Bear Mountain Trails Project

The New York-New Jersey Trail Conference is rebuilding the Appalachian Trail over Bear Mountain in NY state. This blog will help keep our volunteers and members informed on the work being completed!

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Make an Impact!

We're running out of time for work this season. As the cold and rain creep in, our work slows down and we're planning to wrap up the season around the middle of December. Then, it won't be until April that we're breaking ground again at Bear Mountain. I want to encourage you to head up to the mountain any day of the week (except Tuesday and Wednesday) and really make an impact as we wrap up 2007!

Please call Eddie Walsh at least 24 hours in advance at 845-591-1537 so we know to expect you!

Friday, October 12, 2007

Want to Learn More Skills? Attend one of our Upcoming Workshops!

Late Fall 2007 Trail University Workshops at Bear Mountain

Contact: Leslie Rapparlie (rapparlie@nynjtc.org) for more information (201) 512-9348 x 28

Trail Construction: Building Over Bedrock: The art of stone pinning
Dates: October 26-29th (come out for all days or for just the weekend)
Instructor: Peter Jensen
Close to where the new AT route joins the old, the trail will wrap around a ridge which is a smooth bedrock ledge for nearly 60 linear feet. Here, for these four days, crews will be anchoring a two to three foot tall crib wall onto numerous steel pins for that entire length while enjoying leafless views down onto the Bear Mountain Bridge, Anthony’s Nose, and the Hudson River. Most quarrying will be done prior to the weekend. Allowing participants a unique opportunity to learn and perfect skills. Participants must have volunteers on stone work trail crews before and get permission to participate from Construction Manager or the General Project Manager (see above).

Trail Construction: Stone Step Construction for Beginners
Dates: November 3rd and 4th
Instructors: Jon Paulson, former SCA crew leader and Yosemite National Park Trail Crew Member
Participants will learn how to build stone steps on the western side of Bear Mountain, a short distance from the Summit Tower. Several different methods will be employed to build a two foot’ wide stone staircase in beginner-friendly terrain on the mountain’s gentler south side. Instruction and tips will be given to safely move stone with minimal effort and impact to the environment.

Advanced Trail Construction: Stone Crib Wall Construction
Dates: November 10th and 11th
Instructors: TBD
If you missed these workshops in the fall or in year one, this may be your last chance in a while as the 2008 season has mostly stone steps planned. Participants in this workshop will learn to build dry stack stone retaining walls (a.k.a. crib walls). In addition to key structural and design requirements, participants will also learn how to use stone shaping tools to cut rock to desired shapes and sizes.

Advanced Trail Construction: Stone Cutting and Shaping
Dates: November 17th and 18th
Instructors: Eddie Walsh and Matt Townsend
This will be the inaugural workshop to take place in the dramatic “boulder fields” uphill of Hessian Lake. Stone cut and split during this workshop will be used as five foot wide stone steps that wind between bus-sized boulders and under dramatic rock ledges. By learning how the stone prefers to break, participants in this classic Bear Mountain workshop spend time learning how to split boulders into usable steps and smaller boulders as well as how to delicately shape stone.




Advanced Trail Construction: Stone Paving
Dates: December 1 and 2
Stone Paving, also called rip-rap, or pitching, is a technique used to create a durable walking surfacing that can withstand heavy water flows. On Bear Mountain it is used below large rock slabs and in areas where intermittent streams flow through a wide area of hillside. Essentially, it is the construction of a stone patio like structure across the walking surface. Tools used include basic rock moving tools, shaping tools and occasionally rock saws. This work differs from other construction work on the mountain in that the stones used are usually smaller and easier to handle.


Advanced Trail Skills: Rigging and Highline Basics
Dates: December 1 and 2
Learn the basic safety and operational methods of using highlines to move large stones. This workshop will take place in the lower boulder fields above Hessian Lake, weather permitting.

Fall 2007 Update

What a long and terrific summer. Full of workshops and the Biennial conference, volunteers on Bear Mountain have been busy. And now we are looking forward to another exciting fall. We had a lot of help and support this summer. Thank you to all those volunteers that came out and sweat with us in the grueling summer heat.

Now, with our focus on autumn, we are looking forward to the crew from the Appalachian Trail Conservancy to join us. Led by Ted Wilson, this crew of seven to eight has been working on Bear Mountain since the founding. This season they will spend 3 weeks camping and building new trail for the project. Most crew members are from the eastern side of the country but the most traveled volunteers, Edward and Alan, will join us from Great Britain. The skill amongst this group ranges from beginner to experienced, but all are hard workers and eager to learn. The newcomers are like every volunteer we see here: quick and willing to learn and have fun!
With their first two weeks completed, this group has completed a great amount of trail, including six stairs. This dedicated team came together to learn specialized skills together, their stone cribbing skills are equal to the masters’. Ted’s crew has been working to connect the work from this summer’s Biennial Conference to the waterfall area just before the boulder field and North face section of Bear Mountain. So far, the ATC crew has built sixty-eight and a half feet of trail with an average crib wall height of two feet. This gives us a total of six hundred sixteen square feet of trail. Not to bad for “beginners.”

