October PA 03
Transcription
October PA 03
ISSN 098—8154 The Newsletter of the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club 118 Park Street, S.E., Vienna, VA 22180-4609 http://www.patc.net Volume 32, Number 10 October 2003 75 Years of Service Celebrate 76 Years at PATC’s Annual Dinner C ome out and join in the fun at our 76th Annual Meeting/Dinner! Mark your calendar now, and sign up for PATC’s 2003 Annual Meeting/Dinner on Tuesday, Nov. 11, in Vienna to celebrate our 76th year. We will begin with a social gathering at 6:00 p.m., and dinner will follow. The cost is $25 per person. The event will be held again this year at the beautiful Atrium of the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority, located next to the Meadowlark Botanical Gardens on Beulah Road in Vienna. Our speaker this year will be Robert Rubin who is Editor of the AT Conference AT News and author of “On The Beaten Path,” the memoir of his AT thru hike. There will also be displays made by the volunteers of our various activities. When you look them over, you just may find a new volunteer interest. The Atrium (pictured above) is a beautiful garden and conference center generously made available to us for the past two years by the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority$ The Atrium is located next to the Meadowlark Gardens at 9750 Meadowlark Gardens Court, just off Beulah Road, Vienna, Va. Take I-495 north to the Vienna/Tyson’s Corner/Rte. 123 exit. From Rte. 123, turn right onto Courthouse Road. Then go through the stop sign and continue on Beulah Road. The New SNP Cabin Rates and Winter Policy New Cabin Rates for SNP Cabins N ew cabin rates for all cabins except the Shenandoah Park cabins went into effect beginning October 2002. New rental rates for all Shenandoah Park cabins – Corbin, Doyles River, Jones Mountain, Pocosin, Range View, and Rock Spring – will be effective for reservations made beginning October 6, 2003. The new rates will be $18 for each weekday night and $28 for each weekend night. New Winter Policy for SNP Cabins If Skyline Drive is closed and a renter cannot reach the cabin by vehicle, he or she can request a refund of the advance payment minus the $5 processing fee. Hike-in directions are made available on the cabin direction sheets mailed out with the key. If PATC is not informed of the cancellation prior to the first date of the reservation, no refunds will be made regardless of whether or not the drive is closed. ❏ —Pat Fankhauser, Membership and Cabins Coordinator Gardens are on the left. Shuttle service will be available at 5:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. at the Vienna metro station. Please call Pat Fankhauser at 703/242-0693, Ext. 17, if you will be using the shuttle service. See Annual Meeting page In This Issue . . . Council Fire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Tom’s Trail Talk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Committee Proposes New Award . . . .4 Watch Those Thorns! . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 New Rail-Trail Under Study by NPS . .5 Book Review: Virginia’s Wild Side . . .5 Wagon Wheel Shelter Dedication . . . .6 North District Hoodlums Work Trip . .7 Let’s Hear it for 20 Years of Pigs . . . .7 Bob Pickett’s Appalachian Nature . . . . .8 K9 Hike at Gambrill State Park . . . . . .9 Hiker’s Notebook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Forecast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 Volunteers Appointed . . . . . . . . . . . .15 Leave No Trace Trainers Course . . . .15 Backpacking 202 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 Notices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Trailhead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 Help Wanted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Council Members, Chairs and PA Staff Council Fire Officers President: Tom Johnson (johnts3@juno.com) Weekdays, Reston, Va, ph. 703/435-2755 Weekends, Front Royal, ph. 540/622-6422 VP Volunteerism: Mickey McDermott VP Operations: Fred “Hop” Long Treasurer: Gerhard Salinger Secretary: Georgeann Smale (gsmale99@yahoo.com) Supervisor of Trails: Liles Creighton Supervisor of Membership: Susan Nelson Supervisor of Land Management: Chris Mangold, csm5749@yahoo.com Supervisor of Facilities: Larry Marcoux Supervisor of Education, Information, and Activities: Lisa Still General Counsel: Charles Sloan T he Potomac Appalachian Trail Club’s regularly scheduled Council meeting was held at Club Headquarters Aug. 12, 2003. President Tom Johnson welcomed Lisa Still as the new Supervisor of Information, Education, and Activities. He also welcomed George Still as the new Chair of Public Affairs. Tom reported on the biennial ATC Conference held in New Hampshire. Approximately 40 PATC members had attended, including five Council members and two officers. Sections/Chapters Mountaineering Section: Andy Britton SMRG: Christopher Smith Ski Touring Section: Steve Brickel North Chapter: Pete Brown N. Shenandoah Valley Chapter: Lee Sheaffer S. Shenandoah Valley Chapter: Michael Seth Charlottesville Chapter: John Shannon West Virginia Chapter: Judy Smoot Standing Committee Chairs (Council Members) AT Corridor Monitoring: Tom Lupp Blackburn Trail Center: Chris Brunton Budget: David White Cabins Operations: Mel Merritt Cabin Construction: Charlie Graf Conservation: Jeff Pearcy Grants & Donations: Susan Nelson Endowment: Don Price Finance: Gerhard Salinger Hikes: Karen Brown & Lee Sheaffer Internet Services: Stephen Raia Land Management: Chris Mangold, csm5749@yahoo.com Legal: Charles Sloan Maps: Dave Pierce Maryland Appalachian Trail Management Committee: Charlie Graf Potomac Appalachian: Linda Shannon-Beaver Public Affairs: George Still Publications: George Meek Sales: Vacant Shelters: Frank Turk Trail Lands Acquisition: Phil Paschall Trail Patrol: Kumait Jawdat Tuscarora Trail Land Management: Lloyd MacAskill Special Committees/Ongoing Activities Archives & Library: Carol Niedzialek Cabin Reservations: Shakuntala Ghare Communications Team: Tom Johnson Deputy Finance Committee Chair: John Ferguson Deputy Supervisor of Trails: Jon Rindt Headquarters Facility: Orron Kee Information/Sales Desks: Annetta DePompa Medical: Vacant Shelters, Cabins, & Cabins Land Fund: Larry Marcoux SNP Boundary Trailheads Study Group: Mark Holland Tuscarora Trail Shenandoah Valley Project: Phoebe Kilby & Larry Bradford Potomac Appalachian Chief Editor: Linda Shannon-Beaver PA@patc.net Features Editor: Joanne Erickson Forecast Editor: Suzie Shannon PA-Forecast@patc.net % Tom had attended two sessions on risk management and liability. He reported he had also attended an enlightening workshop on accessibility issues. Tom commended Liles Creighton for introducing a resolution accepted by the ATC Conference that called for Supervisors of Trails and their counterparts in other clubs to meet and exchange policies and lessons learned at the next biennial meeting. Liles said the objective of the resolution was to get clubs back into ATC business to help formulate policy, rather than merely conform to policy set by ATC. Tom noted that attendance at the conference had dramatically decreased, from 1,100 attendees in 2001 to 800 in 2003. While high costs of the 2003 conference may have contributed, he observed that attendance has been steadily declining since 1995. Finance, 2004 Goals Treasurer Gerhard Salinger distributed the monthly budget report, noting that cabin rental revenue, as well as membership dues, has increased since the last budget report. The planning session for next year’s goals was held prior to the Council meeting. Tom thanked participants for attending the goals session. Other Business SMRG: John Luck reported the group participated in the search for a lost 10-year-old boy on the Dark Hollow Falls Trail in Shenandoah National Park. The boy was found in a drainage area leading from the falls after being missing for 30 hours. A total of 23 SMRG members helped with the search, or had begun to respond to the call, when the child was found. He was dehydrated and had minor injuries but has fully recovered. John also reported that, in response to a request from the Park Service, SMRG was in SNP over the busy July 4 weekend, ready to respond as needed. They did assist with some motor vehicle accidents over the holiday. Trail Patrol: Reporting for Trail Patrol, Holly Wheeler announced the Backpacking Committee met recently to discuss the future of the course. They will expand the number of classes to include a fall Backpacking 101 course and to include one-day seminars on focused topics, such as meal planning and See Council Fire page + HEADQUARTERS HOW TO CONTACT US FOR CABIN RESERVATIONS, MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION, AND SALES Address: 118 Park Street, S.E., Vienna, VA 22180 Hours: Monday through Thursday, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Thursday and Friday 12 noon to 2 p.m. Phone #: 703/242-0315 24-hr. Activities Tape #: 703/242-0965 To receive an information packet: Extension 10 To leave a message for the Club President, Tom Johnson: Extension 40 Club e-mail: info@patc.net Facsimile #: 703/242-0968 World Wide Web URL: http://www.patc.net STAFF DURING REGULAR BUSINESS HOURS Director of Administration: Wilson Riley (Ext. 11) e-mail: Wriley@patc.net Trails Management Coordinator: Heidi Forrest (Ext. 12) e-mail: hforrest@patc.net Business Manager: Monica Clark (Ext. 15) e-mail: mclark@patc.net Membership/Cabin Coordinator: Pat Fankhauser (Ext. 17) e-mail: pfankhauser@patc.net Sales Coordinator: Maureen Estes (Ext. 19) e-mail: mestes@patc.net Bus/Metro Directions to Headquarters: When taking Metro Orange line, get off at Dunn Loring station (not Vienna, the last stop). Outside the station, find the stop for Metrobus 2T westbound in the direction of Tyson’s Corner. When the bus starts down Maple Avenue in Vienna, exit at the library just past Center St. Walk half a block in the same direction the bus travels, and turn right at Park St. PATC will be on the left only a few yards down from the corner. The fare is $1.10, but you can ride for $.25 if you remember to get a transfer ticket at your originating station. October %'' – Potomac Appalachian Tom’s Trail Talk Computers, PATC, and You “T o err is human; to really foul up takes a computer.” Frankly, I don’t know a megabyte from a flourescent light. But ignorance of the law is no excuse. I’m talking about the iron law, so often quoted, above. PATC’s size, its diversity, and its reporting requirements demand a Club that is run, increasingly, by (and some say for) computers. We are completely reliant on electronic communications. Modern e-mail communications are so ubiquitous that every single voting member of our Council (there are 40 of them, in case you were wondering) now has an e-mail address. Web sites are so pervasive that it is unthinkable for a club like PATC not to have one. To paraphrase one of our Council members, a functional Web site will be an absolute requirement for all organizations that pretend to serve the public. When I sit down at my desk in the evening, I normally do at least two hours of e-mail. When I finish my trail work, my report goes in electronically. My District Manager knows within hours where I have been and what I’ve been doing. That is now the way I communicate. I suspect that it is the same for most of you. When the Club’s communications do not work, as they did not for most of the month of July, it is a transcendent crisis. This was not the first instance of computer gridlock, but it was the most obvious example of a hidden crisis that has been building for years. Let me explain. Our computer systems have evolved over time. Like everything else the Club does, they have been strapped together by volunteers who have taken time away from trail work to try to get the Club into the modern (that is, the computer) age. Each new crisis engenders a new computer committee of committed volunteers who do their best. Each time we come to the end of a fix-it-up session we breathe a sigh of relief and launch the new system. And each new system eventually breaks down. By going cheap, we have worked ourselves into some technological blind alleys, and it will not be easy to get out of them. So, once again, we are faced with a crisis and need to regenerate our computer committee. But this time the role of the volunteers will be different. They will be writing architecture and work requirements for a system that will be maintained by professionals. The task demands people who, unlike me, are conversant with computer systems. But more important, they must also be conversant with the Club and its operations. They Annual Meeting from page , Reserve your seat by filling out the form below and mailing it back to PATC no later than Nov. 4, 2003. Space is limited. As always, we will need a lot of volunteers to handle various tasks will be discussing the requirements with companies that are in the business of creating computer structures and Web sites that function and interlock. This is serious. The Club needs your help. If you have any IT skills and a modicum of understanding of some area of our operations, contact me. No, I don’t mean by telephone – johnts3@juno.com or president@patc.net. That is how I communicate these days. I’m waiting to hear from you. ❏ —Tom Johnson to help coordinate a successful event. If you’re interested, please contact Pat Fankhauser at 703/242-0693, Ext. 17, or pfankhauser@patc.net. ❏ —Pat Fankhauser Registration for PATC’s ./th Annual Meeting/Dinner Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2003, from 6:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., at the Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority’s Atrium. For more information, please contact Pat Fankhauser at 703/242-0693, Ext. 17, or pfankhauser@patc.net. Don’t delay, space is limited. Come on out and join us to celebrate 76 years! Name: ____________________________________________, entree` preference (choose one) ❏ vegetarian ❏ chicken ❏ beef Name: ____________________________________________, entree` preference (choose one) ❏ vegetarian ❏ chicken ❏ beef Daytime phone number: __________________________________________ Please enclose a check in the amount of $25 ( or list your credit card information below) per attendee for dinner. If you wish to attend the meeting and not have dinner, please contact Pat fankhauser and let her know you will be coming. ( ) Here is an additional $76 to for the Trail Land Acquisition Fund for 76 years of service on the trails. ( ) Sorry, I can’t attend the banquet, but here is $76 to support PATC’s Trail Land Acquisition Fund. For 76 years the Club has led hikes; constructed and renovated shelters and cabins; mapped the trails; taught trail construction, safety, and conservation; and built and cleared the trails in rain, snow, and sunshine. Your contribution will be used to enhance those activities. Let’s celebrate as we move into our 76th year! VISA/MasterCard Number: ____________________________, Expiration Date: ______________Please charge my credit card for __________ for ______ dinner(s) Signature: __________________________________________ Mail to: PATC - Annual Meeting/Dinner 2003, 118 Park Street, SE, Vienna, Virginia 22180 Attn: Monica Clark, Business Manager Because PATC pays for dinners in advance, no refunds after November 4, 2003. Potomac Appalachian – October %'' Award Nominations Need to be Submitted Now T his is what every volunteer sweats, toils, grunts, and yes, sometimes curses when one drops a rock on one’s tow for the coveted PATC Service Award. So if you’re a District Manager of trails, shelters, or cabins, or a supervisor of a particular project, and you would like to recognize a superior effort by one of your volunteers, we need to hear from you. Send your nominations for Honorary Life Member or Volunteer of the Year to Mickey McDermott at volunteer@PATC.net and your nominations for Service Awards or Special Commendations (for non-PATC members) to Pat Fankhauser at pfankhauser@patc.net or by phone (703/242-0693, ext. 17) by Oct. 10. Following are some general guidelines to help you in choosing award nominees: ❏ Honorary Life Membership. A very special, coveted award, reserved for members who have rendered outstanding service or contributions to the Club or its objectives over an extended period of time. The recipient must be a long-time Club member and exemplify the service aims of the Club, such as leading trips, serving on committees, serving as trail or cabin Overseer, or donating time at Headquarters. ❏ PATC Appreciation Award. Primarily for nonmembers, this award would be given to individuals who have made some special contribution to the Club and its objectives. Recipients could include government officials (federal, state, local) who have assisted the Club in its activities, individuals who have donated land or facilities to the Club, retired PATC employees, or anyone else who has helped the Club in a significant way. Watch Those Thorns! The steady rains of summer made for lots of trail growth, and we were all soaked with sweat when we hit Windy Run at 1 p.m. Pam casually mentioned that she had been stuck in a finger through her rubber-coated garden gloves by a huge, unseen thorn when grabbing a bush she lopped. Through the rest of a normal weekend day of errands, minor house projects, and relaxation, Pam noticed her finger was starting to swell and become sore. Ibuprofen and soaking in ice water didn’t seem to help, and by this time she couldn’t remove a ring on the stuck finger. When the situation worsened with more + ❏ Service Award. This award recognizes members for outstanding service during a specific year. The individual must be a PATC member who has given a specific service or completed a project within the year and has not received the award previously for the same service. ❏ Honorary Membership. This award may be for a fixed or renewable term to a nonmember in recognition of outstanding contributions to the objectives of the Club. ❏ —Susan Nelson, Supervisor of Membership Council Fire from page % A s new members, my wife Pam and I have looked forward to getting involved in PATC trail projects, and a chance meeting a few months ago with Bruce Glendening, the Potomac Heritage Trail Overseer, got us on the e-mail list for PHT projects. On Saturday, Aug. 30, we met Bruce and Alex Sanders at Windy Run to help Alex maintain his portion of the PHT from Roosevelt Island to Windy Run. After being shuttled to Roosevelt Island by Bruce’s wife, Cecile, Bruce, Alex, and I fired up the weedwackers and Pam manned the loppers as we worked our way back to Windy Run and our cars. ❏ Youth Under 14. Individuals under 14 years of age who have participated in Club worktrips or other activities are eligible for special recognition. Upon the recommendation of an adult member, a letter of appreciation, along with a PATC patch, will be sent to the individual, thanking him or her for contributing to the Club’s work and encouraging him or her to become a PATC member when they reach 14 years of age. redness and swelling and a touch of dizziness, it was time for a second opinion. A call to the Blue Cross Nurse Hotline led us to the Alexandria Hospital at 12:30 a.m. and a diagnosis of an infected tendon sheath. She was admitted at 3:30 a.m. and put on intravenous antibiotics with the possibility of hand surgery if the infection traveled to the palm tendons, according to the hand surgeon, Dr. Jimmy Chow! Fortunately, a two-night hospital stay with intravenous antibiotics every eight hours turned the tide and she was released on Monday afternoon with a prescription for oral antibiotics, rest, and a follow-up visit with Dr Chow. It still amazes us what one thorn puncture can do! preparation. They also hope to facilitate trips by alumni through improved communications. Holly noted that Dave Paxton, the Trail Patrol’s training officer, has been working to increase the partnership between the group and SNP, working closely with Steve Bair, the backcountry Ranger for Shenandoah. Ski Touring Section: Burt Finkelstein reported that winter ski trips are being planned and reminded members of the Nov. 1 Ski Fair at Headquarters. Facilities Mel Merritt reported the Highacre paint job has been contracted. He introduced a fundraising idea to Council, proposing a “show of cabins.” Mel announced the retirement of Diana Niskern, Overseer for the Doyle River Cabin for 35 years. Vining Tract Manager Hugh Robinson reported members of the Vining family had granted legal access to Wineberry Cabin. So, watch those thorns, wear leather gloves, and, if you suspect an infection, seek medical advice quickly. Also, look for us back on the trail soon! ❏ The August Council meeting was attended by five Club officers, seven committee Chairs, three chapter representatives, three section representatives, one staff member, and four other Club members. ❏ —Ken and Pam Williams —Secretary Georgeann Smale October %'' – Potomac Appalachian Spectacular New Rail-Trail Under Study by the National Park Service H ow does a trail with six high trestle bridges and three tunnels within 12 miles sound? In Morgan County, W.Va., in the Paw Paw Bends of the Potomac River, this possibility exists. The abandoned Western Maryland Railway right-of-way is owned by the C&O Canal National Historical Park (NHP). It is a 34-mile segment between Pearre, Md.(on the C&O Canal towpath), and Cumberland, crossing over the Potomac River on those six magnificent, high bridges three times into and out of West Virginia through lovely remote, wild mountains. The three stretches in West Virginia are one half, three, and 3.5 miles, respectively. The C&O Canal Park owns the right-of-way because it intersects the towpath four times, and, when not in a tunnel, it parallels the towpath most of the distance. This abandoned railway has already been made into a rail-trail from Fort Frederick, Md., to Pearre, by the state of Maryland. From that point on, ownership is by the C&O NHP. It is within the first 14 miles from the termination of the Maryland rail-trail that these bridges and tunnels come up. However, the entire 34 miles offers wonderful scenery; dramatic cuts; interesting rock formations; and several short bridges over side streams, with views of the old aqueducts of the C&O Canal paralleling. It passes through historic Oldtown, Spring Gap, and North Branch toward Cumberland. A man from North Carolina said it was “the premier hiking/biking trail on the East Coast, perhaps in the country!” At this time, a study is being done by the National Park Service to determine the fate of this right-of-way. The park is seeking citizen input for alternative uses of the property. The C&O Canal Association and others are working very hard to ensure that the hiking/biking trail is the alternative of choice. We must be sure that the Park Service knows the public wants this old rail line preserved for the purpose of a trail so that they do not dispose of the property, tear down the bridges, and seal the tunnels! Those are irreplaceable resources!!! Please let your voice be heard!! For your information, there is a beautiful Web site on the subject: www.wmwestsub.com. Click on “slide show.” Please check it out!! You can e-mail me at actthree@earthlink.net. Please place WMRR as the subject. ❏ —Emmie Woodward Shepherdstown, W.Va. A letter supporting this trail would carry a lot of weight! Please write to: ❏ Superintendent, C&O Canal NHP, 1850 Dual Highway, Suite 100, Hagerstown, MD 21740 PATC Members get 20% off of in-stock items. Bring proof of membership. Book Review: Virginia’s Wild Side “Virginia’s Wild Side,” by Curtis J. Badger. University of Virginia Press, 2003, 240 p., 13 illustrations, four maps, cloth, $24.95. “T om thought he was being attacked by a shark.” Thus begins an exploration of Burton’s Bay on the Eastern Shore. Author Curtis Badger searches for fossils at Westmoreland State Park and searches for gold at Lake Anna. He confronts a bear with nothing but a multi-use tool on Stony Man Mountain. Don’t expect a travel guide from this book. There are no recommended accommodations or restaurants. There are no detailed maps. Instead, Badger bikes, hikes, canoes, and kayaks through 50 unique places in Virginia, from the Eastern shore to the mountains. Along the way he entertains us with great stories and informs us of the natural and man-made history of these places. ❏ County Commission of Morgan County, 210 Fairfax St., Berkeley Springs, WV 25411 ❏ County Commission of Allegany County, County Office Bldg., Suite 405, 701 Kelly Road, Cumberland, MD 21502 I enjoyed reading about the places I’ve already seen and learning more about them, such as the history of Crabtree Falls. I’m looking forward to exploring some of the places I haven’t been. This is a good book to get you excited about seeing new and familiar places. ❏ —Cheryl Zebrowski Potomac Appalachian – October %'' 2 Wagon Wheel Shelter Dedication Ceremony Charlie Irvin led the 2001 effort to dismantle and relocate the former Hemlock Hills Shelter from the AT in Smithsburg, Md., and place it on the Tuscarora Trail in Pennsylvania. This is what Charlie had to say at the Wagon Wheel dedication ceremony. I would like to thank you all for coming to the Wagon Wheel Shelter Dedication. There are many that worked on the shelter who are with us. We appreciate all the help that Jim Foose and the Tuscarora Forest Service have given us. Jim is not with us. Ed Franco is Overseer, Lynn Miller is Co-Overseer, and they are with us. We had over 400 hours by 19 different volunteers on 10 worktrips in 2002. Now this new shelter for the Tuscarora Trail stands proudly. It is a solid and gentle testament to its background of caring trail workers, ready to help the hiking community today and for future time; but let us go back in time to recap how and why we are here today dedicating this place of rest. As noted on PATC’s North Chapter Web site, our involvement with the Tuscarora Trail officially goes back to April 1993 when KTA turned its maintenance over to the North Chapter. But for years before that, starting about 1988-89, Jack Danner, Dale Kitchen, Charles Irwin, Elizabeth Johnston, and others came to help Dennis Helfrick from Mercersburg. He asked if the North Chapter could help with the four miles of TT South of Rte. 16. According to Elizabeth, soon we somehow had 14 miles south of Rte. 16. After many a bloody trip from the blackberry and current brambles and much chainsaw work, it looked like a trail instead of a briar patch. There was literally no trail in many places when we started. Charlie and I had to flag it. Charlie noted that they worked south of 16 for three years (thought we would never get it open), then started going north, which wasn’t as bad until they hit Rte 641. About this point in time, Ethel Nelson reported from KTA that the TT was a problem for them, and they wanted to abandon it. By this time the North Chapter had too much invested in it and proposed to take it over. This decision had to be ratified by both KTA and PATC in 1993. Elizabeth remembers Charlie took over with a vengeance, working all summer almost full time with help from people like Jack Danner. Many / long days went by, after working 8 a.m. until 11 p.m. before they had supper. During this time the crews realized that having more than one shelter on the TT would be a great asset. There were not many good locations for TT shelters due to its proximity in places to private land or game land. Today the Tuscarora Trail is a major U.S. Eastern trail, stretching 252 miles to touch the Appalachian Trail from Virginia’s Skyline Drive near Front Royal to Dean’s Gap on the AT in Pennsylvania’s capital region. Since it became passable again in 1994, its popularity has increased dramatically as an alternate to the busy AT, as well as providing loop hikes and a byway via the Link Trail to Maryland state, on and on. Having another shelter for the Tuscarora Trail became the next goal. Scouting around for a suitable location, the Wagon Wheel site was approved. Since