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Ski
Hiking Trail Conditions Report
Peaks
Peaks Mt. Monroe, Mt. Eidenhower, Mt. Pierce, NH
Trails
Trails: Dry River Trail, Crawford Path, Monroe Loop, Eisenhower Loop, Webster-Cliff Trail, Mt. Clinton Trail
Date of Hike
Date of Hike: Saturday, October 11, 2014
Parking/Access Road Notes
Parking/Access Road Notes:  
Surface Conditions
Surface Conditions: Dry Trail, Wet Trail, Wet/Slippery Rock, Standing/Running Water on Trail, Mud - Minor/Avoidable, Mud - Significant, Leaves - Significant/Slippery 
Recommended Equipment
Recommended Equipment:  
Water Crossing Notes
Water Crossing Notes: Numerous rock hops that could be impassable with high water during and after heavy rainfall 
Trail Maintenance Notes
Trail Maintenance Notes: Mount Clinton Trail is more of a bushwhack herd path than trail. 
Dog-Related Notes
Dog-Related Notes: Fine for dogs 
Bugs
Bugs:  
Lost and Found
Lost and Found:  
 
Comments
Comments: The Dry River Trail is in decent shape. The washed out sections have been relocated up on the banks, the footing is muddy and eroding on the reroutes. The rest of the trail is covered with foliage but the path is easy to follow albeit faint in spots. Dry River Shelter #3 is looking good. Behind the shelter the trail crosses the river pretty quickly and bangs an immediate left. All trails above treeline are in great shape. The Mount Clinton Trail, the upper part to the junction of the Dry River Cutoff is fine. From here it's a different story, first off, half the sign was missing at this junction. After the junction the trail becomes narrow, wet, muddy, slick, and overgrown in spots but easy to follow until after one of the water crossings. (Each water crossing is flagged) . After one of the waters crossings the trail seems to head slightly left into a mossy mucky drainage but it doesn't. the trail is up on the right, we whacked from the mossy mini stream up a small embankment and were back on the logging grade. From here until the end the trail goes from obscure but ok to follow, to basically following an old grade similar to when bushwhacking out in the middle of nowhere, to walking in the woods on basically no path. At certain points we only knew we had been on the trail at water crossing where there was flagging. The last part of the trail parallels the Dry River for 0.2 miles. We decided to just head to the river and rock hop the banks until the cairns showing where to cross came in. Hardest trail to follow in the Whites!  
Name
Name: Chris 
E-Mail
E-Mail: cdailey@hpearce.com 
Date Submitted
Date Submitted: 2014-10-15 
Link
Link: https://dailey7779.blogspot.com/2014/10/the-dry-river-wilderness-is-open-for.html 
Bookmark and Share Disclaimer: Reports are not verified - conditions may vary. Use at own risk. Always be prepared when hiking. Observe all signs. Trail conditions reports are not substitutes for weather reports or common sense.

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