CYCLE ADIRONDACKS RIDERS` FIELD GUIDE
Transcription
CYCLE ADIRONDACKS RIDERS` FIELD GUIDE
CYCLE ADIRONDACKS RIDERS’ FIELD GUIDE Prepared by the Wildlife Conservation Society Adirondack Program mile 9 30 Saranac Lake 1 Forest H ome Ro ad 2 3 mile 52 mile 62 8 9 ond yP le Too mile 40 6 mile 26 3 4 5 oad 7 R 3 3 Tupper Lake Cranberry Lake Star Lake N ADIRONDACKs Day 1 - Saranac Lake to Star Lake Distance - 68.3 miles (109.9k) Total Climbing - 3,297 ft (1,005m) elevation profile START WATER LUNCH STOP FORTIFIED WATER FINISH REST AREA 1 POINT OF INTEREST CLIMB NATURALIST 1,750 1,600 1,450 1,250 0 5 14 Miles 3.36 - 5.72, 253 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 2% 28 5 41 Miles 27.7-30.4, 174 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 1.22% 55 5 68.3 Miles 38.1 - 39.9, 219 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 2.4% Day one has lots of woods, water, and rolling climbs. The route starts northwest on a small road through the eighty-thousand acre Saranac Lake Wild Forest. This was an early addition to the Forest Preserve and contains old-growth and classic Adirondack wildlife habitat. It then turns south, following upper Saranac Lake, and then west, along the Raquette River into Tupper Lake. The first rest stop is along the lake shore at mile 28. The route continues goes west, over the Raquette River and Dead Creek, and by Catamount Lake. The streams here are lowland boreal, with spruce and tamarack on their shores, and several of the park’s largest open bogs lie just to the south. Farther west it passes the Cranberry Lake Wild Forest and enters the village of Cranberry Lake. The lake one of the wildest in the Park; 75% of its shoreline is state land and like all state land in the Adirondacks, protected by the forever-wild clause of the state constitution. At fifty-five miles the route leaves the main road and turns northwest on the Tooley Pond Road, following the a wild, flatwater section of the Oswegatchie River. This is another boreal segment, rich in wetlands and wildlife. The Adirondack Park one of the few places in the Northeast that contains extensive boreal habitat; stop and look around, look for loons, admire the forests and the river. The Tooley Road turns south through the Benson Mine, once one of the largest iron mines in the Northeast. It ends at Rt. 3; Star Lake, the end of day one, is three miles to the east. 1 DEC Fish Hatchery A NYS Department of Environmental Conservation facility that produces about thirty thousand pounds of landlocked Atlantic salmon a year. The indoor visitor center contains a pool containing salmon, a monitor showing brood fish in a pond, and other exhibits on fish propagation. 2 Follensby Clear Pond A small, scenic pond surrounded by public land, open for camping. It has a completely undeveloped shoreline, a warm-water fishery, and good loon habitat. The swimming is great. 3 Fish Creek Campground A large DEC campground with 350 campsites; with Rollins Pond, just to the west, one of the most popular in New York. Just to the north and also popular, the St. Regis Canoe Area, the only wilderness canoe area in the state. 4 Tupper Lake Waterfront Tupper lake began as a railroad town, became a lumber town, and remained industrial until the last of the mills along the waterfront closed in 2012. It now celebrates this history with its Adirondack Woodsmen’s Days, held in the waterfront park, and featuring, chain-saw carving, monster trucks, greased poles, and the biggest tug-of-war in the park. The old-time woodsmen wished for chainsaws and monster trucks but did not have them. 5. Piercefield Flow An impounded section of the Raquette River, downstream of Tupper Lake and separated from it by the Setting Pole Dam, offering fishing and fine flatwater paddling. It was dammed for electric power in 1899; the original power plant is still in operation. Snags from the forest flooded by the dam are visible in the shallows of the lake. 6 South Branch Grass River The Grass River is one of five rivers flowing northwest from the Adirondacks to the St. Lawrence. All were used for log drives in the nineteenth century. The logs were driven to mills at the edges of the park and in the valleys just beyond it. 7 Cranberry Lake and the Five Ponds Wilderness Area Cranberry Lake is an artificial lake, first dammed to supply water for log drives in 1867. It switched from river drives to railroad logging about 1900 and remained a major mill town until 1930. It is now a summer colony and one of