Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Forbes State Forest: More Discoveries on the Mountain Streams Trail

It was a strange day to be in the forest.  Spooky and dark, it felt more like a gray ghost of Novembers past than the hopeful spirit of March and Springtime future.  But I had business to attend to back in the Forbes State Forest.  On my last trek, below, I accidentally bypassed the parts of the Mountain Streams Trail System that would lead me onto the high flank above Indian Creek and deep into the forest.  Here's a shot of that fast-moving stream with the trail climbing the mountainside on its banks.
The temperatures were barely into the 40s, but the wind chill made it feel much colder on the upland hillsides and ridges.  Soon enough, the loud gurgling of the brook gave way to the chaotic screaming of the turnpike.  It may have been the noise, but all along this hike, I had the uncanny feeling of being watched.  I kept casting a downhill glance over my shoulder to see if there was some vagrant or stray animal trotting along behind me.  It didn't help, either, that a hapless backpacker was killed just a few days ago on the Appalachian Trail in Maryland when the wind downed an old tree onto his head.
In October or June, this stretch of woods is probably a lovely place...and it has a melancholy beauty in March, too.  But the seasonal gray joined with the turnpike racket to make it strangely eerie.  I loved this long wooded ridge that accompanied me all the way to 2,600 feet elevation, where I had to turn around in order to hurry home in time to meet my kids off the bus.  To the left of the trail, as you ascend, there's always something noisy: a stream, a turnpike.  But to the right, there's this deep valley, with its ever-present ridgeline on the opposite side.  Unseen in the chasm below is the remote watercourse called "Little Run."  It's a tributary of Indian Creek, but there's no trail through that valley, which makes it an immensely appealing place for a lonesome camp-out.
 Indian Creek really is a mountain stream, swift and swollen with snowmelt and spring rains.  It tumbles down the side of this steep hill, over rocks and fallen trees.  I saw a herd of about twenty deer leaping through the gray undergrowth.  And upon my return to the car, I had to pluck two deer ticks off my clothes and skin. 
 Closer to the trailhead on Skyview Road, before beginning the long climb upward, the stream dashes past this odd stone wall.  Click on the photo to see it.  I couldn't ford the creek in order to go investigate.  The water was moving to deep and fast.  But it looks too thick to be the foundation of a barn.  I'm guessing that it's the remains of an old flour mill.  This stone structure probably used to hold a water wheel over the stream in order to grind grain into flour.  Surprisingly small bodies of water were often used for mills.
On the way home, I stopped near Donegal to get some coffee, and I saw this strange convoy of VWs, below.  They were en route from California to Boston and apparently advertising some kind of beer.  The Mohawk haircuts are rows of wheat, so it must be a wheat brew.  I don't drink anymore, so I don't know.  They've got that little gray car surrounded.

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Forbes State Forest: Mountain Streams Trail System

Ah, sweet March, the deceptive month!  It draws you out into its golden air with birdsong and early spring promises.  The trails are all slippery with hard-packed ice and mud, and only the earliest of incipient little buds are beginning to appear in the undergrowth.  But it was 50 degrees today and sunny.  I had to hustle back down the the Forbes to spend my day off.
There's nothing really all that spectacular about the Forbes State Forest.  It's got some nice overlooks and pretty streams.  But for the most part, its trails run a little too close to human habitation for my comfort.  I went into the Mountain Streams Trails System with an old map that I printed off the Internet about five years ago, but I got shamefully lost in a maze of narrow woodlots on the edge of public roadways and fields.  The map was too sketchy.  
Driving on PA381, back in the fall, I'd often seen parking areas where the Mountain Streams Trail crossed the road.  It called to me, but there were always so many other quadrants of the forest to discover.  Even today, when I finally got back around to the Mountain Streams, I never did make it into the deep woods that I was aiming for on the map.  I ended up wandering around the wrong area, looking for the right path.  I followed a steep and slick woodland road up to this summit, where the view out onto the countryside below was less than spectacular, but definitely worth a trek.  Click on the photo to enlarge it.  These are the Laurel Highlands, not the Laurel Mountains....
On the selfsame summit, there was an odd structure, recently built.  It looked like a horse stable, but inside there were chandeliers and strings of lights.  What is this place, some kind of mountain dance hall?  Is it a venue for wedding receptions? 
The place doesn't look like it's been used yet, but there's a blackboard on the wall with a list of alcoholic drinks.  And the back porch had a pleasant feel to it.  Even at a modest altitude of 2,600 feet, it was surprisingly colder here than in the city.  And there were far fewer springtime birds up in the hills than down in the suburbs.  
It always scares me a little when I hear an engine in the forest.  Not sure why.  I just prefer to hide from motorized vehicles.  I heard a truck hurrying down the icy mountain road, and I hid inside this dance hall.  I half expected them to turn into the parking lot and catch me, taking me for a middle-aged vandal.  After returning to my car, I did end up finding a better map of the Mountain Streams Trail System at the trailhead.  I'll try to get to the bigger woods the next time I go out--hopefully next week.  I found a better place to park for the segment of trail that I was looking for, and I'm actually kind of dreaming of doing an early spring overnight in the woods.