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Wednesday, June 29, 2022

VA Shenandoah National Park: Shen2022 Sisters Camp & Hike

 Fox Hollow Trail (2022 52-Hike Challenge #11)

For our annual Sister's Camping Trip to Shenandoah National Park in Virginia, we did a series of day hikes while base camping at Mathews Arm Campground in the Northern District of the park. As I counted each of these day hikes towards my 2022 52-Hike Challenge, I've numbered them here to add to my tally. Our first hike was the Fox Hollow Trail about two miles when we added some extra wandering we did at the Dickey Ridge Visitor Center. This is a good hike to orient yourself to the history of Shenandoah National Park - a remembrance really, for all the mountain families who gave up their homes for the national park in the 1930s. Many did so willingly. Others resisted fiercely. All are gone. Gone are generations of resilient people and their ways of managing the land, medicinal knowledge, and foodways that made these mountains their home. For us, this is an ancestral home as well with many Scots-Irish and German branches of our family tree having settled in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Every time we come back, it feels like coming home.


Fox Hollow Trail - carefully stacked field stone piles (1800s) 

Fox Family Cemetery - late 1700s onward

American Cancer Root, Conopholis americana


Much of the trail follows old wagon and foot paths that settlers established to connect families, towns, and markets in the valleys. Over hundreds of years these paths became lines with stacked rocks, oaks, red cedar, and fencing which is still visible in many places. We heard Barred Owls in the hollow and plenty of Towhees and Wood Thrushes. Amos fell into a springhead tank, much to his surprise! 


A Virginia Black-and-Tan Coonhound, Amos attracted a lot of attention!



Windham Rocks Trail (Hike #12) 

Though I've hiked this great little geology trail before, this time it came complete with a Black Bear popping his jaws at us, hidden behind a great hardened pillow of basalt lava. We retreated for a few minutes until we were sure the noise we were making (HEY BEAR! GO BEAR!) had sent him packing down the hill. We saw several other bears in our travels on the Skyline Drive during the week.  Shenandoah has a very high concentration of this beautiful bruin. 


We sure did make a lot of noise! GO BEAR! 

We enjoyed a great look at a Hooded Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, and Whorled Loosestrife. Carrion Beetles were common, scurrying across the path to devour a half-eaten mouse, mate, or scouting for more dead things.  The main rock formation was impressive, which, like the bear boulder, is an exposed pillow of hardened lava that was squeezed up from below as colliding continental plates 400-million-years ago ground together pushing up this mountain range. Along with greenstone, another common volcanic found in the park, it displays unique structure, most famous for it columnar jointing. 


Windham Rocks are volcanic formations of basalt

Whorled  Loosestrife, Lysimacha quadrifolia




Traces Trail, Mathews Arm (Hike #13) 

This was one of my favorite loops of the week. The Traces Trail encircles Mathews Arm Campground for about two miles and has a great blend of natural history and human history. Of course, I cannot pass a mountain seep without flipping rocks and we weren't disappointed to find a bunch of juvenile Dusky Salamanders. ( https://dwr.virginia.gov/wildlife/information/northern-dusky-salamander/


Northern Dusky Salamander


Old roads and farm paths are lined walls for livestock, field stone piles, and boundary features. One proper four-foot-wide wall demonstrates that some builders were highly skilled wallers who used techniques and traditions brought with them from England. Oaks that once shaded a wagon road lined the trail in their old age, now hundreds of years old.  Habitats included a mineral-poor lichen and moss barren where we found a rare Large Twayblade Orchid, Rattlesnake Weed, and toxic Fly Poison for which there is no cure.  


Mule and oxen path

A proper stone fence in the English tradition in a "dog hair wood." 


Fly Poison, Amianthium muscitoxicum


Rattlesnake Weed


The woodland scene was constantly shifting as slopes full of old pasture "dog hair woods" transformed into mature woodlots that have grown in since the 1940s.  This trail was a birder's paradise full of Red and White-Eyed Vireos, Veery and Wood Thrushes, Phoebes and Catbirds. There were plenty of Dark-Eyed Juncos which I loved seeing because I only have them in winter down in the Susquehanna Valley.  Even a Willow Flycatcher put in an appearance. Throughout our hike, an ever-present family of Northern Ravens croaked, quorked, and yelped from the canopy. We figured at least two young of the year were pestering their parents as they scouted the forest for food. At camp, Amy witnessed a Raven raid a Robin's nest to kill and eat a plump nestling. We're sure these squalling trail Ravens were the same ones since we were hiking around the campground.  