the gateways to the hundred-thousand acre Five Ponds Wilderness, first suggested as a conservation area by Bob Marshall in 1935. WCS has partnered with Cranberry Lake and Star Lake to develop the popular Cranberry Lake 50, a long distance hiking trail around the lake. 8 Oswegatchie River Road River Road follows Oswegatchie River, which flows northwest to meet the St. Lawrence River ib Ogdensburg. Chaumont Pond is a log-drive pond, which partially floods a large lowland-boreal swamp called Chaumont Swamp, good for plants and birds. Look for loons here. 9 Newton Falls Founded by James Newton, who built a sawmill and paper mill here in 1894; reached by the Carthage & Adirondack Railroad in 1896. The paper mill closed in 2000, reopened under new ownership in 2007, and closed again in 2011. Benson, the next junction to the south, was an iron-mining town. You will see the strip mines, the concentrating plant, and the Carthage & Adirondack tracks. The mines operated from 889 to 1918 and from 1940 to 1978. When they closed, the town collapsed. Mill towns and mining towns were common a hundred years ago; most have had similar stories. 3 mile 10 1 Harrisville 2 3 mile 20 Star Lake 812 mile 40 3 4 Croghan 3 5 West Martinsburg 6 mile 51 7 mile 62 8 East Rd Boonville N 9 10 ADIRONDACKs Day 2 - Star Lake to Boonville Distance - 76.3 miles (122.9k) Total Climbing - 3,086 ft (4,966m) elevation profile 1,550 1,050 800 500 3 START WATER LUNCH STOP FORTIFIED WATER FINISH REST AREA 1 POINT OF INTEREST CLIMB NATURALIST 3 0 15 Miles 47.6 - 55.12, 559 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 1.4% 31 46 62 77.3 DAY TWO starts with a fifteen-mile downhill, off the highlands of the western Adirondacks and into the Black River Valley. The valley is excellent farmland and was first settled short settled in the early 1800s. The highlands are rockand forests, and were still wild in 1860. The route starts west, crosses the Black River Valley and then turns south along the eastern edge of the Tug Hill Plateau where we will be for the next two days. The plateau is moderately high, cold and snowy in winter, and wet in summer. It was farmed briefly and unsuccessfully a century ago and is mostly young forest. Its area is 1.2 million acres, a fifth of the Adirondack Park. After the lunch stop at mile 40, the route turns southeast, moving up the the foothills of the Black River Valley. It passes through Indian River, Croghan and Lowville, climbs about five hundred feet to the afternoon’ s high point at the Snow Ridge Ski Area, and then descends gradually for the last fifteen miles to Boonville. 1 Blue Line The Blue Line is the legal boundary of Adirondack Park, established by the legislature in 1892. The state lands within it—and similar lands within the Catskill Park—make up the Forest Preserve and, since 1894, have been protected by Article 14 of the state constitution, which requires that they be kept forever wild and forbids the sale of land or the cutting of timber. Few, if any, places in the world have this level of protection. 2 West Branch of the Oswegatchie River—Grandview Park All three branches of the Oswegatchie begin in the Five Ponds Wilderness. This stop has big rocks for sitting and pools for bathing. 3 North American Maple Museum Maple syrup production is a traditional and sustainable use of the forest. It was formerly an important cash crop in the farm economy; now it is moving north to Canada as the climate warms. The museum will be open for tours. 4 NYS Department of Environmental Conservation Sub-Office The NYS DEC is the state’s environmental management and regulatory agency. This one office was formerly a nursery, suppling seedlings to the Civilian Conservation Corps for reforestation. There is an arboretum and, if you have a head for heights, a 1930s fire tower and observer’s cabin. 5 Wind Turbines The large wind farm near the east scarp of the Tug Hill Plateau is the Maple Hill project, owned by Iberdrola, a Spanish multinational. It contains 195 turbines on 21,000 acres and can generate 320 MW at peak. The towers are 260 feet high; the blades are 390 feet high at the top of their sweep. The wind farm employs 35 people and makes a significant contribution to the local economy but, like most extractive industries sends most of its profits elsewhere. 