With just one more week left of work with the ATC, we are looking for more individual volunteers to come and complete the work. We also look forward to having SCA crew leaders; Mike Johnson, Erin Anderson, and Jon Paulson return to the project. With the temperature cooling down and becoming generally more pleasant, we look forward to an autumn that will be just as busy as summer!

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Get Ready to Get Dirty

With winter dying out, we at the Bear Mountain Trails Project are getting ready for another season up on the mountain. Tools have been maintained and ordered, new volunteers have been recruited and don't forget about the workshops! Oh glorious workshops! Have you signed up for any yet? Better get to it for they fill up fast. Also any of you out there that would like to request a group day might want to start thinking about reserving your day as we only have a few left available. So as you can see we have been busy while the cold has been upon us. For those of you interested in any workshops that are going on this season you can find your interest and sign up at www.nynjtc.org/workshops/bearmt/index.html, but be quick for like I mentioned they fill up fast and we start on March 25, 2007. If you have any questions you can contact me, Matt Townsend, at townsend@nynjtc.org, or our Volunteer Coordinator, Heidi Adami at adami@nynjtc.org. Hurry up and can't wait to see you there!

Friday, February 09, 2007

Before and After Pictures




Monday, January 29, 2007

Hello. I'm Matt Townsend

With winter coming on, a few changes occurred at Bear Mountain. First we said goodbye to interns Dan and Carrol. We will definitely miss them for all the effort and hard hours they put in. With Dan and Carrol fading with the season, I took over. My name is Matt Townsend and I have taken the place as the new SCA Hudson Valley Corp intern. Well not so new maybe, I started in October as some of you will remember. A little about me..... I'm originally from the other side of New York state where I earned my Eagle Scout rank almost ten years ago. Between then and now I spent my time pursuing a B.A. in the Environmental Studies field and also as a professional landscaper. My free time was spent in the woods on various short walkabouts. Sooo... That's a little about me. Now what has been happening on the mountain the past month. Well of course things have been winding down, but not to a halt. Any day that the weather treats us fair I'm up there slugging away at various tasks, or leading worktrips. There is a lot of maintenance for tools. Last year saw lots of wall built and lots of handles broken. Recently we had a twenty foot storage container shipped to the site for tools to be kept in out of the weather. Time has also been spent seeing that new equipment and tools have been ordered for this year. There has been a lot of time in planning, planning, planning. We have been planning for group days in the spring as well as workshop schedules. I personally am planning a scout outing and a day for an SCA service project. Both to take place in the late spring. Planning is also under way to once again have an SCA leader crew come in for the spring months. We are all looking forward to see them again. That's it for now. I'm gonna do my best to keep this blog updated so keep checking back for recent posts and pictures.

Monday, November 27, 2006

We're winding down


Well, folks, its been awhile. I apologize. I've been spending more of my office time working on the next installment of the newsletter. It will have a wrap up of the year, and a sundry other announcements. I have also been working on an exciting development of our web presence.

we have...pictures!


I signed us up for free web hosting of pictures so that they are accessible for you all to see. We've taken many pictures, but were not really able to get them up onto the NYNJTC website, so I found us a site that has some great features.

The best part is that you can email us any pictures you've taken and send them to us at the email: Bear_Mountain_Trails@pickle.com and we can upload them directly. Also, you can leave comments too! The website to see the albums at is: http://www.pickle.com/bear_mountain_trails Be sure to go!

Anyway, updates on the work done. A large contigous piece of trail is completed, with all the steps placed. We even had treading put down in many places, all it needs now is a little bit of native mineral soil put down on top to hide the blue color of the imported gravel and dust and it is 100% completed. If you haven't been out in awhile, you will see just how much was completed this year. We still have this weekend and then whenever the weather is good this winter to get a bit more done, but still, its impressive. We will have a count out for you with the newsletter.

On Nov 11th, we had a womens work trip. The hosts of this work trip were Sarah, Erin, me (Carol), and Liz (half day, her dad was visiting and working on the other side for the frist half) hosting with Leslie and Deb volunteering. Instead of kicking the usual co-ed work trip off the mountain, we went to the south face of the mountain and did some good old fashioned side hilling trail building. This is how most trail building is done, for more backcountry hiking. What you do is use a hoe to dig out the flat bench for the hiking trail, compared to what we are doing on the East face, where we build the bench out of crib wall. The south face is used generally only by through hikers and other more serious hikers out for long hikes, compared to people's shorter hikes up to the top of the mountain and back. I really enjoyed the side hilling. It can be tiring work, but it is fun because its safe to just chit chat as you hack at the dirt. It was a beautiful warm day for November, and since we were on the south face we had sunlight all day, on top of the gorgeous views.

