Frozen At Dupont State Forest – 1/6/18 – 9 miles
What could be better than four frozen lakes and three icy
waterfalls on a teeth-chattering arctic day?
Add a covered bridge and one of my favorite hiking partners for an
exceptionally rewarding hiking experience.
Carolina Mountain Club hikes every Saturday, so I signed up for
the first one of 2018 to kick off an active new year. They start early, so I traveled on Friday to
my friend Danny Bernstein’s home for a long overdue sleepover visit, enjoying dinner
and dessert and a long stroll in West Asheville.
The weather forecast was for bitter cold and the club’s hike
venue was changed to a lower elevation to hopefully gain a couple of
degrees. Dupont State Forest is always a
favorite and we were intrigued to see what impact the sustained sub-freezing
temperatures had rendered upon its water features.
Sub-freezing gained a new context for me: six degrees as we drove alongside the French
Broad River, noticing ice chunks clinging to its banks. We joined hikers at a group meeting place,
then set up a short shuttle from Dupont’s visitor center. My car’s interior
reached a merely chilly comfort zone as we arrived at the Lake Imaging parking
lot.
I didn’t have a map of Dupont so it was imperative to keep
up with the group today. Dupont’s maze
of trails and tricky intersections can confuse a hiker any day even with a map,
and today we walked on a dozen (more?) trails. Since the hike location had
changed just the day before, the exact route hadn’t been scouted and the hike
leader frequently consulted the map for turns.
Fortunately, she and other group members were very familiar with Dupont
and kept us on track. My usual practice
is to carry a map and understand the route, so this letting go of control and responsibility
was uncomfortable for me.
We had a frigid start as expected but warmed up quickly. My fingers were the last body parts to “thaw”
and I was reluctant to take off gloves for photos. The sky was clear, no wind, and the trails
were dry. We noted Lake Imaging’s frozen surface but no one volunteered to test
its thickness. See the blurred
reflection of the trees.
We walked along Lake Imaging Road to Grassy Creek Falls
Trail. Grassy Creek Falls is a long sliding cascade that looks inviting in the
summer but bone-chilling today.
From the falls we worked our way along several trails
(Chestnut Oak Road, Joanna Road, Pitch Pine Trail, Three Lakes Trail) to reach the
edge of Lake Dense. We stopped for lunch
at the picnic shelter by a small dock. A muffled groaning emanated from beneath
the ice as it cracked and shifted, sounding like a moaning cow in a distant
pasture.
Mountain
bikers having fun parking a bike on the ice just because they could
Even sitting in the strong sun during lunch could not stave
off the chill and we started off again with frozen fingers and noses. We continued on Three Lakes Trail past Lake
Alford, which was tiny (a half-acre) and underwhelming. I wonder what it looks like when it’s not
frozen?
Just a glimpse of a small cove of Lake Julia, the
third on the Three Lakes Trail
Conservation Road to Buck Forest Road to Covered Bridge
Trail, only half a mile of walking but woe to the hiker who doesn’t know the
intersections. Covered bridges are romantic
and charming, aren’t they? This one spans
a tranquil vantage point of Little River that belies the massive waterfalls
downstream.
We descended along High Falls Trail with its dramatic view
of High Falls, spectacular on any given day, now alternating surreal strands of
ice and flowing water. Some of us took River Bend Trail to get closer to the
base of the falls. Traversing the large
ice rocks was risky but compelling – we may never see this again!
We continued on High Falls Trail as it followed Little River
downstream. The temperature had warmed up to freezing and more people were venturing
out. [Triple Falls and High Falls are easily accessible from the Hooker Falls
parking area.] Triple Falls, as dramatic as High Falls, was also partially
frozen. We walked out onto the expansive
rock face at the bottom of Second Falls.
Water was still flowing down the center but the largest part of the pool
was frozen.
Triple Falls from top to bottom:
Takeaway from today’s hike:
Don’t let the cold keep you inside. Get the right gear to be warm in bitter cold
temperatures and go explore a winter wonderland!
Learn more about Dupont State Forest at the Friends of Dupont Forest website.
“What good is the
warmth of summer, without the cold of winter to give it sweetness?” ~John
Steinbeck
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