PATC planned to replace this shelter near Smithsburg, Md., plans were made to have it disassembled carefully and then reconstructed. Originally built as an Eagle Scout project in August of 1976 by the son of Alfred and Karel Henneberger of Smithsburg, Md., the shelter has found a new home. Providing a haven from rain, wind, and snow, and a place to sit, sleep and relax, this shelter patiently awaits the hikers venturing on the Tuscarora for years to come. ❏ Sincerely, Charles Irvin October %'' – Potomac Appalachian A Typical August Worktrip for the North District Hoodlums T Photos by Wayne Limberg he North District Hoodlums put in some good hours on Aug. 16, repairing and adding waterbars and checkdams to the AT just south of Jenkins Gap. Rain and a surprise appearance by a mama bear and three – yes, three, count ‘em – cubs forced an earlier-than-planned quitting time, and the crew retired to Indian Run for the Hoodlum’s annual Jamaican feast complete with jerked chicken and John McCrea’s flambeed plantains. Good, mon! ❏ —Wayne Limberg George Ivey crafts a waterbar$ Tails from the Woods by George Walters Bernie Stahlman and John McCrea debate the philosophy of just where the waterbar should go$ Correction: The photo on page , of the September PA contained an incorrect caption$ That caption should have appeared with the photo at right: Pictured are (l9r) Dave Trone Bill Jones Jim Stauch and Al Black$ Let’s Hear it for 20 Good Years of Pigs and Cheer! P lease join us for the 20th Annual Blackburn Pig Roast, scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 11-12, 2003, at Blackburn Trail Center, near Round Hill, Va. The organizers – who will admit to being no more than 18 years old when the first Pig Roast was held – will be the same as always: Rick Portal with help from Tim Rahn and Nancy Hughes. Registration this year is once again being taken by Trailboss Chris Brunton and Sandi Marra. As is the Saturday evening tradition, black beans and rice, potato au gratin, and apple crisp will accompany our Cuban-style roast pig. Happy hour will lead off the evening with Rick’s famous tamales. In addition, Tim will make sure anyone waking up Sunday morning still hungry will be taken care of with his quality breakfast fare. Anyone wanting to participate in the Friday night Pig grease down and seasoning (an event worth experiencing at least once in your life) are welcomed! Dinner on Friday and breakfast and lunch on Saturday are up to each individual. Potomac Appalachian – October %'' In keeping with our family-oriented events, we will have planned activities for children of all ages, culminating in our annual jack-o-lantern contest, complete with scary stories and prizes for all. Of course all attendees can take a hike along the AT or simply enjoy the changing leaves from our front porch. Overnight accomodations include bunk space inside the trail center (first-come, first-served) and tent sites outside on the grounds. And all are included with the low reservation fee. Confirmation with directions will be sent after a reservation is received. Members and friends interested in attending the event should complete the registration form on page 8 and send a check for $25 per adult and for children over 10 to Sandi Marra, 9000 Piney Grove Dr., Fairfax, VA 22031. MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO SANDRA MARRA. Info: Chris Brunton, (trailbossbtc@msn.com) 703/560-8070. ❏ . Bob Pickett’s Appalachian Nature: The Forest World Prepares for Winter W ith the coming of October, we reach the end of the growing season. With the decreasing solar energy, the rate of plant photosynthesis and animal metabolism has significantly slowed down (with the notable exception of the warm-blooded mammals and birds). The days are getting colder, and the killing frosts are near at hand. The mammals and birds of the forest are stimulated to ingest as many calories as possible before the onset of winter. And the usable form of energy that supports our diverse faunal community is largely based upon the hard mast crop produced by the oaks and hickories. Prior to this last century, the American chestnut was also a major constituent of this energy supply. It is believed that the chestnut was the dietary staple of passenger pigeons, supporting their annual fall migration. The value of the chestnut was not only in its prominence in the forest composition, but also in its habit of producing a large crop of fruits every year. This is unlike the oak species, which may have a good fruit-producing “mast crop” only once every five years, or even less often. Animals Store Fat October is a very busy time for wildlife. Much of our wildlife counts on the acorns and nuts to provide them with the energy necessary to get through the winter season of scarcity. Bear, deer, raccoon, and other mammals join the food fight with grouse and turkey. And this doesn’t include the fungi, bacteria, arthropods, and micro-invertebrates that count on mast for their food supply. Chipmunks cache their acorns and other nuts, and conifer seeds in large hiding places called middens. Well-developed cheek pouches have been known to hold up to 32 beechnuts or 70 sunflower seeds. Red squirrels also use the midden approach. Gray squirrels choose a different method of storage, preferring individual holes for each acorn or seed. Stored foods are found by smell, not memory. This is the time of year mass movements of squirrels have historically occurred. Such movements are necessitated by local high populations and erratic annual acorn mast crops. A famous naturalist of 100 years ago, Ernest Thompson Seton, estimated one mass movement at more than 1 billion individuals in 1920. A more recent mass movement on a reduced scale was reported in October of 1968 in the southern Appalachians of Tennessee, Georgia, and North Carolina. This followed a mast crop the previous year, resulting in an abundance of young squirrels. Unfortunately, 1968 was a poor mast year, resulting in a major food shortage. No Time for Mating: A Clever System The mast crop is so important to black bears that all other physiological functions take second priority. This even includes mating. With an eight-week gestation period, late fall is the time black bears should be getting serious about mating. However, such activity would call for much time and effort being expended seeking females and defending territories, something that would severely detract from the important function of fattening up for the upcoming winter season. So, nature has provided a unique solution to the bear’s dilemma, known as delayed implantation. The black bear mates in late spring, when food resources are prevalent, but, shortly after fertilization, the egg’s growth is arrested and lies dormant within the female for six months. Only in November does the egg implant on the uterus wall and its growth continue, allowing birthing to occur in late January. Interestingly, if the mast crop fails and the sow fails to put on adequate brown fat before entering the winter dormancy, the embryo will abort. Thus, the delayed implantation prevents the sow from investing in a pregnancy before her food reserves are established. This delayed implantation also occurs among most of the weasel family, including minks, marten, skunks, river otters, long- and shorttailed weasels, and the recently re-introduced fisher. The fisher is the record holder, with a delayed implantation period of 10 to 11 months, resulting in a birth a year after mating (an average of 352 days, which includes a gestation period of 30 to 50 days). The female is quickly inseminated again (in fact, she is not pregnant for only about 10 days), so that birthing takes place every year. Amphibian Preparation What else is happening in October? Rattlesnakes will enter their dens in our region from the last week of September until the middle of October, often denning with copperheads and a few black rat snakes. Other snakes will burrow in individual holes, nooks, and crannies. And many of our turtles will be hatching and leaving their nests for winter dens underwater or in individual burrows. An exception to this is the painted turtle, which, after hatching, will remain in its nest with the See Bob page ,+ Make Plans Now for the 20th Annual Blackburn Pig Roast Blackburn Pig Roast — Saturday and Sunday, October 11/12, 2003 Name: Address: ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Phone: (day) ________________________ (evening) ______________________ Number of reservations: __________ @ $25.00 each Total enclosed: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ I will also be bringing __________ # children aged 10 and under (for whom there is no charge) Include a $25.00 payment per person for each reservation with checks payable to Sandra Marra and mail to: Sandra Marra, 9000 Piney Grove Drive, Fairfax, VA 22031. IMPORTANT: Please be sure to make your check payable to Sandra Marra. : October %'' – Potomac Appalachian Gambrill State Park Proves Haven for Dogs T Gambrill State Park is on Catoctin Mountain, on a tract of land that was originally purchased by Frederick County and donated to the city of Frederick for a municipal park. In September 1934, Frederick returned the park to the state, and it was later named Gambrill State Park in honor of James H. Gambrill Jr., described on the Maryland state Web site as a Frederick resident and leading advocate of the conservation of natural resources. Today’s hike was led by Pat with Mickey, Jeff with Katy, and Cindy with Belle. Joining us were newcomers Phyllis with Cody, Joe with Hunter, and Karen and Victor with Loki. Regular K9TB hikers included Shirley with Princess and Sarah and Eric with Toby and his friend Poppy. We did the chocolate and biscuits routine at the trailhead, but it was Sarah’s trail mix at the North Frederick overlook that really hit the spot. The group voted her club hostess! We hiked a large loop, starting with a downhill and then a long uphill, which became longer when Pat and Mickey blew on by the next trail junction! Jeff, who was sweeping, radioed a heads-up and the fast hikers retraced their steps back to join the rest of the group for the short climb to Bootjack spring. Dogs and people were delighted to rest and drink the cool Photos by Jeff Bolognese he humidity was high but the rains held off until we finished our six-mile loop at Gambrill State Park. The trails were exceptionally well-maintained, and even after so much recent rain we encountered no flooding. The Bootjack spring was running well, and the vegetation was lush everywhere. Taking a break at the North Frederick overlook$ water. Then we took off on the newly re-routed black trail, which is now a series of switchbacks up to the North Frederick overlook, where we enjoyed a nice breeze and an even nicer view of the Frederick Valley. Everyone hung out on the native stone benches built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s. Cody sat up and begged. Jeff took some pictures. Sarah shared her special trail mix. Suddenly we heard a soft whining, which became grumbling and grew louder and more insistent. Belle had rested enough and was eager to get the show on the road again! So off we went. It was all downhill from there. Literally. We hiked out on the wide yellow trail, stopping at the overlook to see Middletown Valley, and continued on down past the Visitor Center. Club naturalist Cindy pointed out Indian pipe stem and explained that it is not a mushroom but a true flower that is pollinated by small insects, such as the clouds of gnats we were standing in. She also talked about the gniess rock we saw that had flecks of mica and veins of quartz. This rock is formed by pressure deep inside the earth and gradually, over millions of years, hardens and works its way to the surface where we see it as slate. We turned onto the red trail and went steeply downhill, past the sign warning mountain bikers about the steep descent, and finally the trail flattened out again and we ambled back to the parking area. There are many varieties of wildlife in the Park. Today we saw chipmunks, squirrels, and deer but no bears or coyotes or snakes. And we heard songbirds but didn’t see any of the birds of prey. We didn’t see many people or mountain bikes either. It was peaceful in the forest, and we were fortunate to have it pretty much to ourselves. ❏ Hiking up the switchback toward the overlook$ Potomac Appalachian – October %'' —Pat Fuhrer, K9 Trailblazers Dog Hiking Club http://www.k9trailblazers.org Hikers Notebook Common Name: Spotted Jewelweed, Touch-me-not, Snapweed Scientific Name: Impatiens capensis Family: Balsaminaceae Jewelweed is prolific along shaded stream banks and shaded swampy areas. Flowers may be either orangecolored (spotted), as shown, or pale yellow (called pale jewelweed) and grows in dense stands about one to two meters in height. Potpourri: The name “touch-me-not” refers to the manner in which the jewelweed disperses its seeds. There are small elongated seed capsules containing three to five seeds each that burst open at the slightest touch. This disperses the seeds up to five feet away, which is very effective at propagating the seeds, particularly if they fall into an adjacent stream. Jewelweed is unusual in that it has two kinds of flowers. The more obvious large flowers are either male or female and so must be cross-fertilized (pollinated) by an insect or a bee. This is desirable from the standpoint of genetic diversity at the expense of ensuring that the species survives. The jewelweed therefore has smaller secondary flowers that are self fertilizing. They look like small green buds on the stem. The juice of the jewelweed is said to be effective at reducing the effects of poison ivy if applied soon enough after exposure. ❏ —William Needham Visit the Hiker’s Notebook Web site at: mwrop.org/W_Needham/h_notebook.html. ; FORECAST Chapters Charlottesville Chapter The Charlottesville Chapter hikes every Saturday; summer, winter, and in between. Hikes are usually 8 to 10 miles. We usually maintain trails on the