Monadnock Adventures (National Natural Landmark, NH)

December 29, 2021

There will be multiple sections to this post. Instead of making separate entries for Monadnock, I’ll just keep adding to this one each time I visit. (Edit March 30, 2022 – I started a new post for the remaining six visits – see March 29, 2022 post).

According to (my own) rules, I will hike all maintained trails in a given landmark. Since this particular landmark includes the entire mountain, that means I will hike all the maintained trails on Monadnock.

I first visited this mountain with my daughters almost ten years ago; we did a White Dot-Cascades Link-Spellman-Pumpelly loop. The link to that trip report is here, and the photo below shows our route in yellow highlighter.

Today (December 29, 2021), I visited and stuck to the lower trails, as I am four months out from major abdominal surgery (removal of a honeydew melon-sized noncancerous tumor along with my uterus – the incision was vertical from my pelvis to just beneath my belly button). I am recovering well, but am still being careful not to go too hard too quickly. Pre-surgery, I could handle 26 mile traverses up and over multiple high mountains in extreme weather during all seasons. I’ll get to that point again, likely within a couple of months. For today though, the 5.5-ish miles with about 1000 feet of elevation gain was fine. Felt good, actually, like I could do a lot more. Soon, I will.

My route: Pond Loop-Ravine Trail (out and back)-Birchtoft-Cascade Link-Harling-Birchtoft-Pond Loop. This is marked in red below.

The snow barely covered the trails, so microspikes were sufficient. I saw no one at all which, for the third most climbed mountain in the world, was wonderful. Normally this place is supposedly a zoo, so if you want solitude, hike midweek during winter. I parked in the winter lot, where you do not need to pay November – March. It’s good to leave money anyway though, as your donation supports the state park.

The views were snow, trees, bridges, stone walls, and roads. A lovely walk in the winter woods. Always good to be out and about in nature.