Indian Pipe, Monotropa uniflora

Large Twayblade Orchid, Liparis lilifolia

Maidenhair Fern, 

Old oaks mark the roadway (now trail)


Bluebell Trail, Shenandoah River State Park  (Hike #14) 


After heavy storms - it's town day!

After a night of wicked heavy storms we headed into the valley for town day in Front Royal. Such a great little town. Amos was a star. We took afternoon hike along the Southern Fork of the Shenandoah River in Shenandoah River State Park. The river was running high and muddy after the rains (which caused local flash floods) but we took the Bluebell Trail along its banks for about two miles until the mud turned us around. 


Tulip Poplar and Paw Paw dominated the flood plain


Paw Paw fruit


This was Paw Paw Nation. The fruits were setting on almost every branch of hundreds of the small trees which lined the trail so thickly we could barely see out of our green tunnel to the river.  A Great Blue Heron squawked from somewhere along the bank and there were a few mudslides to navigate around. But mud means fresh tracks and we observed White-tailed Deer, Raccoon, and Squirrel prints. 

From a spectacular overlook - Shenandoah River and Massanutten Mountain 

Jelly Ear, Auricularia auricularia


Hawksbill Trail (Hike #15) 

This is another one of my favorites in SNP and it leads to the highest summit in the park at '4050. It starts out tame enough but soon becomes a steep series of trail pitches that lead through three different ecological zones. We met up with some impressive Yellow Birch and stately Hemlock then, near the top, we inhaled the rich scent of Red Spruce needles. This is trail where it's good to agree to hike your own hike. Everyone does it at their own pace, takes as many or as few breaks as they need/want, and no worries about who's fast or who's slow. Just go up and up. Amos enjoyed drinking from all the cold springs that bursting from beneath boulders. We met so many wonderful people along the way. 

It starts out easy enough, but then climbs steeply to the summit.

Yellow Birch, Betula alleghaniensis

Summit of Hawksbill 

One of the best meet-ups was my niece meeting a fellow lifter and strong woman who recognized her competition shirt. There are many reasons I love hiking and backpacking so much (and now bike packing) but best of all is the comraderies and conversations. There were lots of woman putting down serious miles on the AT section of the Hawksbill Trail as well as women day hikers like us who were elevating each other to the top with smiles, laughs, and support. My best meet-up was a young man who was doing a section hike of the AT for his two week vacation from work. He admitted he had "Summit Obsession Disorder" and could never pass up the opportunity to bag a peak even if it was off his chosen path, so after a good laugh about "things people worry about" off he went, lanky and fast, striding up the mountain to add Hawksbill  to his summit list. 



Rose River Trail (Hike # 16)  

This walk has become a bit of a tradition for our camp-out weeks.  Dark Hollow Falls carves its ravine in a dike of volcanic greenstone and threads its way down Hogcamp Branch to become the Rose River. We did the trail as an out-and-back but its a great loop trail, too, that offers plenty of opportunity to dunk in the river when its hot and humid. We visited as old cemetery and found that a new burial has taken place there, while caretakers have kept it looking neat and beautiful. It is one of the few cemeteries within the park that is still used and maintained. 


Dark Hollow Falls

An old gravesite is marked with a simple granite slab

We were thrilled to see and hear our first Scarlet Tanagers of the trip as well as buzzed by a Ruby-Throated Hummingbird. In fact we were thrilled with the whole week's wildlife sightings that included Black Bears, a Bobcat, Cotton-tailed Rabbits, a flock of Wild Turkey with poults ("goblets"), White-Tailed Deer, a baby Striped Skunk, Coyotes, a Brown Bat, and so much more. The birding was excellent as was the botany and geology. Next year we'll camp at SNP Loft Campground in the Southern District and we really look forward to it. Meanwhile I'll be coming back for day hikes and overnights before we can all be back together again for Shen2023. 


Notes: 

Though we arrived just as the new Visitor's Center was closing at Shenandoah River State Park, we were able to enjoy the Bluebell Trail along the river. We'd love to come back and hike the whole park, camp, and explore the valley some more. https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/shenandoah-river

Some areas of the park, thanks to Covid, became incredible crowded and though we didn't encounter the crowds (thank goodness) I was afraid of, some trails like Old Rag now require seasonal ticketing. https://www.nps.gov/shen/index.htm

I am a salamander addict. The Appalachian Mountains in general and the Blue Ridge Range in particular are home to a large variety of sally-folk. https://dwr.virginia.gov/wildlife/salamanders/

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