last Saturday of the month. Meet at Sprint parking lot, 2307 Hydraulic Road, at 9 a.m., with food and water for the day. The majority of hikes are in the southern and central districts of Shenandoah National Park, with some in the north district and in George Washington National Forest. Our Chapter hikes are posted at www.patc.net/chapters/ char/hikes.html. INFO: Jere Bidwell 434/295-2143 or John Shannon 434/293-2953. North Chapter The North Chapter of PATC conducts monthly trail work trips on the Maryland and Pennsylvania sections of the AT and on the Pennsylvania sections of the Tuscarora Trail. We also lead hikes on these and other trails. Maryland AT work trips are generally held on the first and third Saturdays – contact Mark Mitchell (mdtrail@yahoo.com) 301/461-7048 for information. Pennsylvania work trips are generally held on the AT on the first Saturday and on the Tuscarora on the third Saturday – contact Pete Brown (peter.brown4@worldnet.att.net) 410/343-1140. Pennsylvania AT work trips also include an optional Saturday night stay at the Gypsy Spring cabin. For information on upcoming hikes, contact Chris Firme (bncfirme@innernet.net) 717/794-2855. For general chapter information, contact chapter president Pete Brown or visit the North Chapter home page: www.patc.net/chapters/north/. Northern Shenandoah Valley Chapter The Northern Shenandoah Valley Chapter sponsors hikes in national and state parks and forests in the Shenandoah Valley vicinity, open to the public, on a monthly basis except during the winter. Hikes are posted in the Forecast. Other activities are in the NSV Chapter Newsletter. For further information contact Lee Sheaffer, (thumpers@visuallink.com) 540/955-0736. KEY to Forecast Activities All events are marked for easy identification. Late changes or cancellations are listed on the weekly information tape (703/242-0965), which is updated on Sunday evening for the following seven days. The Forecast can also be found on PATC’s Web site at www.patc.net/activities/forecast.html. ` ~ . i s \ a z Hiking Trips Backpacking Trips Trail Work Trips Cabin/Shelter Work Trips Special Events Meetings Classes K9 Trail Blazers (dogs permitted) Note to all hike leaders: Please ask nonmembers on your hike if they would like to join PATC, then get names and addresses so a Club volunteer can send them information packets. Thanks! ,' Southern Shenandoah Valley Chapter Please refer to our Web site at www.ssvc.org or the one linked to the PATC Web site for descriptions of hikes and work trips. We usually hike in the southern and central districts of the SNP and in the GWNF. Contact the listed hike leader for information about a specific event, or contact Michael Seth 540/438-1301 for more information. West Virginia Chapter Chapter meetings at Highacre are on the second Wednesday of Feb., Apr., Jun., Aug., Oct., and Dec. See Forecast for upcoming activities. For information about the chapter or to receive the newsletter, contact Judy Smoot 540/667-2036 or e-mail wvpatc@hotmail.com. Ski Touring Section The Ski Touring Section has served since 1974 to introduce Washington area residents to crosscountry skiing and to provide cross-country skiing opportunities to experienced skiers. The Section sponsors winter weekend ski trips for all levels of skiers to nearby mountains in Maryland, West Virginia and Pennsylvania, as well as periodic social events year round. INFO: Steve Brickel 301/946-2520 or sbrickel@erols.com. Mountaineering Section We’re a diverse group of local Washington, DC area climbers. Young and old, male and female, crag rat, sport climber, and alpinist, active and armchair types – we all enjoy climbing in its many varieties. We also share common interests in promoting safe climbing, conserving the outdoors, developing new climbers’ skills, representing the Washington area climbing community, and having fun! We provide instruction for those wanting to learn the basics – we’re not a school, but we can get you started. We go climbing, either locally or further afield, nearly every weekend. In the winter we organize trips to the Ice Festivals in the Adirondacks and the White Mountains for beginning and advanced ice climbers. For further information contact Andy Britton, (tallandyb@aol.com) 703/622-1920, or (MackMuir@edisaurus.com). PATC Hikes PATC offers organized hikes appealing to the diverse interests of our members. There are K-9 Hikes, which invite you to bring your favorite dog; Family Hikes tailored to kids; Natural History Hikes stalking the fascinating but often elusive flora and fauna of the region; hikes featuring varying levels of difficulty with the Easy Hikers, In-Between Hikers, and Vigorous Hikers; Birding Hikes with experts to help sight and identify our avian neighbors; Historical Hikes tracking little-known structures in Shenandoah National Park; Series Hikes tracing the entire length of the Tuscarora Trail or the trails of Pennsylvania section by section; Backpacking Hikes traversing the tracts of West Virginia and Southern Virginia; hikes scheduled for weekends; ones scheduled for weekdays; Geology Hikes led by experts from the Smithsonian focused on the unique stratigraphy of our area; Mushroom Hikes with mycologists; Waterfall Hikes to beat the summer heat; and Outreach Hikes to get together with the members of area groups like the Sierra Club or the Congressional Hikers. Just to name a few. Check out the Forecast calendar and hear updates on the weekly tape (703/242-0965). Other Clubs’ Hikes Capital (www.capitalhikingclub.org) and Wanderbirds hike on Sundays, traveling by bus and leaving from downtown, with suburban stops as well. Center Club, Northern Virginia Hiking Club and Sierra Club hike on both Saturdays and Sundays using carpools, which often leave from a suburban Metro stop. Schedules are available at PATC Headquarters and are published in area newspapers on Fridays. The schedule of West Virginia Highland Conservancy outings in the Monongahela National Forest and surrounding areas is on their web site at www.wvhighlands.org. Meetings Meetings Meetings are held at PATC HQ, 118 Park Street, S.E., Vienna, VA unless otherwise noted. New Members (PATC) – First Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Curious about the Club? Want to learn more? The best way is to attend a New Members meeting (but you don’t have to be new to qualify). Attend the meeting and find the mysteries of PATC revealed in full. Refreshments will be served. Directions to PATC: Take Rt. 23 into Vienna, Va. and turn east on Park St. (Rt.675) to 118 Park St. on your left. INFO: Jane Thompson 301/565-6704 x208. Mountaineering Section – Second Wednesday 8:00 p.m. – We meet every month unless noted in the Forecast. INFO: Mack Muir (MackMuir@edisaurus.com) 703/960-1697 or PATC’s Web site: www.patc.net/chapters/mtn_sect. Shenandoah Mountain Rescue Group Business meeting – Last Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. INFO: Zeb Whitaker (zw@tdcarchitects.com) 703/2555034, then press #5. PATC Council – Second Tuesday 7:00 p.m. sharp. The PATC Council meets every month to conduct business of the Club and once a year for a Dinner meeting. All members are welcome. Come see how we make decisions about your Club. INFO: Wilson Riley (wriley@patc.net) 703/242-0693 x11. Trail Patrol – First Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Trail Patrol volunteers are PATC’s goodwill trail ambassadors to the hiking public. They provide a visible, reassuring presence on the trails, educating the public on good hiking practices, minimum impact hiking, and camping ethics. Patrol members are trained in land navigation, emergency procedures, radio communications, and personal equipment. All patrol volunteers are also expected to become certified in a recognized basic first aid course. Some equipment and uniform items are provided upon completion of training. INFO: Kumait Jawdat 202/3288137 or see our section in PATC’s Web site: www.patc.net/volunteer/trailpatrol. October %'' – Potomac Appalachian FORECAST OCTOBER 1 (Wednesday) DEADLINE - November Potomac Appalachian Material due to Editors 5:00 p.m. All items for the next issue of the newsletter due. Send Forecast events to PAForecast@patc.net and all other articles to PA@patc.net. NOTE: Do not send photos or articles to headquarters. E-mail for address. a 1 (Wednesday) CLASS - Meet Ed Viesturs, REI Fairfax, VA Tour & Book Signing with Ed Viesturs. 7:00 p.m. Come visit REI’s new Fairfax store on Wednesday, Oct. 1, at 7:00 p.m., for a special presentation by Ed Viesturs, America’s leading high-altitude mountaineer. Ed is the only American, and one of only a handful of climbers internationally, to stand atop 13 of the world’s 14 8000-meter peaks. Ed climbs without the use of supplemental oxygen, adding to the mental and physical difficulty of his climbs. Ed will be showing stunning photography from his climbing career as well as phenomenal new pictures from his recent summits of Nanga Parbat and Broad Peak. He will also be signing his new book, Himalayan Quest. Tickets are available at the REI Fairfax store, 703/266-7655, beginning Friday, Sept. 12, for $5. Ticket proceeds will be donated to the Central Asia Institute, a non-profit group supporting community-based programs in education, women?s empowerment, public health, and conservation in remote regions of Central Asia. INFO: Mark Nelson (mnelson@rei.com) 703/379-9400. 1 (Wednesday) ` HIKE - Easy Hikers National Arboretum, DC The Easy Hikers will hike about four easy miles through the Arboretum. Meet at 10:15 a.m. at the main parking lot immediately inside the R Street entrance. Bring lunch and water. Directions: Take the Baltimore-Washington Parkway south from the Beltway. At the split with I-295, bear right on New York Avenue toward Washington. Continue 2 miles to Bladensburg Road, a major intersection. Turn left and go 0.4 miles on Bladensburg Road to R Street, NE. Turn left and go 0.3 miles to the Arboretum entrance gate. INFO: Nancie Coan (Nanco4000@yahoo.com) 202/338-4580. \ 1 (Wednesday) MEETING - New Members (PATC), 7:30 p.m. a 2 (Thursday) CLASS - Backpacking 202 Vienna, VA 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. This is the second of three group planning meetings for the Columbus Day weekend backpacking trip. Pre-registration is required. INFO: Alex Lampros a.lampros@att.net) 703/719-7846 evenings 7:30-9:30, weekends until 9:30; [between Aug. 23 and Sept. 6, contact John Browne (jbrowne11@COX.NET) 703/425-5645]. 2 - 6 (Thursday - Monday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - Mid-Atlantic Trail Crew Appalachian Trail, VA The Mid-Atlantic Trail Crew will be spending five days rebuilding an eroded section of the AT in the Roller Coaster area. We will be building rock steps, water bars, check dams, and some cribbing. This is a great opportunity to learn how the experts do this type of work. The crew will be based at the Blackburn Trail Center during their stay. Come for a day or two, or all week. INFO: Chris Brunton (trailbossbtc@msn.com) 703/560-8070. Potomac Appalachian – October %'' 4 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Rock Creek Park Crew Rock Creek Park, DC 8:15 a.m. to noon .The end of the work-trip season is drawing near. Get in a trip before it’s too late. Meet at the Rock Creek Nature Center. INFO: Mark Anderson (dc.trails@verizon.net) or 202/462-7718 or Ranger Ken Ferebee 202/895-6221. . 4 (Saturday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - South Mountaineers Appalachian Trail, MD The colors are starting to change in western Maryland. Get away from the city for a day of work, comradeship, and peace in the woods. INFO: Mark Mitchell (mdtrail@yahoo.com) 301/461-7048. 4 (Saturday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - Yankee Clippers Appalachian Trail, PA Meet at US 30 and PA 233 at the parking lot of Caledonia State Park. Departure 9:00 a.m. sharp. INFO: Pete Brown (peter.brown4@worldnet.att.net) 410/343-1140. 4 (Saturday) s SPECIAL EVENT - Annual Display Frederick, MD In the Streets Festival, an annual event in Frederick, the first Saturday in October. The West Virginia Chapter will have a display in front of the Trail House. Volunteers are needed to assist with manning the display. INFO: Dave Jordahl (dave.jordahl@askdep.com) 301/834-7729. a 4-5 (Saturday - Sunday) CLASS – LNT Trainers Course Shenandoah National Park, VA PATC headquarters and SNP Leave No Trace (LNT) Trainers Course will be held in a two part series. The class room instruction (introduction and planning) will be held Monday evening 7:15- 9:45 PM. The field experience will be a backpacking trip in the SNP. Instructors will be LNT Masters from Trail Patrol. The goal will be to enhance LNT skills and ethics and to gain confidence in teaching LNT to others. Pre-registration required, space is limited. INFO: Anniell Miller (amill1@yahoo.com) 703/250-8113 (before 11:00 p.m.) 5 (Sunday) HIKE - K9 Trailblazers Potomac, MD Pennyfield Lock, C&O Canal. We’ll hike at a moderate pace for 8 miles along and near the scenic and historic C & O Canal and in the surrounding woods. The hike will take us over hilly and sometimes rocky terrain as we pass horse farms and climb up to the Blockhouse Point to eat lunch while enjoying fantastic views of the Potomac (elevation change of ~200 ft). This is a joint hike with K9 Trailblazers so well behaved dogs are welcome as long as you keep them on leash and scoop after them. Maps, chocolate, and dog biscuits provided at the trailhead. Bring snacks, and water for you and your dog. Visit www.k9trailblazers.org for more details. INFO: Pat Fuhrer (psfuhrer@k9trailblazers.org) 301/482-2468 or Jeff Bolognese (jbolognese@k9trailblazers.org) 410/247-4434. z 5 (Sunday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - C&O Canal Potomac, MD Join us for a half-day work trip at the C&O Canal that will leave you time for an afternoon hike or bike ride on the towpath. Meet at the Great Falls Tavern Visitor Center at 9:00 a.m. Bring water and work gloves. INFO: Georgeann Smale (gsmale99@ yahoo.com) 301/581-9584. 