6 Whetstone Gulf State Park The largest and most dramatic of the Tug Hill gorges, cut by glacial meltwater and currently known for rare plants and spectacular views. The park road continues about a mile into the gorge, and a six-mile rim trail circlers it. 7 Black River Valley, Wildlife Connectivity Wide-ranging species like black bear, moose, and bobcat use the Black River Valley to cross between the Adirondacks and the Tug Hill Plateau. To protect this connection, the Tug Hill Land Trust has been working with WCS, the Tug Hill Commission, and The Nature Conservancy to secure conservation easements on private lands in the wildlife corridor and adjacent highlands. Thus far, over 16,000 acres of working farms and forests have been protected. 8 Snow Ridge Ski Area; Lake-effect Snows The central Tug Hill Plateau is the snowiest place in New York, receiving over 200 inches of snow in an average year and over 400 in a deep-snow year. Montague holds a New York State record with 77 inches in one day, and Redfield another record with 120 inches in seven days. The heavy snows, and persistent cold associated with them, support a significant winter sports industry, dominated by snowmobiling, but with alpine and nordic skiing as well. 9 Hulbert House An 1812 hotel in Boonville where generals Grant and Sheridan once stayed; also a celebrated ghost-hunting destination on the Genesee County Chamber of Commerce’s Historic Haunt Trail. 10 Black River Canal Museum, The Black River Canal was built to connect the navigable segment of the river, between Carthage and Lyons Falls, with the Erie Canal at Rome. The route was formidably steep, with a total rise and fall of 1079 feet, and required 109 locks in 34 miles. It opened in 1855 and remained in use until 1820, the last of the Erie Canal’s feeders. The museum sits at the junction of the main canal, now largely filled in, and a smaller canal which brought water from a dam on the Black river in Forestport. mile 15 High mar Byron Corner s mile 45 6 Constableville 1 4 ee Cr 5 4 h Fis Osceola 5 ce o 3 d. enR W. Leyd d kR Os mile 62 ket R d la 3 Boonville Rd 2 West Leyden Williamstown mile 30 26 Camden Hillsb oro R d N ADIRONDACKs Day 3 - Boonville to Camden START Distance - 78.2 miles (125.1k) Total Climbing - 3,328 ft (1,008m) LUNCH STOP elevation profile (long option) 1,700 1,300 850 425 3 3 0 WATER 4 FINISH REST AREA 1 POINT OF INTEREST CLIMB NATURALIST 5 16 Miles .4-10.39, 634 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 1.2% FORTIFIED WATER 31 4 47 Miles 14.43-19.66, 524 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 1.9% 62 5 Miles 46.6-48.96, 200 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 1.6% 78.2 DAY THREE, Boonville to Camden, is the westernmost part of the tour. The route goes west from Booneville, loops north to Constableville and West Leyden, and then northwest, in one of the wildest segments of the tour, to Redfield. From Redfield it goes south to Williamstown, and then south and east to Camden. The full route is 78 miles; by cutting off the Constableville loop it may be shortened to 53 miles. The route goes through four watersheds—the Black River, Mohawk River, Fish Creek (Lake Oneida) and Salmon River— and a 1,3000-foot elevation range and will be one of our most varied days for geography and landscape. Booneville and Constable are in the Black River foothills. The country is fertile and rolling, with incised stream valleys and many glacial features. It is both fine farmland and an important wildlife connection. The drainage here is north through the Black River to Lake Ontario. West Leyden, another foothill town, is also farming country. Here the drainage is south, through the Mohawk River to the Hudson. West of West Leyden the route climbs the southern edge of the Tug Hill Plateau: high, wet, swampy country, aligned northwest-southeast drainages, thin soils, cold, snowy winters. The drainage is south, through Fish Creek to Lake Oneida and then into Lake Ontario. The land is good for wildlife and poor for farming; much of the land here was farmed briefly and then abandoned. The route remains within the southern Tug Hill Plateau for the rest of the day, but the landscape and drainage change. Osceola and Redfield are in the Salmon River watershed, draining west into Lake Ontario. The hills are rounder here, with more glacial features. Williamstown and Camden are in a narrow glacial valley, drained by the West Branch of Fish Creek, about five hundred feet below the plateau. The topography here is typical of central New York—glacial, dissected, complex, unlike anything else we will see on the trip. 1 Mohawk Hill Mohawk Hill, between one of the high points of the Tug Hill, and one of the most scenic points in the whole tour, lies between West Leyden and Constableville. It has fine views of the Adirondack Park to the east, the Mohawk Valley to the south, and the Black River Valley and Tug Hill escarpment to the north. 