Also on that day, we had a large number of other volunteers on the main project area, including 4 women from the Mass Parks trail building SCA crew, plus Liz's dad, Job (his first day out I think), Mike and Owen Garrison, Andy Helck and Richard Lynch. I wasn't there when they were working but I know that they got a lot of work done!

On Friday the 17th, we had a group of 9 students and 2 teachers from Peekskill HS come out and do some hard work and get dirty. The were Jasmine, Angie, Shannon, Pira, Anthony, Jacqueline, Rob, Billy and the teachers Mr Benvenga and Ms Day. They day started out interesting enough. They had been promised a 15 person van to bring them on this field trip, and that was all the 9 of them needed. The problem is they got a full sized bus. While for most trips, this is probably not a problem, if only excessive, for this trip it was. It meant they had to hike up. Oh the groaning and complaining about the steep hike! They were assured that it was the hardest work of the day. Once they got to the worksite they were down to work. A few of the volunteers went and helped fly some rocks down the mountain, and a few brave boys helped with using rock bars to get some heavy rocks moved over to the wall area for them to be set. Other volunteers helped shovel and move the fine gravel to cover the trail. One of the volunteers, Anthony, was using our canycom powered "wheelbarrow" and loved it. He wanted to come back just to drive the thing again. It is kind of fun, but I find the noise to eventually become tiresome. A few more students went up to the road top to shovel the gravel into the carrier. At the end of the day, they all had to walk back down. Some of the student, instead of walking, fell the whole way down and probably took half the mountain home on their clothes. They did have fun though! I hope more HS groups come out to work on the project.

The next weekend we had a womens workshop. Hosting the workshop were Erin, Sarah, Denise Vitale and me, and attendees were Liz Mellen, Cal Rizzuto, Joan James, Eileen O'Reilly and Vicki Rubino. We focused on a smattering of basic rock work to get everyone acquainted with the work that happens on the mountain. We spent much of Saturday flying rocks down to the wall site, as well as using our rock moving skills with rock bars. On Sunday, we completed flying the rocks down, and then Sarah was teaching crib wall building, while a few of us dug a trench to make sure the water flowing down the old logging road actually all goes over the stone paving built a few weeks earlier and not over some other part of the trail.

Last weekend we had a college day work trip. It wasn't hugely attended but we had fun. Our workers were Dan, Me, and Jon, with volunteers Andy (not a college student) and Job and new volunteer and Job's friend Annalisa. We primarily focussed on moving the small gravel down the mountain for tread topping. Andy brought his electric belay machine that pulled the carrier of gravel up and down the mountain: Success! We can finally move this stuff! See, the bigger gravel goes down the chute quite efficiently, but the smaller stuff would just get stuck, especially the fine rock dust. We had the idea for the carrier a long time ago, but getting the logistics to cooperate is what took awhile. Finally, we got a metal tripod that held the cable up high enough to clear the hillside completely. Of course, Andy and Eddie have now decided that this is too slow a process but its certainly faster then never. They have started scheming and problem solving again. Still, its great to have the material down at the site finally. At the end of the day, we went down to the inn area and had a picnic with BBQ and pasta salad and chips and cake etc.

The next day was even quieter, with just me, Jon, Dan, Liz and a volunteer, Bill Linhart. We worked at a further down section of the trail, rocks were flown, a few rocks were set by Liz and Bill, and then we made crush. It was a nice day though.

Carol

Ps- I can't seem to get the photo uploader to work properly, and editting the photo away also doesn't seem to be working. I apologize for the bugs!

Monday, October 30, 2006

Deluge!

This weekend, you probably noticed the large amount of rain. Us here on the Bear Mountain Trails Project don't seem to shy away from a little bit of (ok a lot of) water. Friday and Sunday were both wonderful, if only a bit brisk, but Saturday was windy and rainy. There were places with water flowing that I've never seen flowing from the rain before. The waterfall was intense, I suspect it seldom gets much bigger. Also, the reason the existing AT needs to be replaced was entirely apparent- some sections were literally flowing straight through. The places that go directly down the fall line were inundated and left nowhere to walk without stepping into 4 inches of water.

We put up tarps to work under over most of the sites that people were working at. In the morning the rain was constant but it did wax and wane in intensity. The rain actually did stop in the afternoon. The mountain was beautiful under the misty shroud, and the smell of wet leaves. The post rain beauty almost compensated for the cold wet pants and boots.

There was supposed to be a stone shaping workshop, however it was cancelled due to the weather. One of the participants did decide to come out though and volunteer with us. Hormoz Kheirabi seemed to have had a lot of fun and worked with Dan on the section of wall that he has been building. Hormoz also came out on Sunday to work as well. Also on Sunday, Andy Helyk came out. He helped to set up some new rigging and then bring some rocks down to build some stairs. Also out helping us was Sarah Heidenreich and Will Stark.

A lot of work is getting done out here- I hope you all find a chance to come out and work soon! Its amazing to see the progress!

Also, don't forget to bring water. Save your empty jugs, clean them out and fill with potable water for the Crew- their water has been turned off.