5 (Sunday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - WV Chapter Gambrill State Park, VA Continuation of ongoing trail maintenance on the Black Locust trail. Meet at the Nature Center at 10:00 a.m. INFO: Dave Jordahl (dave.jordahl@ askdep.com) 301/834-7729. 7 (Tuesday) HIKE - Family Hike Fairfax, VA Come join us for a 2-3 mile, kid-friendly hike in Fairfax. We will meet at Van Dyck Park, which has a farmer’s market and a wonderful playground with a big sandbox. Come early if you want to shop at the farmer’s market, which is open from 8:00 a.m. 12:00 p.m.. We will cross Old Lee Highway and head to Daniels Run Park. The trails are stroller-passable, paved and crushed stone. We will picnic at Van Dyck Park after the hike. INFO: Lauren Lang (at94L@netzero.net) 703/631-9278. ` \ 7 (Tuesday) MEETING - Trail Patrol, 7:30 p.m. 8 (Wednesday) ` HIKE - Easy Hikers Blockhouse Point, MD We will do a circuit hike of about 4 miles. Bring lunch and water. Meet at 10:15 a.m. at the River Road parking lot about 2 miles beyond Pennyfield Lock on the right. INFO: Carol Niedzialek (niedze@erols.com) 301/949-9729. \ \ 8 (Wednesday) MEETING - Mountaineering Section, 8:00 p.m. 8 (Wednesday) MEETING - West Virginia Chapter, 7:00 p.m. Highacre Cabin, Harpers Ferry, VA a 9 (Thursday) CLASS - Backpacking 202 Vienna, VA 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. This is the final group planning meeting for the Columbus Day weekend backpacking trip. Pre-registration is required. INFO: Alex Lampros a.lampros@att.net) 703/719-7846 evenings 7:30-9:30, weekends until 9:30 p.m. 9 (Thursday) HIKE - In-between Hikers Clarksburg, MD Little Bennett Regional Park. Joint hike with Sierra Club, MWROP. A moderate/fast 9-mile hike, over varied, rolling terrain. Directions: I-495 to I-270 North, exit at Exit 18, Clarksburg Rd (MD 121). Go right (east) onto Clarksburg Rd., and continue on this road approximately 2.3 miles (crossing Rt. 355) to a small parking lot on the right. Start at 10:00 a.m., no pets. Bring water/lunch. INFO: Henri Comeau (henricomeau@aol.com) 703/451-7965; Marjorie Richman (mar0522@aol.com). ` 11 (Saturday) HIKE - Historic Hike Appalachian Trail, VA Hike VIII-Washington Monument/Lambs Knoll section I-70/Rte 40 to Crampton Gap/Gathland State Park. 12.3 miles, difficult, elevation change 800 ft. This section has the first monument built in honor of George Washington our first president. We will also climb around Lambs Knoll with a view to the east of the Middletown Valley with the little town of Burkittsville to the southeast. We will hike south to Gathland State Park home of a famous Civil War cor- ` ,, FORECAST respondent. Meet at 10:00 a.m. at the A.T. parking lot along Rte 40. INFO: Christopher Firme (bncfirme@innernet.net) 717/794-2855. 11 (Saturday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - Fall Maintenance Massanutten, VA Massanutten West. Fall Maintenance of trail clearing blowdowns, brush, and erosion control. Overnight at Glass House. Community meals. INFO: David Reifsnyder (wheelmaker@hotmail.com) 410/586-8468. 11 - 12 (Saturday - Sunday) SPECIAL EVENT - PATC Annual Pig Roast Round Hill, VA Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of this delightful event. The Blackburn Trail center is the site for this family fun weekend. INFO: Chris Brunton (trailbossbtc@msn.com) 703/560-8070. s 11 - 12 (Saturday - Sunday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Cadillac Crew Stanardsville, VA Trail work/Clearing on Vining Tract near Stanardsville, Va. An opportunity to see the arrival of Fall on Columbus Day weekend. The Crew will work on some of the tract trails and possibly reopen some trails since PATC recently acquired an additional 70 acres for the tract. Bring water and a lunch for Saturday noon. Community meals on Saturday dinner and Sunday meals. Overnight at Mutton Top Cabin. INFO: Trudy Thompson (going2home2@ yahoo.com) 703/938-3973 or Jon Rindt (jkrindt@shentel.net) 540/635-6351. . 15 (Wednesday) aBailey’s CLASS - Explore Patagonia, REI Crossroads, VA 7:30 p.m. The roads begin to fall apart south of Punta Arenas on the way to Paine National Park. From Torres del Paine to Greys Lake the scale and grandeur make the rest of the world seem ordinary. The wildlife is also unique: large Megallanic Woodpeckers, penguins, nandu and guanacos. Glacial-fed lakes with icebergs and spectacular waterfalls are bordered by wildflowers and stunted, windblown forests. Nestled in this immense landscape are hosterias, small hotels noted for beautiful gardens and excellent cuisine. This is Chilean Patagonia, a world apart. Join local adventurer, Marjorie Richman, for an evening?s trek, and find out how you too can explore Patagonia with REI Adventures. INFO: Mark Nelson (mnelson@rei.com) 703/379-9400. 15 (Wednesday) ` HIKE - Easy Hikers Great Falls Park, VA The Easy Hikers will hike 4-5 moderate miles. Meet at 10:15 a.m. at the visitors center. Bring lunch and water. To reach the park, exit the Beltway at Exit 13 onto Georgetown Pike (VA 193). Go west 4.1 miles to the intersection with Old Dominion Drive. Turn right at light and continue 1.1 miles to the visitor center. INFO: Shirley Rettig 703/836-0147. 17 - 19 (Friday - Sunday) HIKE - Car Camping Ohiopyle State Park, PA Canoeing and biking (Youghigheny River bike trail) is also available. Falling Water, a summer home in the forest designed by Frank Lloyd Wright is near the state park. Commence weekend with a 12 mile hike on the Laurel Highlands hiking trail. Trip leader has a campsite reserved and will reserve more as interest dictates. INFO: Dave Jordahl (dave.jordahl@askdep.com) 301/834-7729. 18 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Yankee Clippers Tuscarora Trail, PA For meeting place and other details, INFO: Pete Brown (peter.brown4@worldnet.att.net) 410/3431140. . 18 - 19 (Saturday - Sunday) ~ BACKPACKING TRIP - Fall Outing George Washington National Forest, VA Come join us for the fall colors and cool temperatures in the GWNF. Will average 8-9 miles per day on moderate terrain. Exact location dependent on weather and group size. INFO: John Koutze 703/846-9207. a 18 - 19 (Saturday - Sunday) CLASS - Wilderness First Aid, WSC Alexandria, VA A program of the Wilderness Safety Council, this eighteen-hour class includes classroom study, hands-on practice, and results in a two-year certification. The cost is $140. Registration is limited to 25 people. REGISTRATION/INFO: Christopher Tate (http://wfa.net) 703/836-8905. 19 (Sunday) HIKE - Series Hike Laurel Highlands, PA Trail in western Pennsylvania. Second section of this set of series hikes. Maple Ridge summit to Route 643, approximately 12 miles. In conjunction with car camping weekend at Ohiopyle State Park. INFO: Dave Jordahl (dave.jordahl@askdep.com) 301/834-7729. ` ` 11 - 12 (Saturday - Sunday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Hoodlums Oktoberfest North District, Shenandoah National Park, VA Note the date change to the SECOND weekend of this month. More details in next months Forecast. INFO/RSVP: George Walters (gjwalters@ starpower.net) 410/426-2724. . 11 - 13 (Saturday - Monday) ~ BACKPACKING TRIP - Columbus Day Weekend Location to be determined Weekend Outing, three days, two nights. Pre-registration is required. Applicants must know the basics and have some backpacking experience. Fee: $40.00 for PATC Members; $55.00 for nonmembers. REGISTRATION/INFO: Alex Lampros: (a.lampros@att.net) 703/719-7846 evenings 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., weekends until 9:30 p.m. 14 (Tuesday) ` HIKE - Family Hike, C&O Canal Potomac, MD Join us for a kid-friendly 3 miles along the Berma Road and the tow path along the Canal. This hike is jogging-stroller friendly most of the way, except for the bridge and stairs that cross the Canal and some rocks on the tow path. There is some great rock scrambling for the kids along the way. We will have a picnic lunch by the Potomac River at the end. INFO: Jennifer Chambers (jpckjkkc1@starpower.net) 301/588-1716. 14 (Tuesday) HIKE - Vigorous Hikers Massanutten Mountain, VA Massanutten Loop Trail between Woodstock Gap and Edinburg Gap and on Green Mountain Trail. About 14 miles and 2300 feet elevation gain. INFO: Jack Thorsen (thorsen4@juno.com) 704339-6716. ` \ 14 (Tuesday) MEETING - PATC Council, 7:00 p.m. ,% 18 (Saturday) HIKE - Waterfall and Wild Flower Series Central District, Shenandoah National Park, VA The fifth hike of the Waterfall and Wild Flower Series will be a 10-mile circuit with a total elevation gain is 2500 feet. The Dry Run and Cedar and South River Falls will be visited. There will be less than two miles of bush whacking. PATC Map 10. INFO: Jack Thorsen (thorsen4@Juno.com) 703/339-6716 or William Needham (Needham82@AOL.COM) 410/884-9127. ` 18 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Fall Frolic Appalachian Trail, MD Don’t miss the fall foliage, come out and join this event for fun work getting dirty in the woods. 9:00 a.m. in Frederick County. INFO: Mark Mitchell (mdtrail@yahoo.com) 301/461-7048. . 18 (Saturday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - Stonewall Brigade Shenandoah County, VA Great North Mountain on the VA/WV state line. Join the Stonewall Brigade at the Wolf Gap campground parking lot at 9:00 am. We will get tools at the campground and work on a trail in the nearby area. We may leave the parking area so, please, be on time. Let me know by Wednesday evening if you plan to attend. Bring lunch, work gloves, water, seasonal clothing, and hiking shoes. RSVP/INFO: Hop Long (theFSLongs@comcast.net) 301/942-6177. 21 (Tuesday) HIKE - Family Hike Great Falls, VA Scotts Run Nature Preserve. This three mile circuit hike will take us down a wide gravel path along Scotts Run to a waterfall at the mouth of Scotts Run, where it flows into the Potomac. Then we will follow a narrow, rugged hiking path along the Potomac for a while, then join another wide gravel path which winds through the uplands, and back to the parking lot. INFO: Lauren Lang (at94L@netzero.net) 703/631-9278. ` 22 (Wednesday) aBailey’s CLASS - Women’s Backpacking, REI Crossroads, VA 7:30 p.m. Women’s Backpacking Clinic - Yes! Women ought to experience the adventure of backcountry travel, and on their own terms. Pack, clothing, boots and sleeping bags all now come in models specifically designed by women to perform for women. Join REI’s resident women’s outdoor adventure specialists for an evening of eye-opening dialogue on gear, skills, destinations, nutrition, and training for enjoyable backcountry adventure. INFO: Mark Nelson (mnelson@rei.com) 703/379-9400. 22 (Wednesday) HIKE - Easy Hikers Scotts Run, VA 4-5 mile moderate hike over varied terrain. Meet at 10:15 a.m. in the dirt parking area on the north side of Georgetown Pike. From I-495, Exit 44, go west on VA 193 (Georgetown Pike) 0.5 miles to Swinks Mill and turn right into lot. Bring lunch and water. INFO: Mitchell Helbrecht (Helbrecht@msn.com) 703/535-3236. ` 24 - 25 (Friday - Saturday) EVENT - Retreat; Glass House Fort Valley, VA Join the Northern Shenandoah Valley Chapter for a fall retreat at Glass House with a Pot Luck Dinner Friday night, a hike and a dinner in a nearby restau- s SPECIAL October %'' – Potomac Appalachian FORECAST \ rant Saturday night. Enjoy cool evenings and warm company. INFO: Lee Sheaffer (thumper@ visuallink.com) 540/955-0736. 28 (Tuesday) MEETING - Shenandoah Mountain Rescue Group (Business meeting), 7:30 p.m. 25 (Saturday) HIKE - K9 Trailblazers Greenbelt, MD Greenbelt Park. This will be a hike at a moderate pace for a 6-mile loop through the woods of Greenbelt Park. We’ll enjoy the fall foliage on gently rolling trails (< 100 ft. elevation change) with a few stream crossings. This is a joint hike with K9 Trailblazers so well behaved dogs are welcome as long as you keep them on leash and scoop after them. Maps, chocolate, and dog biscuits provided at the trailhead. Bring snacks, and water for you and your dog. Visit www.k9trailblazers.org for more details. INFO: Pat Fuhrer (psfuhrer@k9trailblazers.org) 301/482-2468 or Jeff Bolognese (jabolognese@k9trailblazers.org) 410/247-4434. 29 (Wednesday) CLASS - Antarctica, REI Bailey’s Crossroads, VA 7:30 p.m. Antarctica! Amundsen, Scott, Nansen, Shackleton and Byrd: They all journeyed to the bottom of the Earth for honor, glory, exploration and science. And while much of the rest of the world had been mapped and explored for centuries, Antarctica was almost totally unknown less than 100 years ago. Even today, with satellite navigation and communications and reliable air travel, weather routinely renders travel impossible. Join adventurer and medical missionary Glenn Geelhoed for an evening’s exploration of the bottom of the Earth! z 25 (Saturday) HIKE - West Virginia Chapter Wardensville, WV County Line Trail. Hope for some fall leaf color on this moderate 8 mile ridge hike. Start on Route 55 at the VA/WV State line and hike to Waites Run outside of Wardensville, WV. INFO: Judy Smoot (jasmoot@hotmail.com) 540/667-2036. ` 25 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Rock Creek Park Crew Rock Creek Park, DC 8:15 a.m. to noon. We are having a picnic as a thanks to our volunteers and to celebrate the end of another work season. Contact Mark Anderson to see what you can bring. Meet at the Rock Creek Nature Center. INFO: Mark Anderson (dc.trails@verizon.net) 202/462-7718 or Ranger Ken Ferebee 202/895-6221. . 