who seem to be going too slow, don’t worry so much. If you are trying to win the event you should have been at the very front to start. If winning isn’t the goal, everyone will spread out soon enough and the 4 or 5 extra minutes walking at the start isn’t going to hurt your overall time, chances are it will help it. 

Completely running out of gas and regulating oneself to the side of the trail to sit is more apt to happen for those of us who start too fast. I have never viewed anyone behind me stop to rest, only those who have been in front of me. Take out of this whatever you wish….. 

One of two things is almost certain after this race. Either you’ll be so hungry you’ll sample every bit of food the Notch Visitor Center has to offer (part of your entry fee), or you’ll not be able to eat at all. I haven’t really noticed any "in between" stage. 

Depending on individual goals and aspirations success is decided differently. Regardless of competitive level or lack of, the ticking time clock shouldn’t be the only indication of achievement. It is each of us out there in charge of our own thing. Get out of this what you want to.

{04/01/99}

Thursday, April 5, 2018

Windy, cold day despite the afternoon sun.  Stopped at East Granby Farms and ran up the connector to the Metacomet, just below Copper/Peak Mountain (roughly a 600' elevation gain).  Continued on to make a 3.4-mile run out of it.

View south from Copper/Peak Mountain, with Talcott Mountain in background

Looking west off an unnamed lookout along the Metacomet

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Rain on and off all day, but from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. the sun came out...  so I went to the Metacomet and ran from Phelps Road north, 3-miles.

View west from Metacomet Trail

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Music 2018...

Effort #14, Bill is Dead.  A mellow song by The Fall.  I am really captivated by the "greatest times of my life refrain...".

Monday, April 2, 2018

Continuing to track my "peaks", or at least "high points" along the trails I cover.

March's High Points:
  • Hart's Pond Hill, Agawam, MA
  • Hatchet Hill, Granby, CT
  • "Nick's Hill", West Suffield Mountain / Metacomet Ridge
  • West Suffield Mountain, Metacomet Trail, Suffield, CT
  • Perkins Mountain, Somers, CT
  • Skyline Overlook, Somers, CT
  • Rattlesnake Hill, Somers, CT
  • Minnechoag Mountain, Hampden, CT
  • Stony Hill, McLean Refuge, Granby, CT
February's High Points:
  • Skyline Overlook, Somers, CT
  • Goat Rock and Lookout Point, Hampden, MA
  • Minnechoag Mountain, Hampden, CT
  • "Nick's Hill", West Suffield Mountain / Metacomet Ridge, Suffield, CT
  • Hill 880', Hampden, MA
  • Pine Mountain, Hampden, MA
  • Perkins Mountain, Somers, CT
  • West Ridge, DAR State Forest, Goshen, MA
  • Walnut Hill, Williamsburg, MA
  • Copper - Peak Mountain, Metacomet Trail, Granby, CT
  • West Suffield Mountain, Metacomet Trail, Suffield, CT
  • Merritts Hill, Williamsburg, MA
January's High Points:
  • "Nick's Hill", West Suffield Mountain / Metacomet Ridge
  • Bald Mountain, Shenipsit State Forest
  • The Pinnacle, Shenipsit State Forest
  • "Balanced Rock Hill",  Shenipsit State Forest
  • "Bent Birch Hill", Shenipsit State Forest

Sunday, April 1, 2018

Mid-morning run along the Metacomet from Rising Corner, Suffield, to the Agawam Bowman's Club on Route 57.   4.2-mile round trip, with a little more get-up-and-go in my steps than yesterday.

Stone marker just prior to new bridge-work

North of bridge, flowing to Harts Pond

Southern view from Bridge