Thursday, December 9, 2010

Hiawassee to Neel's Gap

We had two unplanned hostel stays in the last stretch — three nights, since the first, at Neel's Gap turned into a rainy-day zero.

Apparently there is lots of real estate to be purchased in Hiawassee: lots of people who had a cabin, but can't afford it any more.

Another new form of ice, for me: ice curls in the ground.

It was cold, but not without sun — frozen on one side of a ridge, and comfortable to sit and snack and take one's gloves off on the other.

Of the various things they look like, rice noodles is my favorite association. That, or alien sprouts. (That might be hiker-stomach talking.)

Jo thought it was very cold.

The view from Tray Mountain:

The Tray Mountain shelter already had one occupant when we got there — he had set up his tent for extra warmth, and was gathering fire wood. We considered being done and staying there, but decided to hike on down.

On the way down, we passed a bunch of day hikers (ten-ish), all headed for Tray Mountain shelter, which (along with the prospect of a cold and windy night there) made us glad not to have stayed.

We camped at the Cheese Factory site — apparently there was one, once, though no ruins or other signs of build-up any longer.

The first night out from resupply, we both fill our 20L food bags. (It takes a bit of heaving and pulling to hang them.)

In the morning, we found that another southbounder, Low Step, had camped near us later in the night; he said hello before heading out, but then stayed ahead of us.

A significant portion of the day's hiking was on a troad — that is (although The Internet doesn't recognize the word) the trail's tread following an old logging road. (Ed, who we shared the shelter with that night, gave us the vocab. word.)

We stayed at Low Gap Shelter.

Along the trail occasionally, in much of Georgia, there is evidence of wild hogs. We didn't see any, but saw some register entries mentioning them.

Photo Op.: Mark with the Mark Trail.

It drizzled and rained most of the day.

Neel's Gap — a welcome sight as the rain picked up — is the only place the trail goes through a building. (There is an outfitter store to the left, uphill; and to the right, the downstairs is the hostel, and the upstairs is — we think — employee housing.)

Shower, cats, old registers.

Jo's pack — when new, as was the one in the store — used to be more vibrantly colored.

(Compare:

)

In the store, there are 500-mile shoes hanging along the ceiling — including a few sandals.

As the first day finished and then the zero day passed, the hostel filled up a bit: another southbounder (Sweet Talk), a pair of northbounders (Mama Bear and Papa Bear, embarking on a fresh attempt), and a section hiker (I guess we see where my name-storage space is allocated).

I have mixed feelings about Pirate's Hostel. It had an undercurrent of bitterness and ambivalence: the fridge in the hostel area had locks on it; the computer had no internet because in the past hikers couldn't learn to share; the usual complement of snoring; DVDs available only to borrow one at a time due to people stealing them. But it also had what we needed — showers, a place to stay during a day of torrential rain, frozen food from the store — and good things like cats, and sloppy joes for dinner compliments of Pirate, and breakfast (but don't miss it). It was the right decision, but not entirely warm and fuzzy.

Hiawassee (to Neel's Gap to Hiker Hostel) to Springer: Map

From Hiawassee, our final resupply, we did a two-night stretch to Neel's Gap — Pirate's hostel, where we zeroed — then a short day to Hiker Hostel, and finally had one last night tenting before making the last climb to summit Springer.

Franklin, NC to Hiawassee, GA

Our second-to-last stretch was a short one, two nights out from Franklin, NC (around a rather circituitous and, in retrospect, avoidable loop) to Hiawassee, GA — 2010 November 24-26th.

The morning in Franklin was overcast, but as we drove up to the gap (shuttled by the motel), we broke into sunlight; until late morning, our views were of peaks through a sea of clouds.

Another mysterious message — but at least this time my doppelganger isn't dead, just tall.

Another tower: a good view from the stairs, even though the top deck is locked (presumably for the protection of weather sensing equipment).

To the right, Georgia is almost certainly visible, although by the trail we were another full day of hiking (north, then south again) to get there. To the left, perhaps still the Smokies at the horizon.

Sausages for dinner (and I packed out Pillsbury dough in a tube for fresh buns). Another everyday occurance — at least when we had sausages: Jo had finished her meal by the time I had finished my first (painstakingly slow-roasted) sausage.

What is it? What's it doing? (Lichen? Blooming?)

More mysterious flora.

This tree is in the guide book as 'often photographed'.

The Georgia border! Or, rather, the sign for it; the actual border is a few hundred feet further south. It was another in-a-cloud day; my lens was strongly fogged up and refused to defrost, so I ended up digging my lens-cleaning cloth out of my pack (hooray for the front zipper). (Jo was hiking ahead of me, and left me the Crunch bar on the sign. Extra snacks!)

I was amused to find my trail name already on the sign — apparently there was a northbound Karma, earlier. (I don't know what the pipe is about.)

According to my GPS, the actual border was just around the bend. (The scribbly bit is where I stopped by the sign on the tree.)

North Carolina - Georgia border, on the Appalachian Trail

We had to adjust — being in Georgia — to saying "going to Springer Mountain" instead of "going to Georgia".

We started to see holly trees as part of the evergreen population, some with berries.

Decorative blaze.

Notably decorative blaze.

When I suggested this be an 'everyday occurence' shot, Jo said: I hope not! However, our last few hitches had been in the cold and wet with our hands being numb if we stuck 'em out too long. (Eventually some day hikers — from Texas! — who we had seen earlier came back and gave us a ride into town.)

Dairy Queen, Hiawassee Inn, Resupply. Usual town stuff.

However! Jo's friend Bovee — living in Ohio, but visiting the Smokies — dropped in (that is, drove several hours) to visit us, along with a couple friends from the environmental learning center where she works. (E.L.C.s are the underground railroad of Jo's life, apparently.)