25 - 26 (Saturday - Sunday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Cadillac Crew Shenandoah National Park, VA The Crew hopes to complete a new connector trail from Tulip Tree Cabin to the SNP Crusher Ridge trailhead. Tulip Tree Cabin, being built only with hand tools, will hopefully enter the rental system this year. Bring water and a lunch for Saturday noon. Community dinner on Saturday night. Overnight at Tulip Tree Cabin. INFO: Trudy Thompson (going2home2@yahoo.com) 703/938-3973 or Jon Rindt (jkrindt@shentel.net) 540/635-6351. a 29 (Wednesday) ` HIKE – Easy Hikers Lake Accotink, VA The Easy Hikers will hike a mostly level five mile circuit hike around Lake Accotink. Meet at the Wakefield Park Recreation Center at 10:15 a.m. Bring lunch and water. Directions to Wakefield Center: Leave the Beltway (495) at Exit 54A (Braddock Road). Go West on Braddock and turn right at the second light into Wakefield Park. Follow the park road to the last parking lot (second lot on left) in front of the Recreation Center. INFO: Bill Burnett (burn2154@earthlink.net or 703/569-2154. November 1 (Saturday) DEADLINE - December Potomac Appalachian Material Due to Editor 5:00 p.m. All items for the next issue of the newsletter due. Send Forecast events to PAForecast@patc.net and all other articles to PA@patc.net. . 26 (Sunday) HIKE - Historic and Scenic Appalachian Trail, MD Moderate 12 mile hike on the A.T. in Maryland. We will start at Route 40 and continue south through Washington Monument State Park, past the Dahlgren Chapel, up and over Lamb’s Knoll and finish at historical Gathland State Park. Lots of scenery and history will be seen! This hike will require cars to be placed at either end of our hike, so please be willing to help drive. INFO: Vince Ferrari (ferrari3@ix.netcom.com) 301/249-2210. ` 28 (Tuesday) HIKE - Family Hike McLean, VA Difficult Run Trail, part of the Fairfax Cross County Trail. Come join us for a 4-mile, out and back hike beginning near Colvin Run Mill. The trail winds along Difficult Run, through the woods. We will picnic at an open meadow at the halfway point. The trail is joggingstroller passable. It may be a little muddy. Designed for the under-5 crowd, all ages welcome. INFO: Lauren Lang (at94L@netzero.net) 703/631-9278. ` Potomac Appalachian – October %'' 1 (Saturday) s SPECIAL EVENT - Ski Fair Vienna, VA It’s time to think snow! The Ski Touring Section (STS) opens this year’s ski season with their annual ski fair. The fair will be at the PATC headquarters on Saturday, Nov. 1, from noon to 5:00. Signup for cross-country ski trips, renew / join your STS and PATC memberships, and attend trip presentations and workshops. Everyone’s welcome. Plan your ski season, meet the members, and have a great time. INFO: contact Bert Finkelstein (bertf@erols.com) or visit the PATC Ski Touring Section web site. 1 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - South Mountaineers Appalachian Trail, MD The air is getting crisp, come out and enjoy the autumn colors. Work hard and get dirty like when you were a kid. We meet at 9:00 a.m. in Frederick County. INFO: Mark Mitchell, (mdtrail@yahoo.com) 301/461-7048. . 1 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Yankee Clippers Appalachian Trail, PA Meet at US 30 and PA 233 at the parking lot of Caledonia State Park. Departure time is 9:00 a.m. sharp. INFO: Pete Brown (peter.brown4@worldnet.att.net) 410/343-1140. . - 2 (Saturday - Sunday) a1Bailey’s CLASS - Land Navigation, REI Crossroads, VA 10:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Prince William Forest Park This comprehensive two-day course teaches all skills necessary to use map and compass in an integrated land navigation system. The first day is spent in intensive classroom exercises concentrating on topographic map reading and interpretation, position plotting, compass fundamentals, declination and azimuth. The second day is spent in Prince William Forest Park, primarily off-trail, engaging in practical navigation exercises of increasing complexity. The course fee is $85 and includes workbook text, course materials, compass, map, grid reader, and lunch on Saturday. INFO: Mark Nelson (mnelson@rei.com) 703/379-9400. 2 (Sunday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - WV Chapter Gambrill State Park, VA Continuation of ongoing trail maintenance on the Black Locust Trail. Meet at the Nature Center at 10:00 a.m. Dave Jordahl (dave.jordahl@askdep.com) 301/834-7729. . 4 (Tuesday) HIKE - Family Hike Rosslyn, VA Theodore Roosevelt Island. Join us for a regularstroller-passable, jogging-stroller friendly hike around this beautiful island. We will hike about 2 miles around the perimeter trail and have lunch at the monument. INFO: Lauren Lang (at94L@netzero.net) 703/631-9278. 4 (Tuesday) MEETING - Trail Patrol, 7:30 p.m. ` \ 5 (Wednesday) ` HIKE - Easy Hikers Chevy Chase, MD Old and New Crescent Trail. About 5 easy flat miles from Chevy Chase through Rock Creek Park to Silver Spring, returning via the new railroad trestle above Rock Creek. Meet at 10:15 a.m. at the Chevy Chase Public Library parking lot, 8005 Connecticut Ave, just North of East West Highway across the Street from the Hyatt Classic Residence. We’ll eat lunch at Einstein’s Bagel Shop after the hike - you can buy or bring your own. INFO: Renee Schick (rs530@aol.com) 301/493-9525. \ 5 (Wednesday) MEETING - New Members (PATC), 7:30 p.m. , FORECAST 15 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Stonewall Brigade Great North Mountain, VA/WV State line. Join the Stonewall Brigade at the Wolf Gap campground parking lot at 9:00 a.m. We will get tools there and work in a nearby area. Plans may change so let me know by Wednesday evening the week before. RSVP/INFO: Hop Long (theFSLongs@comcast.net) 301/942-6177. . 6 (Thursday) ` HIKE - In-between Hike Great Falls, MD. 9 mile hike over varied terrain to include Goldmine, River and Billy Goat Trails. Meet at 10:00 a.m. in the parking lot across from Old Anglers Inn. INFO: Nena Ewing 301/652-9147 before 10:00 p.m. \ 8 (Saturday) MEETING - North Chapter Thurmont, MD Fall meeting at Catoctin Cottage, 9:30 a.m. INFO Pete Brown (peter.brown4@worldnet.att.net) 410/343-1140. 8 (Saturday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - Rock Creek Park Crew Rock Creek Park, DC 8:15 a.m. to noon. This is the bonus work trip you probably thought would never happen. Join us for a rare November work trip that was triggered by the rainy spring. Meet at the Rock Creek Nature Center. INFO: Mark Anderson (dc.trails@verizon.net) 202/462-7718 or Ranger Ken Ferebee 202/895-6221. 8 - 9 (Saturday - Sunday) . TRAIL WORK TRIP - Cadillac Crew North District, Shenandoah National Park, VA The leaves should still have color as the Crew repairs tread and installs erosion control devices on the AT and side trails in the Shenandoah National Park North District. Bring water and a lunch for Saturday noon. Community dinner on Saturday night and Sunday breakfast. Overnight at Rindt’s house outside Front Royal. INFO: Trudy Thompson (going2home2@yahoo.com) 703/938-3973 or Jon Rindt (jkrindt@shentel.net) 540/635-6351. 11 (Tuesday) EVENT - PATC Annual Meeting Vienna, VA The Atrium at Meadowlark Gardens is the site again this year for our Annual Meeting and dinner. This is a once-a-year opportunity to catch up on the Club happenings for the year, meet fellow members, and be entertained as only a Trail Club knows how. INFO: Pat Fankhauser (pfankhauser@patc.net) 703/242-0315 x17. s SPECIAL \ \ 12 (Wednesday) MEETING - Mountaineering Section, 8:00 p.m. 14 (Friday) MEETING - Northern Shen. Valley Chapter Winchester, VA Dinner and meeting at Gagriela’s Restaurant. The chapters semi-annual meeting will include a short meeting, a speaker, and a chance to get reacquainted with old and new friends. INFO: Lee Sheaffer (thumper@visuallink.com) 540/955-0736. 15 (Saturday) ` HIKE - Appalachian Trail Hike IX Harpers Ferry, WV Weverton Cliffs/Potomac section. Crampton Gap/Gathland State Park to Harpers Ferry, W.V. ATC headquarters-10.0 miles-moderate hike, elevation 900 ft. This section of the A.T. is relative flat on the ridge. After the view of the Potomac River from Weverton Cliffs we will descend off of the mountain onto the C&O canal towpath, which will take us to the railroad/footbridge to get us across the river into Harpers Ferry.Meet at 10:00 a.m. at Gathland State Park parking lot. INFO: Christopher Firme (bncfirme@innernet.net). ,+ 15 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - Yankee Clippers Tuscarora Trail, PA INFO: Pete Brown (peter.brown4@worldnet.att.net) 410/343-1140. . 15 (Saturday) z HIKE - K9 Trailblazers Brandywine, MD Cedarville State Forest. We’ll hike at a moderate pace for 6+ miles enjoying the natural and human history of Cedarville State Forest. We’ll travel on wooded trails and forest roads with a few stream crossings on wooden bridges. This is a joint hike with K9Trailblazers so well behaved dogs are welcome as long as you keep them on leash and scoop after them. Maps, chocolate, and dog biscuits provided at the trailhead. Bring snacks, and water for you and your dog. Visit http://www.k9trailblazers.org. INFO: Pat Fuhrer (psfuhrer@k9trailblazers.org) 301/482-2468 or Jeff Bolognese (jbolognese@k9trailblazers.org) 410/247-4434. 19 (Wednesday) ` HIKE - Easy Hikers C&O Canal, DC Old Angler’s Inn to Carderock. About 5 easy flat miles. Meet at 10:15 a.m. at the parking lot across from Old Angler’s Inn on McArthur Boulevard. Take Carderock exit from Beltway, go to the end of the Parkway, turn left on McArthur Boulevard to Old Angler’s Inn. The Inn is on the right, use the parking lot on the left. Bring water and lunch on Potomac after the hike. INFO: Bob Williams 301/493-4449. 22 (Saturday) TRAIL WORK TRIP - South Mountaineers Appalachian Trail, MD Some of the most fun you will ever have being a volunteer. INFO: Mark Mitchell (mdtrail@yahoo.com) 301/461-7048. . \ 15 (Saturday) ` HIKE - Natural History Cultural Hike Central District, Shenandoah National Park, VA Len Wheat leads us on another unique bushwhack to find homesites in the Park. This time, we’ll hike through the Haywood Mountain area, just east of Hawksbill Mountain. With Len as our leader, you can be assured of an informative and entertaining hike. And, with Bob Pickett, you can be assured to learn something about the forests we hike through. Being a bushwhacking adventure, this must be considered a moderately-difficult hike, although the mileage may be only four or five miles. RSVP/INFO:Bob Pickett 301/681-1511. 25 (Tuesday) MEETING - Shenandoah Mountain Rescue Group (Business meeting), 7:30 p.m. Bob from page : can be found year-round in the higher elevations of West Virginia south to the Smokies.) other juveniles until spring. Lizards and the myriad of almost all other life forms will seek the protective warmth of the deeper soil horizons or rotting wood and be gone from sight until next spring. Aquatic red-spotted newts are developing lungs and becoming the terrestrial red efts, while our native brook trout are spawning in the cold mountain streams. Look for their shallow foot-wide concave excavations in sandier stream sections. And our Shenandoah National Park wintering birds are back, including the northern junco, brown creeper, winter wren, red-breasted nuthatch, golden crowned kinglet, whitethroated sparrow, American tree sparrow, hermit thrush, short-eared owl, and yellowbellied sapsucker. (For clarity, the first five 26 (Wednesday) ` HIKE - Easy Hikers Rock Creek Park, DC An easy to moderate approx. 4.5 mile, variable terrain loop hike in the Northern Section of Rock Creek Park in DC. Meet at 10:15 a.m. at the Nature Center parking lot off Glover Road in Rock Creek Park. Bring lunch and water. Hiking boots recommended. No pets. INFO: Alec McRae (admcrae@erols.com) 202/686-1788. ❏ October ranks second only to April in the number of changes that can be observed in the natural world. April is when the forest awakens from its winter dormancy with an explosion of activity. October is when it must finish its preparations for the oncoming winter season. While the beginning of the month is still dominated by the green of the forests, insects singing, and wildlife busily preparing for winter, by the end of the month, the forest will have experienced its first killing frosts. And, with it, the growing season of our forest community will have been completed, and the onset of the next season of scarcity and pursuit of survival will be upon us. And it’s all because of the reduced solar energy available to fuel our ecosystem. ❏ —Bob Pickett October %'' – Potomac Appalachian Volunteers – Appointed in August Trail Overseers Abhay Bagul Massanutten Trail - Kennedy Peak Trail to Camp Roosevelt David Nebhut Elkwallow Trail Bill Setzer Riprap Trail – Skyline Drive to Cold Spring hollow John Seeberger Appalachian Trail - Lewis Mountain Trail to Pocosin Fire Road Potomac Appalachian Trail Club Trail Patrol Presents Leave No Trace Trainers Course Oct. 4 - 5, 2003 In Memoriam George L. Robbins - PATC Honorary Member - January 2001 George was Overseer of 2.5 miles of Dickey Ridge Trail for 22 years, giving up his section in January 2002 at the age of 91. He received honorary membership in 2001 for his yeoman work in maintaining that trail. He was a very strong hiker, a regular with the Wanderbirds Hiking Club and active with PATC’s Mid-Week Hikers. For his 90th birthday, he chose his favorite hike, the Dickey Ridge Trail, from the entrance station to the Dickey Ridge Visitor Center, more than eight miles round trip and over 1,000 feet of ascent. On other PATC trips, hikers have said they could always see George on top of the next rise waiting for others to catch up. George was way ahead of everyone in other volunteer work, whether taking people to dialysis treatments, shoveling snow on church grounds, or his concern for youth. George was an inspiration to all for his upbeat, cheerful attitude, his impressive career as USDA economist, and his kind, thoughtful, generous ways. This weekend course is designed for those who want to learn more about Leave No Trace (LNT) and to help others better understand their impact on the back/front country. George joined PATC in March 1979 and was a member until the 1990s, when his membership somehow lapsed. You will have opportunities to learn more about the impact of your choices in the back/front country, to practice minimizing your impact, and to gain confidence in helping others practice LNT skills. More than 25 members of PATC and the Wanderbirds attended a memorial service for George on Aug. 27. ❏ After completing the course you will be certified as an LNT trainer. It is our hope that you will be willing to