2 West Leyden: Headwater of the Mohawk River The wetland area to the east of the rest stop is the headwaters of the Mohawk River, which runs south and east to join the Hudson north of Troy. Its valley is one of the three lowland routes through the Appalachians and so played a major role in the geography and settlement of the continent. It is the route through which midwestern animals and plants spread north after glaciation; the connector, and warpath, between the homes of the Iroquois and Mohawk nations; the corridor through which Europeans spread west, usurping the lands of both nations; and the route of the Erie Canal, which gave New York commercial access to the continental interior. 3 Conservation Easement and Invasive Species Protection Zone The East Branch of Fish Creek, at the bridge near Swancott Mills State Forest and just before the hamlet of Swanscott Mills, and the Tagasoke Reservoir, just to the south, are part the the drinking water supply for City of Rome and the Tug Hill Invasive Species Protection Zone. The water comes from the Tug Hill Plateau to the north. The creek and its watershed are protected from subdivision and development by working forest conservation easement. The easement, the first on a working forest in New York State, was the result of a large conservation effort in the 1990s. 4 Old-Growth Forest Just before the lunch stop is one of the few old-growth forests on the Tug Hill. The Adirondacks, because of their terrain and inaccessibility, have large amounts of old growth. Outside the Adirondacks there is very little. Intact forests like this offer critical wildlife habitat, help store large amounts of carbon, and provide buffers to the impacts of climate change. 5 Osceola, Fiddlers’ Hall of Fame Osceola gets between two hundred and three hundred inches of inches a year, and is known for Nordic skiing. It is also the headquarters for the New York Old Tyme Fiddlers Association (traditional music, nontraditional orthography) who will provide entertainment during lunch. 6 East Branch Salmon River The Salmon River is the largest southeast tributary of Lake Ontario, and, for both Europeans and Native Americans, was an important route from the Mohawk Valley to the lowlands on the east shore of the lake. It is also an important spawning habitat for the landlocked Atlantic Salmon of Lake Ontario. Conservation agencies and organizations are working in this region to restore habitat and aquatic connectivity for fish species by ensuring safe passage through culverts and restoring water quality. Old Forge 9 10 28 se oo er Riv McKeever M mile 54 8 4 7 Ha ye s Rd mile 44 6 5 d R Egypt 4 Forestport 3 mile 36 Camden mile 22 mile 15 69 Lee 3 1 Lee Center-Taberg Rd Day 4 - Camden to Old Forge Distance - 75 miles (120.7k) Total Climbing - 4,519 ft (1,377.4m) elevation profile 1,800 1,350 9,00 450 3 2 N Rd ben teu N. S ADIRONDACKs Westernville START WATER LUNCH STOP 3 0 15 Miles 21-30.5, 1128 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 2.3% FINISH REST AREA 1 POINT OF INTEREST CLIMB NATURALIST 4 29 4 FORTIFIED WATER 44 Miles 51.6-60.4, 418 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 0.9% 59 75 DAY FOUR heads east across upper Mohawk Valley, turns north at Steuben, climbs Bowen Hill, crosses the Black River Valley and parallels the river downstream to Hawkinsville, and then turns northeast, into the Adirondacks and up the Moose River watershed to Old Forge. The steepest climb, 1,100 feet in 10 miles, is in the morning. The afternoon begins with a gentle descent followed by a long gradual climb. The afternoon route, through the Sand Flats State Forest and up theMoose River Road, is remote and lovely. The Moose was once a steep and famous log-drive river. The last drive, from the Moose River Plains to Lyons Falls, was in 1948. Now, still formidably steep, it is one of the east’s premier whitewater rivers. 1 Delta Reservoir Delta Reservoir, on the upper Mohawk River, was constructed in 1908 to supply water to Rome. The village of Lake Delta, at its western end, contains buildings that were moved from under the reservoir. Delta Lake State Park, on the south shore of the reservoir, has camping, picnic areas, hiking and cross-country ski trails, and a beach. The reservoir is stocked and has a warm-water fishery. 2 Steuben Memorial Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, whose memorial is here, was a Prussian officer who became a general in the Continental Army, wrote its first training manual, and served as George Washington’s chief of staff. He received a land grant from New York State after the Revolution, summered in a log house here until his death in 1794, and is buried in a grove near the memorial. 3 BREIA Trails at Alder Creek Gorge, Egypt Road The Black River Environmental Improvement Association is a not-for-profit corporation, funded by the Gilbert and Ildiko Butler Family Foundation, that creates and maintains trails and cabins for skiing, snowshoeing, and mountain biking. Access to the trails and facilities is free. BREIA has over fifty kilometers of trails and at three locations, making it one of the largest nordic centers in the state. 4 Black River, Forestport The Black River originates in the southwestern Adirondacks, flows west twenty-five miles to Forestport, and then flows north and finally west another hundred miles to Black River Bay on Lake Ontario. It is a wilderness river with very private canoeing in its upper parts, a whitewater river in its lower gorge, and a hard-working, impounded river, with seventeen mill dams, in between 5 Punkeyville State Forest One of the state’s newest state forests, located along the Black River north of Forestport and protecting about a mile of shoreline. Punkeyville, meaning midgetown, is a old name for Forestport; it was chosen by the students at the Forestport Elementary School. 6 Boonville Airport A private, VFR airport with two grass strips, owned by a a group of local pilots. It opened as a flight school in 1945; many of its students were veterans getting flight training through the G.I. Bill. 7 Sand Flats State Forest A 2,500-acre state forest on reforested potato farms, suffering, as many plantation forests do, from blight, insects and decline. Recently replanted, and in the process, helped set a record by planting 1,622 in an hour, or one tree every 2.2 seconds. 8 Adirondack Park Boundary, Moose River Road The park boundary—the Blue Line—is also the legal boundary between two different approaches to managing state lands. Outside the Blue Line the state lands may be actively managed, which means trees may be cut, crops may be grown, vehicles may be used, and unwanted lands may be sold or traded. Inside the Blue Line the state constitution requires the lands be permanent and wild. In practice this means that selling and trading are forbidden and that active management and vehicle use greatly restricted. Both sorts of land have both ecological value. But it is worth noting that the lands outside the Blue Line are ordinary managed forests, like many others in many states. Those inside the Blue Line are a three-million-acre, interconnected wilderness with an old-growth core, unique in the world. 9 TOBIE TRAIL A 14-mile bike and pedestrian pathway connecting Thendara, Old Forge, Big Moose, Inlet, and Eagle Bay. It uses roads, trails, and an abandoned segment of the railroad spur into Old Forge. 10 Northern Forest Canoe Trail A 740-mile canoe trail that starts in Old Forge and ends in Fort Kent, Maine. It is like a canoe version of the Appalachian trail, only shorter and harder. It uses 22 rivers, some traversed upstream, 58 lakes, and 53 miles of portage trail. Forty-five days of paddling and carrying is a fast trip; 21 days three hours is the record. Big Moose Station 5 mile 22 d R se oo gM Bi 5 mile 13/29 Eagle Bay 5 Inlet 28 Old Forge d R re h ut So o Sh N ADIRONDACKs Day 5 - Old Forge Layover Option Distance - 43.6 miles (70.17k) START Total Climbing - 2,691 ft (820.2m) LUNCH STOP elevation profile 1,900 1,750 1,650 1,525 5 5 0 5 9 Miles 12.3-15.26, 136 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 0.9% 17 5 WATER FORTIFIED WATER FINISH REST AREA 1 POINT OF INTEREST CLIMB NATURALIST 5 26 Miles 17.75-19.0, 138 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 2.0% 35 5 43.6 Miles 20.11-21.79, 190 ft gain, Avg. grade 2.1% DAY FIVE is a layover day, with an optional ride to Big Moose. The trip is and out-and-back, about 44 miles total, and can be done in half a day. The route is mostly on back roads, with nice shade, relatively little traffic, and a reasonable number of bumps and potholes. The first twelve miles, head south and east from Old Forge, follow the south shore of the Fulton Chain. The