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View Full Version : Pinhoti Trail, June 5-7, 2009



Bearpaw
06-10-2009, 14:26
Friday, June 5, 2009

I stepped off from the US-431 trailhead heading southwest on Friday afternoon. I had planned on hiking this section in March, but bronchitis forced me off at Porter’s Gap. I was now set to make up some or all of the miles I had left behind in March.

I was immediately glad I had chosen to wear lightweight long pants. Summer foliage was out.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/001a.jpg

But the trail itself was still smooth and largely clear of blowdowns. I enjoyed not only the well-worn trail, clearly marked with blue blazes, but also the many older turkey track blazes of the early Pinhoti.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/003a_797426.jpg

I made quick time up the mild hills, enjoying the stop at a gorgeous waterfall.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/002a_372916.jpg

I pushed on, crossing CR-24 and heading on to Friendship Campsite. It was a nice spot where you could tuck away 4 or 5 tents easily. The creek was a clear water source that sang me to sleep quickly in the evening.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/005a_997703.jpg

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Saturday dawned clear and noticeably warmer than the previous overcast day. By the time I had walked just three miles I was sweatier than I had been the previous day, despite the ease of the first mile of travel on an old smooth roadbed.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/006a.jpg

I continued moving along, enjoying water stops at creeks and streams, and stopping to check out an old truck hull that looked to have been left alongside the trail decades ago.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/007a_968327.jpg

By the afternoon, the heat was kicking in as I began the 1200 foot climb to the main ridgeline adjoining Cheaha Mountain and State Park. I took my time, stopping for a few moments frequently and cooling off. I was happy to note that despite the heat and climbing, my lungs were doing fine. Still, despite drinking more than a gallon of water already this day, I was pushing sweat out of my body like a hydraulic pump.

When I reached the intersection to the Bald Rock Trail into Cheaha State Park, I knew I was done climbing for the day and close to home.

A ¼ mile later, I dropped my pack at Blue Mountain Shelter.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/008a.jpg

I headed back down the trail to gather water at the happily flowing spring and returned to set up my hammock near the shelter.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/009a_39978.jpg

Graffiti and register entries mentioned the shelter was “spooked”, and that strange noises could be heard at night. It was another of many reasons I was glad to camp near the amenities of a shelter, while still enjoying the comfort of my hammock. Dinner was excellent (Chicken and stuffing with gravy) as I enjoyed a pleasant kitchen and dining room.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/011a_957669.jpg

Due to the higher altitude, the evening cool sank below me and I slept a bit warm in my hammock, but still I enjoyed hearing hickory nuts drop to the ground and squirrels run about and I wondered if these accounted for some of the “spooked” noises as I drifted to sleep.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

This morning I had to make a choice. I had already set up a possible pick-up with my wife (she was staying with her parents who lived just a little over an hour away) at Cheaha State Park. Or I could continue on to Porter’s Gap another 29 miles up the trail.

I stepped off, backtracking up to the Bald Rock Trail to enter the Park. I had already decided to “blue blaze” around the official Pinhoti Trail and walk through Cheaha State Park to see Bald Rock and stand on Cheaha Mountain, Alabama’s high point, which the Pinhoti bypasses. I encountered a rattlesnake in the first few steps, still coiled and resting, which barely seemed to notice me.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/012a_187388.jpg

I headed up the ridge to Bald Rock. After a rocky climb, I was surprised to see a full boardwalk accessing the level ridgetop.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/015a_373389.jpg

The view from Bald Rock was one the nicest I have seen any where in the south.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/013a_121703.jpg

At this point, I decided to call my wife and join her at her parents. I wanted to share this view with her and decided that would be a much more pleasant way to spend the day than hiking the ridgeline in the ever-increasing heat and humidity.

As I headed down from Bald Rock, I also stopped at the firetower on top of Cheaha Mountain. It is very similar to the one on top of Flagg Mountain, the official beginning of the Pinhoti trail 80 miles further southwest. Unlike the Flagg Mountain tower, it was unlocked to provide 360 views.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/019a_971707.jpg

It is officially recognized as Alabama’s high point.
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/files/5/0/2/5/018a_160385.jpg

From there I headed downhill to the camp store, where I grabbed a soda and waited for my ride home.

Mags
06-10-2009, 14:47
Thanks for posting.

I would not mind doing the Pinhoti at some point to get in the southern part of the Appalachians. Many moons ago, a girlfriend of mine at the time did the the Alabama portion of the Pinhoti trail as a prep for her AT hike.

Long story short, she bought me a Pinhoti Trail ball cap. I am probably the one of the few people West of the Mississippi wearing a PT hat. :) I just started wearing it again this past year when I lost the other ball cap that is not destroyed. :)

hikingshoes
06-10-2009, 14:50
Bearpaw,nice pics.Ive day hiked some of that trail in 01.i parked at the trailhead below Cheaha State Park.

Bearpaw
06-10-2009, 14:54
It's strange how different the Pinhoti Trail can be from the Benton MacKaye Trail. It is much easier walking than the fairly severe climbs you walk on the BMT. There are still sizeable sections of roadwalk at the beginning in Alabama and throughout the Georgia section. It does not give the same feel of wilderness like you would experience on the BMT.

And yet, it is a VERY charming walk. I have not run into many hikers on the PT, but you meet many folks on the road and in the more populous areas like Cheaha State Park.

It offers a handful of shelters in Alabama and it is very well blazed and maintained. Personally, at this point, I kind of get the feeling this trail is a lot like what Earl Schaeffer experienced in 1948. Easier walking and more access to local culture than the current AT, without a bunch of other hikers. It is a great reasonably solitary hike, so long as you're not looking for the deeper wilderness of the BMT.

hikingshoes
06-10-2009, 15:24
when i go in to see my family in MS we stop at the park for the night and eat.very nice place to eat too.I love the view as you eat your meal.

The Solemates
06-10-2009, 16:27
must have been a hot one! i dont hike on the Pinhoti from May til Sept!

Bearpaw
06-10-2009, 17:16
must have been a hot one! i dont hike on the Pinhoti from May til Sept!

Friday was overcast and not bad at all.

Saturday was a bit uncomfortable. The humidity drained the fluid from my body at a scary rate.

Sunday, I was glad to meet my wife at the park. The heat index was getting brutal by the afternoon.

I have plans for my next Pinhoti section in October.