give LNT presentations to community groups if your schedule permits. This course takes place in the SNP. We will be day-hiking, and you will have the option of staying in a car-accessible cabin at night. Fee: $30 (nonrefundable), For more information or to register (required), please e-mail Anniell Miller at amill1@yahoo.com or call 703/250-8113 (before 11:00 p.m.). Potomac Appalachian Trail Club Trail Patrol presents BACKPACKING 202 —Carol Niedzialek, Mary Massey, Joan Cooper Elsie Kinsey - PATC Member June 1952 – February 2003 The many members who knew Elsie were very saddened to hear of her passing last February. Elsie started leading trips in 1957 and served on the Excursions Committee from March 1971 until she and her husband moved to Florida in the late 1980s. Elsie was a charming person who led PATC’s overseas trips for many years. She coordinated a large contingent of PATC members who connected with the Holiday Fellowship for their week-long hiking trips in Great Britain and on the Continent, introducing many members to hiking in faraway places. Elsie picked really good trips of wonderfully memorable places and challenges that will long be remembered. ❏ —Carol Niedzialek How to Plan and Enjoy a Backcountry Outing An Intermediate Course Focused On Planning Small-Group Trips Working in groups of eight or fewer, participants have the opportunity to expand or renew their skills by planning and executing a threeday group backpacking trip. The course covers equipment selection and use, route planning, food planning, safety and comfort in challenging conditions, and Leave No Trace (LNT) principles. Experienced instructors facilitate group planning sessions and accompany the weekend trip. GROUP PLANNING SESSIONS: Three Thursday nights, 7:30-9:30: Sep 25, Oct. 2, and Oct. 9, PATC Headquarters, 118 Park Street, SE, Vienna, Virginia WEEKEND OUTING – LOCATION TO BE DETERMINED Three days, two nights: Columbus Day weekend, Oct. 11 - 13 FEE: $40.00 for PATC Members; $55.00 for non-members PRE-REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED. Applicants must know the basics and have some backpacking experience. To receive a registration form and for all other information, call or e-mail Alex Lampros: 703/719-7846 evenings 7:30-9:30, weekends until 9:30; Email: a.lampros@att.net. Visit PATC Trail Patrol’s website: trailpatrol.patc.net ❏ Potomac Appalachian – October %'' Attention Federal Employees PATC is participating again this year in the Combined Federal Campaign of the National Capital Area$ Please consider a donation to PATC$ Our %'' designation number is .;2/$ The fund will be active through December$ Thank you for your support and thanks to the members who con9 tributed via the CFC last year$ ,2 NOTICES NEW NOTICES FOR SALE WALRUS MICRO SWIFT SOLO TENT Used once. Tent, fly, poles, stakes, ground cloth, straps for setting up fly-only shelter, stuff bags, instructions. Great tent, extremely light and compact - but not for the claustrophobic (me). $90 ppd. Contact Bill at 302/636-1149 or dulcibill@aol.com. FOR SALE FOUND-FLUORESCENT TUBE LANTERN - July 17, 2003 at Olive Green cabin. It is forest green and black, has a remote control, and runs on four Dcell batterries. Mfr. appears to be GE/Eddie Bauer. Contact Bryan Bishop at 703/641-0300 or at ltal@starpower.net. FOR SALE: Quality one-man crosscut saws, sharpened and set for hardwoods. Includes second handle and blade guard. Guaranteed to never run out of gas. Contact Dan Dueweke at 703/266-3248 or danjan@fcc.net FOR SALE: Great opportunity to outfit yourself with like-new items at reasonable cost – Mountainsmith Frostfire III backpack, fits tall people well, 6037-7213 c.i. capacity; MSR WhisperLIte Internat’l stove; Mountainsmith Alouette dog pack for large dog; EMS down sleeping bag rated to zero; Karhu x-c 215 cm. skis w/150 cm. poles AND size 47 Heierling boots. And for family activity: Kelty child carrier with sun/rain hood, small zip-off day pack and large capacity detachable day pack; Burly D'Lite bike trailer for 2 children; Baby Jogger II stroller w/ sun shade, rain cover, basket, folds flat. Will donate 10 percent of sale to PATC. Joy Imel, 703/642-8350, 703/403-5206 or Ktjimel@aol.com. HELP WANTED C&O CANAL NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK is seeking volunteers for the Williamsport Visitor Center. This is an opportunity to share your knowledge and enthusiasm for trails and the towpath, and to meet and greet visitors to the towpath. The positions involve staffing the visitor center and bookstore, and can include informal interpretation. We are looking for people who can volunteer as part of a regular schedule, even if it is only for half a day a week. Please call Gloria Updyke, 301/582-0813 or email Gloria_Updyke@nps.gov. ENDOWMENT COMMITTEE VACANCY: A person with experience in investing is sought to serve on the PATC Endowment Committee. The Committee meets quarterly to review performance and the asset allocation of the PATC Endowment. Interested people should send a resume to Wilson Riley, Director of Administration, at wriley@patc.net. HELP WANTED: Help is needed for a new project at the Blackburn Trail Center. Work includes electrical, plumbing, drywall and painting. Volunteers may stay at the Center while working on this project and work may be done on weekends or during the week. We would like to get this project finished as soon as possible. For info call Chris Brunton at 703/560-8070 or e-mail at trailbossbtc@msn.com ,/ HELP NEEDED: Hello Kerry, We want to inform members that Ruth is in need of a kidney replacement and effective this week she has been placed on the kidney replacement list at UVA and has begun testing. Many of our friends at Blackburn will recall the kidney disease she contracted in 1990 which has brought us to this point. We are asking for their thoughts and prayers. We are praying for a living donor and I have agreed to be donor if I qualify. However, my blood doesn’t match so we are exploring the possibility of locating another person in need of a kidney who also has a living donor and then affecting a living donor exchange between me and the other donor. Thanks very much. —Hal and Ruth Hal Washington, who along with his wife Ruth, maintains the AT section from Swift Run Gap to the Saddleback Trail (and who also served as the caretaker of the Blackburn Trail Center), asked me to pass along the above message. —Kerry Snow VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES SALES COMMITTEE VACANCY: A person with experience in Sales and Marketing is sought to serve as chairman of the Sales Committee that oversees the pricing of products and services including maps, publications, resale items, and cabin rentals, and, in collaboration with other appropriate committees, recommends cost-effective changes in procedures. Interested people should send a resume to Wilson Riley, Director of Administration, at wriley@patc.net or fax it to 703/242-0968. FURNITURE UPHOLSTERER NEEDED: Looking for an individual who can reupholster the settee and four chairs that belonged to Katherine Fulkerson (PATC’s General Secretary in the 1930’s and donor of Highacre). The furniture pieces are a wonderful addition to the setting of Highacre, but are in major disrepair. If interested, call Pat Fankhauser 703/242-0693, Ext. 17 or email pfankhauser@patc.net. DAYTIME AND EVENING CABIN RESERVATIONISTS NEEDED: Openings are available to any individual who has a pretty good attention to details, can work independently, and work under pressure some seasons of the year. Daytime volunteers are needed on Thursday afternoon between 12 noon and 2 p.m. Evening volunteers are needed to take one or two nights per month. We Need You Now! Call Pat Fankhauser for interview at 703/242-0693 or e-mail, pfankhauser@patc.net. CREW LEADER TO PLAN, ORGANIZE, and carry out the assembly of a milled-log cabin kit. The cabin will be erected on PATC owned property near Shawneeland, WV. All materials are precut and the kit comes with full instructions. The construction site is in a heavily wooded area well up the mountain but is accessible by a dirt road. INFO: Charlie Graf (410/ 757–6053) or email: Cagraf@aol.com. CALLING ALL LAWYERS, ACCOUNTANTS AND TAX ATTORNEYS. Want to give something of value to the Club, but don’t want to swing a Pulaski? Virginia has enacted a new law that permits donors of conservation easements to sell the tax credit and reap a substantial cash infusion. PATC owns property in Virginia that would be eligible for such a rebate. The Club needs you to help write the proposals that would help the Club save thousands of dollars. Contact: Phil Paschall (bettycox@erols.com), or phone 540/882-3027. But hurry – before the State changes its mind. DONATIONS WANTED LAPTOP AND COMPUTER PROJECTOR NEEDED: PATC HQ needs a laptop computer and computer projector for presentations at conferences, meetings, and community gatherings. Projection at 1024 X 768 desired. If you work for a corporation which might make such a donation, contact Wilson Riley (wriley@patc.net). CONSERVATION OPPORTUNITIES DO YOU WANT TO BE A LANDOWNER along the AT? And have a home in the woods! Are you in a position to become a Conservation Buyer through the Appalachian Trail Conference Land Trust? Our program matches conservation buyers – people like you – with people who are selling land along the AT. You locate your home or cabin out of sight from the Trail. All we ask is that you donate a conservation easement on the rest of the property. A conservation easement “runs with the land;” that is, no present or future owner can develop it! AND, because an easement is an irrevocable gift of a property right, you get a nice income tax deduction equal to the value of the easement. Contact Bob Williams, Director of Land Trust Programs, at bwilliams@appalachiantrail.org, or at 304/535-6331, or write to P.O. Box 807, Harpers Ferry, WV 25425. TRAIL OVERSEER OPPORTUNITIES PATC OVERSEERS GET DISCOUNTS from the following merchants who support our volunteer programs: Blue Ridge Mountain Sports (Charlottesville, Tidewater) – 20%, Hudson Trail Outfitters (Metro DC) – 15%, The Trail House (Frederick, Md.) – 15%, Casual Adventures (Arlington, Va.) – 10%, Campmor (mail order via PATC HQ) – 10%, and Weasel Creek Outfitters in Front Royal – 10%. Check the back page of the PA for the latest trail, cabin, and shelter Overseer opportunities. All PATC members receive a 10% discount from Blue Ridge Mountain Sports. Be sure to have your membership ID or Overseer ID ready when you shop. Notices are published free of charge for PATC members only. PATC cannot vouch for any of the advertised items. No commercial advertisement or personal notices unrelated to hiking will be accepted. Deadline for inclusion is the first day of the month preceding issuance of the newsletter. Notices will be run for 3 months, at the discretion of the editor, unless we are otherwise advised. ❏ October %'' – Potomac Appalachian Trailhead T hey say the jet stream has been responsible for the cooler and wetter-than-normal summer. One has to wonder what is in store for next year. One also wonders if the cool, wet spring has anything to do with the conspicuous absence of gypsy moths this year. However, this has been a good year for trail work with a lot of effort to control the weeds, and a number of improvements have been made to existing trails. The Entry Run Trail into SNP through the Per-Lee/West Tract should enter our trail system shortly. The addition of the Johnson property to the Vining Tract should open the way for new tract trails. ATPO has added the Ovoca Farms section to the AT corridor, which provides an opportunity to route the trail through open pastures with a great view of the Rte. 50 farmland to the east. Overseers are reminded that Oct. 10 is the cutoff date for submission of this year’s volunteer hours to our partners. By the time you receive this issue of PA, you will just have a few days to send in your worktrip reports. Laundry day for the South District Shenandoah Trail Crew has not yet arrived although the requirement for one is obvious$ Dedicated Overseer Will be Missed hikers (and bikers and horsemen) to traverse this mess. Lee District Trails Manager Don Sawyer, Glenn, and Rick scoped the project out one snowy day in March and agreed that it should be done. Best of all, Don agreed to buy the materials (a huge amount of timbers and boards) and deliver them to the mountaintop site. The delivery was the real task. There were two options – helicopter them in (discarded because of the weight) or improve an old forest road enough to allow a truck part way, followed by an ATV with trailer that would come in the last quarter-mile. On Aug. 19, former AT Overseer George Robbins (92) died in his home. George had been Overseer for the 2.5-mile section from Rattlesnake Point to Little Hogback (over Hogback Mountain in the North District of Shenandoah) for more than 20 years. He had remained active as a Co-Overseer until hanging up his pick and McLeod two years ago. An avid hiker with the Wednesday group, as well as the Wanderbirds and others, he was a great guy and an inspiration to talk to. He will be sorely missed. Thanks, George, for the dedication and example for the rest of us. May we carry on your legacy. Delivery of the materials was a story itself. Who knew we would have the wettest year on record? After two weeks of heroic efforts, though, the Forest Service had the materials (including 40 eight inch by eight inch by twelve feet long timbers which would serve as “mud sills”) on site. The Forest Service also provided all the hardware and necessary tools. Palatini’s Puncheon Party “The most fun you can have in the mud.” This summarizes Overseer Glenn Palatini’s recent escapade – with 20 of his good PATC and Forest Service friends over a recent hot August weekend on top of Great North Mountain. How do you have a swamp on top of a mountain? Only Mother Nature knows how – but hikers who have been to the intersection of the Tuscarora and Half Moon trails know the reality. Regardless of