route then follows Rt. 28 around the east end of Fourth Lake from Inlet to Eagle Bay; heads northwest, across state land and several ridges, to Dart Lake and Big Moose Lake; and ends at Big Moose Station. The twelve miles to Eagle Bay are relatively flat, the next ten quite hilly. The shores of the Fulton Chain are private and continuously developed. There, are, for example, over 500 buildings along South Shore Road between Old Forge and Inlet. The largest private landowner is the Adirondack League Club, a hunting and fishing club founded in 1890. It holds 47,000 acres of land south of Old Forge,and is the private largest club, and the largest noncommercial landholder, in the Park. The other properties are much smaller, often an acre or less. Big Moose, like Old Forge,was a hunting and logging settlement after the Civil War. It came a tourist destination and summer colony when New York Central Railroad reached it in1892. The railroad owners and their peers— new money in those days, old money today—bought large private estates near the railroad or built “great camps” on the lakes. W.W. Durant, one of the developers of the railroad, built a road from Big Moose to Raquette Lake to serve the camps there. J.P. Morgan, not to be outdone, built the Raquette Lake Railroad to serve them better. Besides being, for eight years anyway, the gateway to the first great camps around Raquette, and Sagamore lakes, Big Moose figures prominently in two other Adirondack stories. The first is as the locale for Theodore Dreiser’s American Tragedy, based on the murder of Grace Brown by her lover Chester Gillette while they were vacationing there in 1906. Grace and Chester worked in a shirt mill in Cortland; they came here on vacation and went out in a boat. She drowned and he was executed at Auburn Prison. The second, equally sensational, is as the first lake to provide conclusive proof that acid rain could change lake chemistry. The southwest Adirondacks have been heavily impacted by acids from coal-burning power plants to the west and south. The scientific community believed that the acids acidified the lakes and altered their ecology. The power industry, against all the evidence, claimed that they had always been acid. The proof—sediment cores in which biological markers of acidification were linked to chemical markers from fossil fuels—came from Big Moose in 1984. This was the first chemical history of an acidified lake. and a landmark advance in the political fight against acid rain. It was not, however, the last time an industry would deny scientific evidence and gain political advantage by doing so. Long Lake 30 mile 52 rth No t Rd 7 n Poi 6 5 Blue Mountain Lake mile 24 Raquette Lake mile 39 5 28 3 4 Inlet 1 Old Forge 2 mile 13 N ADIRONDACKs Day 6 - Old Forge to Long Lake Distance - 64.1 miles (103.1k) Total Climbing - 3,768 ft (1148.5m) elevation profile 2,100 1,925 1,725 1,525 5 START WATER LUNCH STOP FORTIFIED WATER FINISH REST AREA 1 POINT OF INTEREST CLIMB NATURALIST 5 0 13 Miles 36.5-38.2, 358 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 4.0% 25 38 51 64.1 DAY SIX is a day of lakes and lake chains. It runs up the Fulton Chain, crosses to the Raquette River watershed, runs along Raquette Lake and Blue Mountain Lake, and then heads northwards to Long Lake. A side excursion on the North Point Road goes to Buttermilk Falls and the outlet of Raquette Lake and adds about 16 miles, bringing the total mileage to 64. The morning is a gradual climb, followed by a short, steep climb up a just before lunch and a steep descent after it. The North Point Road has a gentle climb on the way in and a gentle descent on the way out. Each of the lakes has its own history and personality. Old Forge is a gateway town: giant hotels in the 19th century and theme parks, motels, and intense lake-shore development in the 20th. It is, in a sense, a model of what the Forest Preserve was created to prevent. Raquette Lake and Blue Mountain Lakes are natural lakes, much less developed, in wilderness settings. Formerly they were destinations for old money; now they have cottages and campgrounds but few year-around residents. Long Lake lacked water or rail connections and was too remote for old money. It was guide-and-guideboat country in the 19th century and only developed, and only in a limited way, after it was reachable by auto. Surrounding all these lakes, and making them special, are remarkable forests and wetlands. The forests are old, interconnected, and protected. Some have never been logged, many barely logged. The wetlands are intact, peaty, and very private. They are home, at least till warming drives them out, to some of our rarest and most northern species. 