Icebound (Virginia / West Virginia - 3/2/2019)
Mar 3, 2019 10:07:36 GMT -5
Post by GaliWalker on Mar 3, 2019 10:07:36 GMT -5
Icebound (Virginia / West Virginia border, March 2, 2019)
Big Schloss and Tibbet Knob
Straddling the Virginia / West Virginia border are two of the nicer viewpoints in the mid-Atlantic: Big Schloss and Tibbet Knob. Even though I'd been up both perches in the past, it had been a while and I wanted to do photography more than I wanted to push myself on a challenging hike. I left the house at 2:30am, but the drive took me longer than expected due to some snowy roads, so I only reached the parking lot around 6:50am. The same parking lot serviced both hikes: Big Schloss to the north, and Tibbet Knob to the south. I decided to tackle Big Schloss first.
Big Schloss
4.2mi, 1000ft elevation gain, 3.75hrs
The night before my trip, an ice storm had hit the area. The entire forest glittered, with every tree and every bush sheathed in a stifling coat of ice. Tree branches creaked and groaned under the weight. (I had been careful to park my car away from the edge, just in case a branch didn't snap off and fall on it.) My boots made whump whump noises as I crunched my way up the crusty trail.
I ascended up the flanks of Mill Mountain. About halfway up I put on my microspikes for better traction. As I gained the ridge I was enchanted by the conditions on display; it was pure winter wonderland with the icy trees and a swirling fog, airbrushed a delicate pink-blue by the morning sun.
GaliWalker in wonderland
I picked my way past the drooping trees, along the ridge, until the turnoff for the Big Schloss vista. A quarter mile hike deposited me at the perch. Words cannot do justice to how beautiful it was up there, so I'll let the pictures do the talking.
Note: That's ice on the trees, not snow
I spent more than an hour up top, before reluctantly heading back down. In this time the temperature had risen above freezing and entire forest was shaking itself free off its blanket of ice. Chunks of ice began to crash down all around me, so I kept my rain jacket on and its hood up for protection. Thankfully I was able to make my way down safely.
Tibbet Knob
3.2mi. 1000ft elevation gain, 2.5hrs
I made my way up the trail in a hail of ice. No, the hail did not originate from the sky, but was raining down from the trees, as the rising temperature released its hold on every branch, every berry and every leaf.
Hail of ice
Just below the summit, two short rock scrambles have to be tackled, which were spicier than normal, due to a thick carpet of ice chunks that lay on the rocks. The ice was akin to ball bearings, which I had to kick out of the way before each step.
The view from Tibbet Knob's summit was great. Unfortunately, a cold wind had picked up and my hands were freezing, since my gloves had got wet from the scrambles, so I didn't linger for long.
Big Schloss and Tibbet Knob
Straddling the Virginia / West Virginia border are two of the nicer viewpoints in the mid-Atlantic: Big Schloss and Tibbet Knob. Even though I'd been up both perches in the past, it had been a while and I wanted to do photography more than I wanted to push myself on a challenging hike. I left the house at 2:30am, but the drive took me longer than expected due to some snowy roads, so I only reached the parking lot around 6:50am. The same parking lot serviced both hikes: Big Schloss to the north, and Tibbet Knob to the south. I decided to tackle Big Schloss first.
Big Schloss
4.2mi, 1000ft elevation gain, 3.75hrs
The night before my trip, an ice storm had hit the area. The entire forest glittered, with every tree and every bush sheathed in a stifling coat of ice. Tree branches creaked and groaned under the weight. (I had been careful to park my car away from the edge, just in case a branch didn't snap off and fall on it.) My boots made whump whump noises as I crunched my way up the crusty trail.
I ascended up the flanks of Mill Mountain. About halfway up I put on my microspikes for better traction. As I gained the ridge I was enchanted by the conditions on display; it was pure winter wonderland with the icy trees and a swirling fog, airbrushed a delicate pink-blue by the morning sun.
GaliWalker in wonderland
I picked my way past the drooping trees, along the ridge, until the turnoff for the Big Schloss vista. A quarter mile hike deposited me at the perch. Words cannot do justice to how beautiful it was up there, so I'll let the pictures do the talking.
Note: That's ice on the trees, not snow
I spent more than an hour up top, before reluctantly heading back down. In this time the temperature had risen above freezing and entire forest was shaking itself free off its blanket of ice. Chunks of ice began to crash down all around me, so I kept my rain jacket on and its hood up for protection. Thankfully I was able to make my way down safely.
Tibbet Knob
3.2mi. 1000ft elevation gain, 2.5hrs
I made my way up the trail in a hail of ice. No, the hail did not originate from the sky, but was raining down from the trees, as the rising temperature released its hold on every branch, every berry and every leaf.
Hail of ice
Just below the summit, two short rock scrambles have to be tackled, which were spicier than normal, due to a thick carpet of ice chunks that lay on the rocks. The ice was akin to ball bearings, which I had to kick out of the way before each step.
The view from Tibbet Knob's summit was great. Unfortunately, a cold wind had picked up and my hands were freezing, since my gloves had got wet from the scrambles, so I didn't linger for long.