exploring

Have I Ever Gotten Lost?

Notes on the Re-Run for Saturday, March 10th.

— Andy

I’m not sure if I have ever gotten lost before in the woods. There has been times when I’ve taken a trail to a surprise result. I don’t always have a perfect map in my head of every area I’ve been to, and sometimes when visiting a new area, I will loop back upon on a trail and be quite surpised at that fact.

Sometimes I will run into something unexpected in the woods that makes it impossible to reach my destination the way I originally expected. The cliff might drop off steeply, their might be a pond in the ways, the trail might be really muddy and mucky, or their might be a hunter up ahead. I usually find my way back to the trail without a problem.

There have been times when I’ve had difficulty locating one point or another. I almost always find it, after a little searching, if it’s nearby. Sometimes I will give up and go back, especially if my map’s quality is poor or if it’s not readily apparent where it should be.

One Mile Left

I guess some day I will get truly lost.

Red Hill Fire Tower

The Red Hill Firetower is on a relatively small in-holding of land by the state of New York that’s part of the larger Sundown Wild Forest. This was the forth Catskill firetower I have visited in recent weeks. I hiked on a beautiful Monday, which I had decided to take a vacation day on.

Red Hill Sign

Red Hill is the easiest firetower to hike up to in the Catskills, even if it’s one of the most difficult to drive from the Albany-area. It is located outside of Grahamsville, about 10 miles North-West of Rondout Reservoir. There is only local dirt roads and windy county roads that run from NY Route 55, which itself is certainly not an expressway.


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Here is a sign telling you it’s not a tough walk.

1.4 Miles to Firetower

This is typical, relatively flat trail which you walk on for the first 9/10 of a mile.

Easy Walk to Tower

The last 1/2th of a mile is relatively steep compared to the first part, maybe gaining 400 feet in elevation, and you’ll have to stop and breath a few times as you go up towards there.

Steeper Trail

When you reach the top, there is an Ranger Station (open weekends) and several picnic tables. There are big signs saying fires are prohibited due to the fire danger, when the grass is dry. That should be a no brainier, but in the summer and winter, it seems a bit absurd. Must be a bad experience from years ago. There is no outhouse, you’ll have to walk off into the woods to find a place to squat and do your business.

Ranger Station and Pinic Table

This is the tower, directly across from the Ranger Station. It is staffed on the weekends.

Tower Closed

The views aren’t anything to write home about, unless you want to see mountains that are less then remarkable in the distance. This is to the north.

North

Red Hill is the southern edge of the Catskills, and as you can see looking to the south, the landscape is quite flat.

South of Catskill

Most of the area around the tower is heavily wooded and owned by either the State or New York City DEP Water. There are a few farms around, especially looking west.

Farms in Valley

On the weekends, you can go into the tower’s cabin. Weekdays it is closed, supposedly because of vandalism. It’s bullshit if you ask me, because who drives 125 miles into the sticks and hikes 1.4 miles to vandalize an old tower? Mount Tremper is open.

Locked

Despite the lousy views (it’s a relative term), the fire tower must be popular, or so the many signs that warn people the tower can only support six people.

Sign

When I was leaving the fire tower I happened to hear an SUV coming up with the former Ranger (now a private individual). They where planning to paint the tower steps on Monday. He offered to unlock the tower, but I was inpatient, and he wouldn’t let me do it with the keys myself. I don’t know if I or him was being more of a dick.

Climbing

After I left, he closed off the tower, because he was painting the steps.

Tower Closed

Here’s a map of the route to the fire tower.


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This gives you an idea of what you see from the tower. Most notably, Doubletop Mountain and Rondout Reservoir. Nothing really super impressive though, just mountains and very little civilization in this rural part of Sullivan County.


View Firetowers I’ve Been To in a larger map
Map: Mountain House Trail and North Mountain
Thematic Map: Albany Art

Wet July Walk at Five Rivers

On Friday evening I decided to go for a little walk at Five Rivers Nature Preserve, not all that far from my apartment in Delmar. It was a cloudy evening out, but with some sun peaking through the clouds.

Hammock Bug Net

There was lots of wildlife out there enjoying the moist weather between the bands of showers that where coming through.

Number of Wildfires by Month in NY State Since 2008

Then it started to rain, so I ran over to this shelter.

Shelter

After the rain there where some spectular rainbows.

Pot of Gold

And an almost mystical environment.

Hazy Tail

But it lead to some muddy boots.

Office of Lawyers Median Wage

And some beautiful flowers.

 Big Bay Of Piseco Lake

The route.


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