1 Fulton Chain, Seventh Lake The Fulton Chain was created when to the Middle Branch of the Moose River was dammed in 1871, raising the water level and connecting the first five lakes. Another dam connected the sixth and seventh lakes. The dams provided water for the log drives on the Moose River and made the lake chain navigable by steamboats. Old Forge rapidly became, and remains, the gateway to the central Adirondack lakes and a major tourist destination in its own. The Fulton chain is navigable by canoe, with short carries, to Raquette Lake and, with longer ones, beyond it to Forked Lake, Long Lake, Tupper Lake, and the Saranac Lakes. It is the start of both the 740-mile Northern Forest Canoe Trail and the Adirondack Classic, a three-day, 90-mile race. 2 Cathedral Pines A stand of about a dozen large white pines along the south shore of Seventh Lake, a few minutes in from a trail-head marked by a small brown and yellow trail sign. 3 Raquette Lake Waterfront Raquette Lake is a natural lake, surrounded by old-growth forests and with corridors of lowland boreal forest along its bays and inlet streams. It started as ahunting destination in the 1850s and then became a high-end summer colony for the American plutocracy in the 1880s. The log-faced chalet architecture developed here by W.W. Durant and his peers spread through the private Adirondacks, and has come to be called the great camp style. 4 Lowland Boreal Forest and Bog, Raquette Lake South Inlet The channel here is bordered by floating mats of sphagnum, dwarf evergreen shrubs and sedges, grading shorewards into open black-spruce tamarack swamps. These are characteristic habitats of the central and northern Adirondacks, occurring on almost every low-gradient river. They are deeply northern and are home to characteristic boreal species like leatherleaf, dwarf cranberry, spruce grouse, and palm warbler. They are also threatened; they are at the southern edge of the boreal and, here and elsewhere, some of their most characteristic species are decreasing as the climate warms. 5 Adirondack Museum, Blue Mountain Lake A much honored regional museum devoted to Adirondack history and culture. It was, in large part, the creation of the scholar and philanthropist Harold Hochschild. It has boats, paintings, the cabins of a recluse and a writer, a remarkable research library, and, saved from the woods, the last engine of the Marion Carry Railroad, which Hochschild rode on when he was twelve. 6 Blue Mountain The tall mountain east of Blue Mountain Lake, with spectacular views and badly rutted trails. Also the divide between the Hudson and St. Lawrence watersheds; the center of old Township 34, about which Hochshild wrote a masterpiece of Adirondack history; and the home of small population of Bicknell’s thrush, a boreal species at risk from climate change. 8 North Point Road, Old-Growth Forests The North Point Road runs from Deerland, at the south end of Long Lake, southwest along the Raquette River and Forked Lake to the outlet of Raquette Lake. The forests here are some of the oldest in the park and have spectacular individual trees. Some have never been logged, some were logged for softwoods over a century ago. They are not, however, intact or safe. Acid rain, beech disease and an unexplained decline in the number of old red spruce have changed them over the last century; climate change and invasive insects threaten them in this one. mile 51 5 6 86 7 186 30 short option 52.7 miles 8 9 Saranac Lake mile 38 mile 25 3 3 3 2 5 4 Tupper Lake 30 1 mile 10 5 N Long Lake ADIRONDACKs 9 Day 7 - Long Lake to Saranac Lake Distance - 65.3 miles (105.1k) Total Climbing- 3,409 ft (1,039m) 5 5 0 WATER LUNCH STOP elevation profile 1,950 1,800 1,600 1,425 START FORTIFIED WATER FINISH REST AREA 1 POINT OF INTEREST CLIMB NATURALIST 5 13 Miles 4.04-7.15, 286 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 1.7% 27 5 41 Miles 28.4-30.4, 196 ft Gain, Avg. Grade 1.8% 54 65.3 DAY SEVEN starts at Long Lake, near the center of the park, goes north to Paul Smith’s, near the northern boundary, and then circles south to Saranac Lake. The route is west of the high Peaks and entirely over 1,500 feet elevation. It lies on the central dome of the Adirondacks, a region of large lakes and wetlands and, appropriately for the