the year or season – it’s a muddy slog up on Glenn’s section. The stage was set for Glenn and the first contingent of PATC volunteers, who arrived early Saturday morning for the two-mile hike up to the work site. The site, normally boggy, was a sea of deep mud after all the Forest Service trips hauling in all those materials. Undaunted, PATC volunteers and Forest Service workers waded into the mud, lugging the 250-pound mud sills into place. On top of the mud sills went 4”x 6” 10-foot-long stringers (light by comparison), and on top of that 2”-thick decking. Since this is a National Forest multi-use trail, the puncheon plan was designed with heavy running boards and bull rails in order to carry horses. So Glenn appealed to his District Manager Rick Rhoades and the Forest Service gods for money and support to build two sections of puncheon – that is a fancy word for boardwalk – that would allow Planking for the Puncheon Project is being installed by Jim “Jumbo” Norton Mark Allen and Sterling “Suds” Suddarth$ Potomac Appalachian – October %'' Photo by Jon Rindt Saturday night some of the crew departed. The rest – after a very refreshing stream bath – camped out at the site on nearby dry ground and enjoyed a chili dinner with all the trimmings and a selection of appropriate beverages. After we had finally “crashed” into bedrolls, we were visited by a large, curious deer, who stomped and snorted to let us know he did not appreciate our visit on his turf. Sunday morning after coffee and breakfast it was back at it, with a fresh contingent of PATC volunteers arriving at 9:00 a.m. To everyone’s See Trailhead page ,: ,. Trailhead from page ,. delight and in spite of a short rain shower, we finished “on time and on budget.” By 3:00 p.m. we began packing up all the equipment, and the Forest Service shuttled it out in four ATV and trailer trips. The final look back and hike down the mountain felt very good. AT Corridor – Calf Mountain A %2'9pound mud sill is set in place for the Puncheon Project by (left to right) Forest Service’s Wade Bushong Danny Don Sawyer and PATC’s Rick Rhoades$ The Acme Treadway Co. has started flagging the new trail and hopes to finalize the route in October. The trail will pass through some interesting natural scenery. Trail construction is planned for an April start, so look for work trips in the PA’s Forecast. saplings, a truck will take clearing machinery to the areas that are changing from grass-covered to tree-covered. Tuscarora Access New access to the Tuscarora Trail through the recently donated Biby property at Shawnee Lands is beginning to take shape. When finished, the new trail will add an access point to a remote section of the Tuscarora two miles north of the Pinnacle Shelter for hikers and trail maintainers. Hikers will have an interesting hike to the Pinnacle Shelter as well as the views from the Pinnacle Peak and the Rock Cave and Overlook Trail. Your Trail or Mine A couple of Overseers have reported encounters with a not-too-friendly bear near the Rockytop and Big Run Loop South Trails. They made a rapid exit with no problems, but it was obvious the bear did not appreciate their presence. Jamaican Hello The North District Hoodlums used their August “Jamaican” worktrip to build new waterbars and checkdams on the downhill stretch of AT just south of Jenkins Gap in SNP. John McCrea went out a week earlier, cut an ample supply of hearty locust logs for the crew, and laid them right alongside the trail. The crew installed and rebuilt many structures even while our forward advance was blocked by a momma bear with three cubs who claimed part of the AT as their own. (P.S.: And don’t ask Bernie about the locust tree from hell.) Afterwards, Jamaican cooks suddenly appeared and whipped up some jerk chicken and island chow for the crew. And Red Stripe?... Noooo problem, mon! Photo by Kathy Doyle After a slowdown for several years, work on maintaining the balds on Calf Mountain (SNP south district) resumed after Andy Willgruber became corridor Manager. In the late 1980s, PATC cleared the historic balds, but trees are creeping back. At the end of July, with a group from the Charlottesville Chapter, he took the first steps to reclaiming the balds. The first step was clearing a road from Beagle Gap around the mountain up to the AT near Little Calf Mt., using a chainsaw and loppers. Then with a sketch and some guidance from Tom Lupp in June, assisted by John Shannon, he rediscovered and flagged an overgrown road from the AT to Little Calf Mountain summit. After this road is liberated from briars, poison ivy, and Photo by Jon Rindt This was a great effort by PATC volunteers working directly with our Forest Service partners. As a result, hikers, bikers, and horses will pass easily across more than 200 feet of swamp for decades to come. Unless they stop to think about it, most will not appreciate the huge effort expended by this hardy crew. But those who were there will not soon forget this weekend of hard work and good fun. —Rick Rhoades Group of Single Volunteers of D$C$ provide heavy9duty trail9maintenance help for Overseer Kathy Doyle on Sugarloaf’s Northern Peaks West Trail$ ,: Sugarloaf Mountain – Northern Peaks West Trail On July 12, the Single Volunteers of D.C. (SVDC) came through again to help mainSee Trailhead page ,; October %'' – Potomac Appalachian Trailhead from page ,: Photo by Kathy Doyle tain a section of the Northern Peaks West Trail on Sugarloaf Mountain in Maryland. This is the second time SVDC has helped with the trail. In January’s 35 degree weather, 16 volunteers helped clear the many blowdowns on the West section of the trail. Stephanie Allgaier, the team leader for the July work trip, organized 14 volunteers, who performed such tasks as painting blazes, clipping bushes, removing blowdowns, stripping bark, and cleaning out waterbars and checkdams. Everyone was enthusiastic and seemed to have a good time while working on the trail. Several volunteers enjoyed the work so much that they suggested organizing a fall work trip! And, on Aug. 9, Jason Cook and his fellow Boy Scouts from Troop 941 in Olney, Md., constructed 10 waterbars and checkdams on the Northern Peaks West Trail. Jason had submitted his proposal for erosion control work on the trail as an Eagle Scout Project. The project was approved, and a date was scheduled. Kathy Doyle, trail Overseer, began the day with a safety talk concerning tool usage and then gave instruction on building waterbars and checkdams. These young men did a great job and worked hard to build excellent bars with the locust trees that the SVDC volunteers had stripped in July. Some rocks were used for waterbars where possible. Nathan Harris and Shelby Miller built a rock waterbar that any PATC crew would be proud to call its own! In addition, two large blowdowns were removed from the trail with the help of three Scouts, a two-man crosscut saw, and a rock bar. Boy Scouts from Troop ;+, Olney Md$ use crosscut saw to remove blowdown on Sugarloaf’s Northern Peaks Trail as part of an Eagle Scout project$ Meanwhile on Team 2, Dan Dueweke, John Hebbe, Mark Holland, and Cliff Willey were boulder-wrestling on some of the slipperiest rocks in the Park. As with any griphoist exercise, progress is measured not in feet but in inches. In time, two stream crossings emerged from the shallows and should keep feet dry in all but the highest water. Having a good turnout meant being able to spare a few crew members for other nearby trail work. Attacking a perennial bog at the lower end of Nicholson Hollow, Ron Kutz and Melanie Falk led a trail rehab crew that raised and cribbed a soggy section of the old wagon road upon which the trail was built. Kathy cannot express enough gratitude and appreciation for the work done by these two groups. (See photos at top right and at bottom of previous page.) Day’s end brought the crew back to the Pinnacles Research Station where Kerry Snow’s home-cooked lasagna (well, Pinnacles does seem like his home) was devoured with reckless abandon. Hughes River Stream Crossings The long-delayed re-engineering of the Hughes River stream crossings was put into motion by the Blue and White Crew on a rare cool day in August. With water levels finally low enough to work in the streambed, the crew broke into two teams, each taking a branch of the river. Here was an opportunity to see PATC trails money put to good use. Each team had a griphoist and an assorted package of chains, slings, rockbars, and snatch blocks. Having twice the gear meant that the stream crossings could be accomplished in a single day, and none of the 16 volunteers would have much down-time waiting for a tool. Find Love on the Trail In the heat of summer, the Potomac Heritage Trail (PHT) provided a cooler canopy for the DC Singles volunteer group to build ditchwork. By Washington D.C.’s Key Bridge, the Potomac River’s high tide mark reaches PHT’s elevation, creating a constant muddiness in the area. Ten volunteers and Overseer Alex Sanders worked a full dog-day of August to construct two drainage trenches from the trail. Hydration was the key problem, but PHT’s famous “delivered pizza” helped infuse some energy into the group. Though ditch work may not lead directly to love, the drainage will certainly improve the trail – and that is the goal of PATC. Patrick Wilson, Team 1 supervisor, immediately dove for the largest rock in the river and managed to incorporate three snatch blocks in a technical exercise of irresistible force meeting immovable object. With Aksel Falk on that team, the immovable object never had a chance. Please send any interesting tale, technical advice, individual or group accomplishments, and trail-maintenance questions to Trailhead, c/o Jon Rindt, 621 Skyline Forest Drive, Front Royal, VA 22630 or to jkrindt@shentel.net. ❏ Photo by Tom Vis POTOMAC APPALACHIAN South District Shenandoah Trail Crew takes advantage of a photo op and a nice soft seat$ Potomac Appalachian – October %'' (UPS-440-280) ©2003, Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, Inc. Published monthly by the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, 118 Park Street, S.E., Vienna, VA 22180. Periodical class postage paid at Vienna, VA. Postmaster: send address changes to: Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, 118 Park Street, S.E., Vienna, VA 22180 Subscription: (Free with PATC membership) $6.00 annually; $.70 single copies. ,; Trail, Shelter and Corridor Overseers / Monitors Wanted Shelter Overseer Wanted Call Frank Turk, 301/249-8243 E-mail: frankturk@aol.com Rock Springs Hut - SNP Central District Calf Mountain Shelter – SNP South District/ATPO District Managers Wanted for SNP Central Side Trails (North End) – Map 10 US Rte. 211 to Old Rag Call Dan Dueweke, 703/266-3248 E-mail: danjan@fcc.net Co-District Manager for DC Metro – Map N Rock Creek, Glover Archbold, Battery Kemble, Dumbarton Oaks, Melvin Hazen & Soapstone Valley Park Call Mark Anderson, 202/462-7718 E-mail: dc.trails@verizon.net District Manager for SNP South AT MAP 11 US Rte. 33 to US Rte. 64 Call Mike Karpie, 540/785-9553 E-mail: BKPKR@erols.com Trail Overseer Openings. Contact the District Manager for the section that interests you. Tuscarora Pennsylvania – Maps J & K Opportunity to work long hours with no pay or benefits. Generous allowance of blisters, stinging/biting insects, and poisonous plants. Special provision for rain and mud. Little or no supervision. Work hours optional. Location somewhere on the Tuscarora Trail in Pennsylvania. No certification from your doctor or hospital required. Call Pete Brown, 410/343-1140 E-mail: peter.brown4@worldnet.att.net 118 Park Street Vienna, VA 22180-4609 Telephone: 703/242-0315 Mon.-Thurs. 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Thurs. & Fri. 12:00 noon - 2:00 p.m. Harpers Ferry / Ashby Gap AT & BB – Maps 7 & 8 Call Chris Brunton, 703/560-8070 E-mail: trailbossbtc@msn.com Appalachian Trail Trans Mountain Trail to Duke Hollow (1.3 miles) Rod Hollow Shelter Trail AT to Rod Hollow Shelter (0.2 miles) Fishers Hill Loop Trail AT to AT (1 mile) Tuscarora Central – Map L Call Walt Smith, 540/678-0423 E-mail: wsmith@visuallink.com. High Rock Trail Packhorse Trail Road to Tuscarora Trail (2.3 miles) Tuscarora South – Maps F, G, 9 Call Rick Rhoades, 540/477-3247 E-mail: Rrhoades@shentel.net Tuscarora Trail SNP North District Blue-Blazed – Map 9 Call Dick Dugan, 703/836-0391 E-mail: rdugan@bellatlantic.net Thornton River Trail – Co-Overseer Skyline Dr. to Hull School Trail SNP Central Blue-Blazed, south end – Map 10 Call Steve Paull, 703/361-3869 E-mail: stevepaull@yahoo.com Jones Mountain Trail Bear Church Rock to Cat Knob Trail (2.8 miles) Rose River Loop Trail - Co-Overseer Rose River Fire Road to Horse Trail (2.7 miles) Hawk Camp to VA/WV 55 (3.6 miles) Tuscarora Trail Fetzer Gap to Maurertown (5.7 miles) Tuscarora Trail Rock marker to Massanutten Trail (1.5 miles) Tuscarora Trail Shawl Gap to Sherman Gap (2.5 miles) Massanutten North – Map G Call Ed Brimberg, 703/430-6481 E-mail: brimberg@cox.net Massanutten Connector Trail Massanutten Trail to US 211 (1.8 miles) SNP South AT - Map 11 Call Mike Karpie, 540/785-9553 E-mail: BKPKR@erols.com Appalachian Trail – Co-Overseer Frazier Discovery Trail to Loft Mt. Camp Store (1.1 miles) Appalachian Trail - Co-Overseer Beagle Gap to McCormick Gap (1.8 miles) Appalachian Trail Hightop Parking Area to Hightop Hut Trail (2.1 miles) SNP South Blue-Blazed – Map 11 Call Pete Gatje, 434/361-1309 E-mail: pjgatje@aol.com Rocky Mount Trail Skyline Drive to the upper intersection of the Gap Run Trail (2.2 miles) Great North Mountain – Map F Call Hop Long, 301/942-6177 E-mail: theFSLongs@comcast.net Gerhard Shelter Trail Tuscarora Trail to Vances Cove (1.5 miles) Tibbet Knob Trail Wolf Gap Campground to SR 691 (2.4 miles) Bull Run Occoquan Trail Call Dave Fellers, 703/560-2171 E-mail: Fellers_2000@excite.com Bull Run Occoquan Trail Little Rocky Run to Johnny Moore (2.0 miles) Bull Run Occoquan Trail Bull Run Park to Route 28 Parking Lot (2.5 miles) Periodical Postage PAID Vienna, VA