Friday, August 30, 2013

Finley Cane - Bote Mountain - Lead Cove

Date: 8/30/13
Distance: 9.5mi

After a long few days at work, I took a day off to do a little hiking.  It was a hot and humid day and the hike was tough.

I started the day on the Finley Cane trail.  It is a very nice hike in the woods with very little total elevation change.  There are a few easy creek crossings along the way.  The 2.8 miles on this trail passed quickly.  The trail ends at the Bote Mountain Trail.

I turned right on Bote Mountain.  This is not a nice and easy flat trail. It immediately starts up.  The total elevation gain from Finley Cane to Anthony Creek was about 1740' over 3.7 miles.  I hiked all the way to Anthony Creek because I'd never covered the portion of Bote Mountain between Anthony Creek and Lead Cove.  Earlier in the year, I did the top part of Bote Mountain on the hike to Rocky Top.

I was hot and tired before I reached the junction.  After lunch, I turned around and returned to Lead Cove for the hike out to the car.  Lead Cove was relatively steep as well with an elevation drop of 1400' over only 1.8 miles.  It did make for a quick trip back to the car.

Start Time: 9:40
Lunch 12:00 at Anthony Creek
Back to Car: 1:40

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Metcalf Bottoms - Little Brier - Little Greenbrier - Roundtop - Little River crossing

Date: 8/3/13
Distance: 12 miles

I hiked with the Meetup group today from Metcalf Bottoms to the Townsend Y.  The hike was a shuttle hike where we met at the Y and took a few cars up to Metcalf Bottoms to begin the hike.  The hike began on the Metcalf bottoms trail that leaves the picnic area and ends at the Little Greenbrier School.  There was also a cemetery at the school.



A gravel road leaves the school and eventually reaches the 5 sisters cabin.  The cabin is a cool place to visit.  It is very scenic with a Cabin, a spring house and a building that looked like a feed house.



We probably spent 20 minutes milling around the cabin.  The story from the people who knew about the cabin was that the sisters refused to sell when the park was started, but eventually agreed that the park could have the land once all the sisters had died.  One of the sisters lived in the cabin up until 1964.  The gravel road got close to the cabin, but not all of the way.  It would have been a rustic life.

The Little Brier Gap trail leaves the gravel road just above the cabin and terminates at the Little Greenbrier Trail.  This intersection is about 2.5 miles from the Metcalf parking lot.  We took the left fork of the Little Greenbrier Trail towards Townsend.  The trail hugged the edge of the park with several trails that headed down the mountain outside of the park.  At one spot there was a platform with a nice view of Wear's Valley.
This trail terminated at the Metcalf Bottoms Road (not sure this is the name. It is the road from Wear's Valley into the park at Metcalf Bottoms.)  We turned to the left on the road and walked a few hundred yards down the road to the Roundtop Trailhead.  The Roundtop trail had a decent climb onto the side of Roundtop Mountain.  Fortunately it didn't go to the top of Roundtop as that would have been a very hard climb.  The trail was a nice walk in the woods with a few nice views along the way.  It is 7.5 miles in length.  There was one tree across the trail that made life interesting.
The last 0.5 miles of the trail goes down the mountain and ends at the "Y".  It is on the "wrong" side of the "Y", so we had to fjord the Little River to get back to the cars.

Met at the Y at 7:30
Got started on the trail at 8:15
Back to the Y at 2:15