last day, has big water, deep woods, and spectacular views. The central Adirondacks are water-dominated, and the rivers and lakes are the major landmarks. The route starts on the Raquette River goes northwest, crosses Big Brook and Bog Stream, climbs a drainage divide, runs along the west shore of Tupper Lake, and meets the river again at Simon Pond. After Tupper the route goes west into the Saranac River watershed and, reversing Day One, goes north by Upper Saranac Lake, Fish Creek and Follensby Clear Ponds, the St. Regis Canoe Area, and Lake Clear. It then enters the St. Regis watershed and goes by Upper and Lower St. Regis Lakes to Paul Smiths. There it turns southeast, re-enters the Saranac River watershed, passes Lake Colby, and ends in Saranac Lake. A cut-off that is available at Lake Clear Junction (Rt. 186, mile 44). It saves 12 miles but misses Paul Smiths and the St. Regis lakes. The cut-off rejoins the main route by Donelly’s Soft Ice Cream, who still use their original 1953 ice-cream machine, make one flavor each day, and have perhaps the best view of any ice-cream stand on earth. Saturday is chocolate twist. 1 William C. Whitney Wilderness Area One of the park’s newest wilderness, and a popular canoe area. Whiteney was a 19th century coal and oil magnate in the classic style—farms, mansions, race horses—who, as Secretary of the Navy, brought the U.S. into the age of steel ships and, as a gentleman hunter, bought 68,000 acres in the Adirondacks as a wilderness estate. His descendents unwildernessed it rapidly, also in classic style. When the timber ran out, they sold half to the state. The woods are now recovering; lakes and wetlands are spectacular. 2 Raquette River Charismatic Mega-Wetland others for a month of hunting, fishing and conversation. The land passed to the McCormick family, ardent conservationists, and from them to the Nature Conservancy, the current owners. 4 Wild Center The Adirondacks’ newest museum and one of its most imaginative, with live exhibits, trails, an elevated outdoor walkway, and an important education program. Also a regional leader in promoting green technology and promoting climate action and a valued partner of WCS. 5 Paul Smith’s College The Adirondacks’ only four-year college, with programs in natural resources, hotel management, culinary arts, and business. Named for Apollos Smith, a hotelier, raconteur, and land trader who made his fortune here in the late nineteenth century. His son, Phellp’s Smith, gave the land and money to start the college; it admitted its first class in 1946. 6 White Pine Camp A beautiful great camp on Osgood Pond. Built by Archibald White in the 1920s, used as the summer White House by Calvin Coolidge in 1926, passed though a succession of owners, including Potsdam State Teachers College and Paul Smith’s College, and restored and open as a private inn. 7 Harrietstown Hill Open farm country northeast of Lake Clear, with one of the best views in the northern Adirondacks. Loon Lake Mountain is just east of north, Duncan Mountain northeast, Bloomingdale Bog and Whiteface east, and the northern High Peaks—Mackenzie, Barker, Scarface, Ampersand…—to the southeast and south. 8 Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium and Cottage Row Tupper Lake is an artificial lake, formed in 1850 by damming the Raquette River. The damming flooded a complex of bogs fens in the area called Simon Pond. The result is a large and handsome deepwater marsh, used among others, by loons, eagles, ospreys, bitterns, ring-neck ducks, bats, moose and many others. The pull-off here a well known birding stop. The sanitarium was founded by Dr. Edward Trudeau. Trudeau was diagnosed with tuberculosis in 1873, came to Saranac Lake to recover, opened a practice here, and, from European models and his own experience, came to believe in the therapeutic value of clean cold air, rest, and exercise. He opened the sanitarium in 1885 and the Saranac Laboratory for the Study of Tuberculosis, now the Trudeau Institute, in 1894. 3 Follensby Pond Track 9 WCS Adirondack Program Headquarters Follensby Pond is a medium-sized, undeveloped lake surrounded by 14,000 acres of forest. It was where, when the Adirondacks were still roadless and wild, William Stillman brought Ralph Waldo Emerson, Louis Agassiz, and seven The WCS office, home to your hosts for this tour and the only conservationscience organization in the Adirondacks, is along the shores of the Saranac River, just before the lunch stop and end.