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Have you ever stepped onto the rocky dome at the foot of the Presidentials and seen nothing but mountains rising on all sides of you? Have you ever looked into Zealand Notch while scree surfing down the unstable terrain of a rockslide below a rugged cliff? Have you ever gazed upon the boulder that balances atop a stone column surrounded by cascades? Have you ever come face to face with the stoic profile overlooking Franconia Notch? Touched the most prominent freestanding spire of stone on the east coast? Walked through the darkness of a mine shaft or disturbed the stillness of its underground pool? Have you ever clung to the side of a ledge for a view of the slide-scarred peaks that tower over the Kancamagus or stood amongst the rubble that was once the Old Man of the Mountains? This isn’t your average hiking guide. This is how to escape the crowds and get the views you never dreamed possible by going where others won’t. Follow forgotten paths. Visit lost destinations. Go where trails don’t. These are the White Mountains you never knew you were missing out on. These are the White Mountains you haven’t seen.
The White Mountains are full of secrets. Mountains with no trails. Trails that have been abandoned. Lost waterfalls that we've forgotten over time. Remote cascades that somehow go unnoticed. The places we've been missing out on might just outnumber the list of unforgettable destinations we've already visited and this is only the beginning. In this free sampler we explore 9 locations from three different books. There's a little something in here for everyone, whether you're into waterfalls or mountain views, bushwhacking or staying on the trail and sometimes a little bit of both. This is merely a prelude to prepare you for The White Mountains You Haven't Seen.
Have you ever stepped onto the rocky dome at the foot of the Presidentials and seen nothing but mountains rising on all sides of you? Have you ever looked into Zealand Notch while scree surfing down the unstable terrain of a rockslide below a rugged cliff? Have you ever gazed upon the boulder that balances atop a stone column surrounded by cascades? Have you ever come face to face with the stoic profile overlooking Franconia Notch? Touched the most prominent freestanding spire of stone on the east coast? Walked through the darkness of a mine shaft or disturbed the stillness of its underground pool? Have you ever clung to the side of a ledge for a view of the slide-scarred peaks that tower over the Kancamagus or stood amongst the rubble that was once the Old Man of the Mountains?This isn't your average hiking guide. This is how to escape the crowds and get the views you never dreamed possible by going where others won't. Follow forgotten paths. Visit lost destinations. Go where trails don't.These are the White Mountains you never knew you were missing out on. These are the White Mountains you haven't seen.
Lost. Forgotten. Abandoned. On the slopes of the rugged White Mountains lie countless cascades rarely visited by humans. Some had trails, postcards, even viewing platforms. Today they hide in plain sight in places we don't visit. With hundreds of nameless streams spanning thousands of trail-less miles, the trick is finding them. Follow me as we explore 25 off-trail waterfalls. Some are merely steps from the road. Others require bushwhacking through forests so steep you'll need to use trees to pull yourself up. In the end, every grueling step is worth it. When that remote stream pours over a rugged rock ledge, you'll understand why you're out here where the average hiker doesn't venture. You may know the White Mountains. You might think you've visited all the waterfalls they have to offer. But these are the White Mountains You Haven't Seen, Waterfall Edition.
(for color version visit http://www.matthewmarchon.weebly.com)Lost. Forgotten. Abandoned. On the slopes of the rugged White Mountains lie countless cascades rarely visited by humans. Some had trails, postcards, even viewing platforms. Today they hide in plain sight in places we don't visit. With hundreds of nameless streams spanning thousands of trail-less miles, the trick is finding them. Follow me as we explore 25 off-trail waterfalls. Some are merely steps from the road. Others require bushwhacking through forests so steep you'll need to use trees to pull yourself up. In the end, every grueling step is worth it. When that remote stream pours over a rugged rock ledge, you'll understand why you're out here where the average hiker doesn't venture. You may know the White Mountains. You might think you've visited all the waterfalls they have to offer. But these are the White Mountains You Haven't Seen, Waterfall Edition.
Built by James Everell Henry, the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (EB&L) is considered to be the grandest and largest logging railroad operation ever built in New England. In 1892, the mountain town of Lincoln, New Hampshire, was transformed from a struggling wilderness enclave to a thriving mill town when Henry moved his logging operation from Zealand. He built houses, a company store, sawmills, and a railroad into the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River watershed to harvest virgin spruce. Despite the departure of the last EB&L log train from Lincoln Woods by 1948, the industry's cut-and-run practices forever changed the future of land conservation in the region, prompting legislation like the Weeks Act of 1911 and the Wilderness Act of 1964. Today, nearly every trail in the Pemigewasset Wilderness follows or utilizes portions of the old EB&L Railroad bed.
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