Looking southwest from Cadillac Mountain |
Directions – Drive to the tourist area at the top of Cadillac Mountain and park.
The true summit of Cadillac is not really pointed out to people. Start on the South Ridge Trail, heading to the left of the store up a wide dirt road. A few hundred feet along it will level off. On the right look for two short mounds of ledge sticking up a few feet above the surrounding ground. They will have metal discs set in them. The further of the two mounds is the true summit and has the elevation listed on its disc.
From here you have two choices: you can continue on the South Ridge Trail, or you can bypass a couple small challenges right at the beginning. I’ve been up and down this stretch of trail several times, so there was nothing special to me about seeing it again. I chose to walk down the auto road about a tenth of a mile to where the last sharp curve in the road is (opposite the entrance to the Blue Hill Overlook.) On the left you will see a worn path leading off the road. In just a few feet you will pick up the South Ridge Trail’s blazes and cairns.
View towards Cranberry Islands from Cadillac. This is where I started the hike. |
Looking down the South Ridge of Cadillac Mountain |
At the beginning the Canon Brook Trail was very narrow, with
bushes grown to about a foot from each other on the sides of the trail. For the first stretch your legs will be
brushing the vegetation. There was also
a little bit of mud at the beginning, but it is easy enough to avoid, if it
would bother you.
This trail descends easily for about half its length; I was
beginning to wonder if the steepness of it had been exaggerated. Just about then the trail turned into some
small open ledge walking. I had trouble
finding blazes on the ledge. Just then a
man came up the trail and this pinpointed it for me. We talked and it turns out he had hiked the entire
Appalachian Trail. He said he was enjoying
this day because hiking without a pack (he just had a small cloth bag hanging
from his belt) felt so easy. He was on his way to Jordan Pond.
Right after this the trail starts to descend steeply and I
soon reached the small canyon than gives the trail its name. (Once upon a time this was “Canyon” Brook
Trail, but at some point the “y” was dropped and the name stuck.) The trail descends beside the canyon. With a little bit of effort you could
probably try descending in the canyon itself, but I would not recommend
it. The brook, which the trail has been
following, runs right through this small canyon.
The canyon |
Open area at Canon Brook Trail and A. Murray Young Trail intersection |
I actually was feeling that descent in my legs already, so I
took a break. I should explain
something. To look at me would not make
people think I am a hiker. I’m not the
stereotype of the rail thin guy munching on a granola bar. I’m carrying extra weight with me and more
than once while on the summit of a mountain I’ve received sideways glances from
folks and you could tell they were thinking something along the lines of “How
the hell did that guy get up here?” The
answer is simple: I have strong legs.
Even carrying my extra body weight, when I hike it’s not my
legs that cause me to stop periodically; it’s my breathing. On descents I simply don’t need to stop
because my breathing is fine and so my legs just take me along. The big difference on this hike is that the
descent was at the beginning. Once again
I just went right along without stopping, but I had not warmed up my legs by
first ascending. It was a surprise to me
to realize that I could feel some tiredness in my legs as I stopped at this
intersection. The 1,300 feet I now had
to regain, including the final stretch on the Gorge Path where 500 feet are
gained in four tenths of a mile, was all of a sudden a little daunting. I also considered that since this was my
first hike in more than a year that maybe I should have started with something
a little simpler. There was no help for
that now; I would have to complete the loop.
After a few minutes I started up the A. Murray Young
Trail. Like the Canon Brook Trail this
one also parallels a stream and sometimes crosses it. The first section rises quite easily and has
a lot of flat rocks laid down so that it was almost like walking on a garden
path that inclined. This was followed by
a section that rose moderately, then another that was quite easy again.
As I neared the end of this trail, though, all of a sudden it
turned into a talus slope of large boulders and the trail went over and around
them. I encountered a young couple who
had made a wrong turn coming down off Dorr.
They had wanted to ascend Cadillac and only later loop around the south
and east of Dorr back to where they started at Sieur de Monts. They told me there was about another quarter
mile of this kind of path. Just before
reaching the next trail intersection the path levels out.
Looking up at the east face of Cadillac from near the top of the A. Murray Young Trail |
Thankfully, the upper end of the Gorge Path that summits
Cadillac Mountain was still open. While
I stopped here for a drink of water a man came up the A. Murray Young Trail
just after I did. He and I got to
talking and it turns out both of us were hiking it for the same reason: it was
the last trail in the area that we had not done yet.
We compared notes, offering advice to each other on the
trails only one of us had done. He asked
about Cadillac’s West Face Trail and I started to describe it, but then
realized that my post here could do a better job than whatever I was trying to say. I suggested he google “Tips from Chip” and “hikes”
and he would soon be at the post. His reaction
was unexpected; he asked “You’re Chip?”
He had found my site already when looking into another trail. This is the first time I’ve happened to run
into someone on a hiking trail who had used my posts for reference.
About this time a whole group of folks came down off Dorr
Mountain and started up Cadillac.
Apparently this was a popular day to park at Sieur de Monts, traverse
Dorr, summit Cadillac, come down off Cadillac the same way I had, then loop
south and east of Dorr to get back to where they started.
I decided I should bite the bullet and finish this last,
very steep section. As it turns out, the
need to stop every few seconds to make sure of a proper foothold or handhold
sort of gave me built in pauses to have “micro-rests”. Ascending this last piece wasn’t as bad as I
had thought it might be.
Frenchman Bay as seen from near the top of the Gorge Path |
Cumulative distance: 3.7
miles for hike; 4.0 including the scenic tourist loop
Cumulative elevation gain: 1,300 feet
Cumulative duration: 2.5 – 3 hours (including time for photos)
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