If you've been following this blog, you may have noticed that I've
been hiking a lot more this spring than I did last year. There's a
reason for this (and it's not that my work schedule has eased up--haha,
that'll happen when I'm dead): I'm heading west again this summer to
pick off a few more highpoints! The Southwestern ones are all snow-free
by July, but they're still serious ascents involving several thousand
feet of gain, moderately tricky terrain, and high elevation. I might not
be able to train for the last two of those here in Virginia, but I've
mapped out some loop hikes along the Blue Ridge that will at least
approximate the first.
And so I headed out this Friday
for the first of them, which would take me back up Old Rag Mountain and
some of the nearby trails in Shenandoah National Park.
As
you might recall, Old Rag is one of the few genuine Class 3 scrambles
I've seen in Virginia. The top quarter of the mountain is covered in
huge, smooth granite boulders, which the trail to the summit takes you
over, around, and through. The mountain's unusual terrain and proximity
to the DC metro area leave it quite crowded in warm months, so if you
prefer to hike without a bunch of randoms breathing down your neck, I
recommend you get there early. By the time I arrived, at 9:30 a.m. on a
Friday in late May, the (huge) parking lot at the base was already
two-thirds full.
The first few miles of my ascent were uneventful, though much greener than the last time I'd been there: