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[cohp] Digest Number 5505
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County High Pointing in all 50 states
Yahoo! Groups
County High Pointing in all 50 states Group
8 Messages
Digest #5505
1a
Re: Queen Anne MD coHP areas, partial visit. by "Ken Oeser"
2
Ken Oeser on Big Bald Mtn. by "Jobe Wymore"
3a
Re: Solar Eclipse in August by "Dick Ellsworth" quavik
3b
Re: Solar Eclipse in August by jlhcpa
3c
Re: Solar Eclipse in August by "xander Carlson" xandathor
4a
Re: Bearly survived by gregslayden
5a
Big Bald Mountain   Gilmer County, GA by
5b
Re: Big Bald Mountain   Gilmer County, GA by "Andrew Karr" karrhorn

Messages
1a
Re: Queen Anne MD coHP areas, partial visit.
Thu Apr 27, 2017 5:48 am (PDT) . Posted by:
"Ken Oeser"


2aBearly survived <https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/cohp/conversations/topics/28239;_ylc=X3oDMTJxMWxvMTdhBF9TAzk3MzU5NzE1BGdycElkAzM0NjA4OARncnBzcElkAzE3MDUwNjU3ODYEbXNnSWQDMjgyMzkEc2VjA2Rtc2cEc2xrA3Ztc2cEc3RpbWUDMTQ5MzI1ODAzMg-->
Tue Apr 25, 2017 10:00 pm (PDT) . Posted by: "Andy Martin" oldadit <mailto:oldadit@gmail.com?subject=Re%3A%20Bearly%20survived>
holsti97
>>When I got home I looked at the picture that I snapped of the bear.
It was blurred slightly, but you can see that it is running towards me.
Next time I will have to be sure to keep the camera still when I take
the picture.

This might be the closest Bear call on a COHP expedition ?# ####################################################This past Saturday I hiked to Big Bald Mountain in Gilmer County, GA. After I had summited and back to the road headed down, I was photographing some warblers, then started around the corner and heard something running in the leaves just ahead. I thought deer or hikers, but once in view I looked up the embankment and saw a black bear walking just on the other side of a medium-sized tree. I tried to keep the tree between the bears head and me so it wouldnt see me, but it didnt work. Once it saw me it ran uphill, away from me a short distance, and I decided that was a good time for me to speed up my downhill hike and stop birding for a few hundred feet. The bear was maybe 50 feet away, but not threatening, although I wasnt sure if it might be a yearling and mom nearby since it wasnt a large bear.
Ken OeserHendersonville, TN

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2
Ken Oeser on Big Bald Mtn.
Thu Apr 27, 2017 7:17 am (PDT) . Posted by:
"Jobe Wymore"
Ken Oeser writes about stumbling upon a bear while on Big Bald Mtn, the highest point in Gilmer County, GA, this past Saturday. I'm kind of thinking that I may have stumbled upon a Ken Oeser, and didn't even realize it!

I was back East doing some CoHPing last week with a buddy of mine, Mark Hansen from Utah, and as luck would have it the weather wasn't on our side. Thank goodness for the unlimited miles on the rental plus the multitude of options that CoHPing in the East provides. Anyway, after Brasstown Bald in the early A.M we shot on over to Big Bald Mtn on Saturday which is about an hour to the West. Both gates were open so we were able to drive pretty high, from there do a short road march up the last steep bit of road and then through very minor open brush hoofed it to the top. Way too easy, but to be transparent, I was aided by some cheep loppers just in case war had to be waged with briars. This helped calm my mind eliminating the horrific thought of having to potentially go into battle with only my flesh and bare hands.

But I was wondering - on the way down we passed a guy slogging up the road alone, wearing an orange shirt and carrying a camera. Was that you Ken?

Jobe Wymore
Portland, Oregon

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3a
Re: Solar Eclipse in August
Thu Apr 27, 2017 10:35 am (PDT) . Posted by:
"Dick Ellsworth" quavik
I too have had my eye on this area for the last eight months. (Of course I
was thinking Ellsworth NE would be best for me.) My daughter Laurel will
be with me to view the eclipse, so car camping will be a big plus if we can
contact an agreeable landowner.

-dick
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3b
Re: Solar Eclipse in August
Thu Apr 27, 2017 12:12 pm (PDT) . Posted by:
jlhcpa
Hi Dave. Is there any flexibility that would allow the CoHP hiking to occur AFTER the eclipse? If I come, I would be driving frantically to leave home Saturday later in the day. So any pre-eclipse outings would probably not be possible for me. But I would be able to stay around after the eclipse to bag some. Specifically, what are the chances of bagging Cherry?

John Hasch
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3c
Re: Solar Eclipse in August
Thu Apr 27, 2017 1:52 pm (PDT) . Posted by:
"xander Carlson" xandathor
Cherry is on public land from what I have been told. So not only would it be possible to get it, I would think you could get it during the eclipse.
If the weather window was right, that was my original plan.

--------------------------------------------
On Thu, 4/27/17, jlhcpa@yahoo.com [cohp] <cohp@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

Subject: [cohp] Re: Solar Eclipse in August
To: cohp@yahoogroups.com
Date: Thursday, April 27, 2017, 2:12 PM


 









Hi Dave.  Is there any flexibility that would
allow the CoHP hiking to occur AFTER the eclipse?  If I
come, I would be driving frantically to leave home Saturday
later in the day.  So any pre-eclipse outings would
probably not be possible for me.  But I would be able to
stay around after the eclipse to bag some.  Specifically,
what are the chances of bagging Cherry?

John Hasch









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4a
Re: Bearly survived
Thu Apr 27, 2017 10:44 am (PDT) . Posted by:
gregslayden
In May, 2014, James Barlow, Edward Earl, and I encountered a grizzly bear while attempting the Sitka Borough CoHP-equivalent in Alaska. It was maybe 30 yards from us as we hiked a gated dirt road, just after starting our hike. It ran into the woods after seeing us. Still, very scary. Oddly, we saw none during the subsequent brushy bushwhack.


Many hikers have seen grizzlies on the summit of Mount Cleveland, MT.

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5a
Big Bald Mountain   Gilmer County, GA
Thu Apr 27, 2017 4:31 pm (PDT) . Posted by:
I decided to visit Gilmer and Pickens Counties in Georgia this past Saturday (April 22) to fill in some holes and add some state birds during migration.

#################################################
Gilmer County, Georgia    April 22, 2017     Ken Oeser

I followed Edward Earl's directions for the most part, driving north from Ellijay, GA on Highway 515 to Cherry Log and Rock Creek Road.  I followed this road east passing the check station at 4.3 miles and reaching the forest road on the right at 5.1 miles.  I had printed the topo, but it seemed to show only the road going in from the check station, so I was confused for a few minutes.  I decided to follow Earl's instructions, and drove in on the gravel road in my sedan, and like him parked at 1.7 miles at the crest of a small hill, mainly due to few places to pass, and also due to me wanting to bird my way up and down the mountain.  I crossed the stream in about 1/4 mile, hiked up through the Black-Throated Green Warbler habitat zone, and worked my way uphill.  I hiked up to the elevation of breeding Black-Throated Blue Warblers, then decided to bushwhack from there since the GPS said I was .6 mile or so from the summit. 

At about elevation 3300 the road rounds a corner and heads south, and here I noted an old forest road heading off to the right and going slightly uphill.  A turn to the left (east) was coming up, and here I spent 10 minutes photographing the Black-Throated Blue Warbler.  I then left the road and headed up a drainage due south toward the summit through fairly open woods, hit the aforementioned road and followed it uphill until I lost it, then went up the drainage a little farther, then up to the right to gain the north/south ridge.  I followed this ridge uphill to the summit area.  There are two bumps on the ridge.  The highest area on the west bump seems to be at a mid-sized tree, although a couple of rocks sticking up nearby are close.  The east bump is topped by some large rocks.  At first I wasn't paying attention and started heading south from the summit, but corrected my path and went down the ridge north that I had ascended.  The road I followed up is on this ridge from about halfway down and can be followed to the main road where I had seen it leave the road hiking in, but I detoured back to the warbler and took more photos.  At the steep part of the road I took photos of Blackburnian Warblers next to the road, and once I started back down I heard something stirring up or running in the leaves above the road.  As I rounded the corner I noticed a black bear on the other side of a tree just walking along, and when it spotted me it ran uphill a little.  Not knowing if another bear was around, I sped up my downhill hike for a few hundred feet, and then birded/hiked my way back to the car.  This road is in quite good condition, and I could have easily driven another mile.  The only tough part if continuing farther would be the steep section at around 3000 feet, and meeting another vehicle in some sections wouldn't be fun.  According to the topo it levels off above 3300 feet, so any high clearance vehicle would probably be fine to drive high on the mountain.  I saw two large farm-type trucks, a mid-size pickup, and a jeep driving the road past the creek crossing, and 2 crossover vehicles parked past the creek.

########################################################################################

Mount Oglethorpe in Pickens County is a drive up at the end of Monument Road, as reported before.  Just stay on the main, paved road and it will end at some parking areas and a radio tower.  Lots of overlooks and a 2 mile loop trail are at the top, but not much on views.  Birding could be excellent here, but it was kind of slow on my visit. 

@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
I could be interested in a Nebraska trip for the eclipse, but I would like to fly home that night if possible.
Ken Oeser
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5b
Re: Big Bald Mountain   Gilmer County, GA
Thu Apr 27, 2017 5:31 pm (PDT) . Posted by:
"Andrew Karr" karrhorn
I was at Oglethorpe last month. Nice spot with the outlooks. I spoke with Kevin Williamson, King of Georgia highpoints, after I did it, and he notes that Burnt Mountain, a little north, could possibly steal both prominence and elevation from Oglethorpe in Gilmer. Unfortunately, it is on land that is still private. I plan to return to it later this year.

On Thursday, April 27, 2017 7:31 PM, "Oeserscave@aol.com [cohp]" <cohp@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


  I decided to visit Gilmer and Pickens Counties in Georgia this past Saturday (April 22) to fill in some holes and add some state birds during migration.

#################################################
Gilmer County, Georgia    April 22, 2017     Ken Oeser

I followed Edward Earl's directions for the most part, driving north from Ellijay, GA on Highway 515 to Cherry Log and Rock Creek Road.  I followed this road east passing the check station at 4.3 miles and reaching the forest road on the right at 5.1 miles.  I had printed the topo, but it seemed to show only the road going in from the check station, so I was confused for a few minutes.  I decided to follow Earl's instructions, and drove in on the gravel road in my sedan, and like him parked at 1.7 miles at the crest of a small hill, mainly due to few places to pass, and also due to me wanting to bird my way up and down the mountain.  I crossed the stream in about 1/4 mile, hiked up through the Black-Throated Green Warbler habitat zone, and worked my way uphill.  I hiked up to the elevation of breeding Black-Throated Blue Warblers, then decided to bushwhack from there since the GPS said I was .6 mile or so from the summit. 

At about elevation 3300 the road rounds a corner and heads south, and here I noted an old forest road heading off to the right and going slightly uphill.  A turn to the left (east) was coming up, and here I spent 10 minutes photographing the Black-Throated Blue Warbler.  I then left the road and headed up a drainage due south toward the summit through fairly open woods, hit the aforementioned road and followed it uphill until I lost it, then went up the drainage a little farther, then up to the right to gain the north/south ridge.  I followed this ridge uphill to the summit area.  There are two bumps on the ridge.  The highest area on the west bump seems to be at a mid-sized tree, although a couple of rocks sticking up nearby are close.  The east bump is topped by some large rocks.  At first I wasn't paying attention and started heading south from the summit, but corrected my path and went down the ridge north that I had ascended.  The road I followed up is on this ridge from about halfway down and can be followed to the main road where I had seen it leave the road hiking in, but I detoured back to the warbler and took more photos.  At the steep part of the road I took photos of Blackburnian Warblers next to the road, and once I started back down I heard something stirring up or running in the leaves above the road.  As I rounded the corner I noticed a black bear on the other side of a tree just walking along, and when it spotted me it ran uphill a little.  Not knowing if another bear was around, I sped up my downhill hike for a few hundred feet, and then birded/hiked my way back to the car.  This road is in quite good condition, and I could have easily driven another mile.  The only tough part if continuing farther would be the steep section at around 3000 feet, and meeting another vehicle in some sections wouldn't be fun.  According to the topo it levels off above 3300 feet, so any high clearance vehicle would probably be fine to drive high on the mountain.  I saw two large farm-type trucks, a mid-size pickup, and a jeep driving the road past the creek crossing, and 2 crossover vehicles parked past the creek.

########################################################################################

Mount Oglethorpe in Pickens County is a drive up at the end of Monument Road, as reported before.  Just stay on the main, paved road and it will end at some parking areas and a radio tower.  Lots of overlooks and a 2 mile loop trail are at the top, but not much on views.  Birding could be excellent here, but it was kind of slow on my visit. 

@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
I could be interested in a Nebraska trip for the eclipse, but I would like to fly home that night if possible.
Ken Oeser
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