Friday, November 25, 2016

2016 11-25, Big South Fork Map Marking Complete, Tar Kiln and O&W Loop


Anyone watching us would have wondered what we were up to. We’d spent yesterday in the Big South  Fork trying to follow old, obscure trails through the woods north of Oneida. Last night we’d backpacked a short distance down the John Muir Trail from Leatherwood Ford to camp by the river. This morning we broke camp and were now driving to the opposite corner of the park, our destination the obscure Mill Creek Trailhead.

The unusual configuration was the result of one of our compulsions. We like to explore new places, especially on foot or by bike. This has led us to try to hike every trail on the map in several of our favorite hiking areas. Our first venture was the well-known Smokies 900 milers, where the goal is to complete every trail on the current edition of the Smokies trail map. We’d both begun hiking in the Smokies before we’d met, but we decided the right way to do this was to hike all the trails together, something we had completed by 2002.

The Smokies map was followed by two smaller projects; hiking all the trails in the combined Joyce Kilmer-Slickrock and Citico Creek Wildernesses (2005) and then hiking all the trails in Frozen Head State park (2005). After our map marking lay dormant for a while, I decided to try the Big South Fork, and Jean reluctantly at first, agreed. Knowing that these compulsions can take over one’s free time we both wanted to let this project move slowly and we gave ourselves no time limit to finish it.

The Big South Fork has long been a go to area for backpacking for us so much of our early mileage was on backpacking trips planned to pick up long loops that would tough to reach by day hikes or via long tedious drives. Jean got some spectacular help from the BSF Visitor Center staff, especially from Howard Ray Duncan who seemed intimate  with every corner of the park. Thanks to them we enjoyed many awesome campsites and were able to backpack trails that saw few hikers.

As we marked off the core hiking trails we realized one of the key differences between the Big South Fork and other parks. In the Smokies or Frozen Head you can go into the park office an buy a map that clearly shows all the hiking trails and simply go out and hike them. You can total up the trail mileage and know exactly how much hiking you’ll need to do. For the Smokies there is even a guidebook written just for the 900 milers.

As a National Recreation Area, BSF is managed differently. There are hiker only trails, trails that allow horses, trails that allow mountain bikes, multi-purpose trails that allow vehicles and even wagon trails. The simple thing would have been to just complete the ~141 miles of hiking trails. But to do that efficiently we’d be using some of the other trail types, so what to do with them? We decided to hike all the BSF trails adding 182 miles of horse trails, 101 miles of multiuse trails, 24 miles of mountain bike trails, and five miles of wagon trails to our plate.

So how to complete these various types of trails? We are mountain bikers, but neither of us had ever ridden a horse or had any inclination to do so, and of course we didn’t own a wagon. Should we allow ourselves to simply drive over the multiuse trails where this was allowed? That doesn’t sound very sporting.

Not surprisingly, we ended up deciding that we would walk or bike all the trails, adjusting each trip to the condition of the trail we planned to hike. In the end we biked the wagon trail, many of the multiuse trails and some of the horse trails, then hiked the remainder. Gravel roads in the BSF are superbly maintained so those were perfect for biking. We got lucky and hit many of the horse trails in winter, or right after major maintenance, and so were able to ride many of them enjoyably. The rutted, muddy, and most popular horse trails we mostly walked. Still, we never quite knew what to expect on some of these trails. Even the innocuous sounding Wagon Trail, would prove a challenge as it was the scene of our only bear attack.

Another difference between the BSF and other parks is the surrounding land units. We decided “our map” for the project would be the current version of the BSF Trails Illustrated map. That map shows several other land units including Pickett State Park, Pickett State Forest, Pogue Creek, and the Daniel Boone National Forest. What to do about the trails that connected all these units? I was more familiar with Pickett having done some adventure racing there in the 1990s, and also knew many of the surrounding DBNF trails from my work on writing “50 Hikes in Kentucky” so I felt that we should add all these trails to the list as well. Jean, having more sense, was skeptical of this ever expanding list. We eventually compromised by settling on US 27 as the eastern boundary of our quest, thus avoiding having to complete the entire Sheltowee Trace, among the myriad of DBNF connecting trails, but including the Pickett, Pouge Creek and other DBNF trails for a total of around 700 miles.

With our goal finally in place we began to complete our trails more seriously. By 2013 we were travelling more often to the BSF and were adding day hikes planned to allow us to mark off as many new trails as possible. At this stage we realized the final key difference between the BSF and other areas. While the BSF has a travel management plan that defines the official trail network and this network is shown on the Trails Illustrated map, this official network doesn’t always match what is on the ground.

The TI map shows multiuse trails in purple. Most of these are well maintained gravel roads leading to various features. Many of the dead end  multiuse trails are a different story. We found some of these deadenders to be totally nonexistent. We both are experienced off trail hikers with several hundred miles of off trail hiking in the Smokies and other areas but often could not simply find these supposedly vehicle legal trails. In other cases, the road were so covered with deadfall (often downed pine beetle killed trees) as to be obviously impassable for several previous years. We did our best to follow these trails, but in several cases did not bother to complete the route of an obviously nonexistent trail.

Another issue with the BSF map conversely was that it did not show many trails heavily used by horse riders. We met many horse riders during our hikes and rides, and they were courteous and helpful to us, but it is fair to say that they don’t use the park maps or stay on official park trails. We found several networks of trails in the Honey Creek, Darrow Ridge and Spruce Ridge area that were not on the TI map. We decided that for our project we would not have to hike these trails since they were not part of the map. However, we ended up using unofficial horse trails several times to complete loops that we did need for our map.

On this weekend we hoped to finally complete our map. On Saturday we had headed north of Oneida to walk the little used and obscure Cliff Terry and Hurricane Ridge East multiuse trails. Now we headed to the little if ever used Mill Creek Trailhead to hike the almost completely unknown Tar Kiln Trail, the western end of the O&W Trail and make a loop with the hypothesized Old Tar Kiln unofficial horse trail.

The loop we hoped to walk had required more planning than most hikes in our quest. We’d previously walked the O&W trail west from Zenith (why didn’t we plan to finish our map there?) to Mill Creek and Jean was sure the O&W did not extend any further west than that. I’d seen a horse trail map that showed the trail should continue west at least to an old trail shown on the topo. Some wishful viewing of satellites maps showed that the old trail might still be used and thus would allow us to hike a loop rather than two long out and back sections on the O&W and Tar Kiln trails.

Mill Creek Trailhead

The Mill Creek TH is located off the Mt Helen Road and north of the White Oak housing development.  We parked in a large lot near a new looking display board. The trail led 0.4 mile down an old road to a shallow concrete ford of North White Oak Creek and then to intersect with the O&W trail. Though there is no park maintenance on the O&W to the west we could see horse traffic did follow the old railroad bed that way, good news for our proposed return route. We turned east to follow the O&W trail for 0.7 mile to an unofficial sign for the NPS Tar Kiln Trail.

Fording North White Oak Creek

We climbed the loose, rocky trail for 0.4 mile to a gate near the top of the bluff line. A spur trail led south and the gate was easily by passed by ATVs. Once above the bluff line the Tar Kiln Trail was hard packed sand in its flat sections and had some potential for being mountain bikable. The informal “Old Tar Kiln” trail was marked with a user sign, so again we were confident that we would be able to complete our proposed loop.

The Upper Part of Tar Kiln Trail

We followed the Tar Kiln Trail west to a prominent sign marking the park boundary. There our quest was complete, and we celebrated with a morning beer (while standing outside the park boundary, of course). After ten years or so of effort it was time to reflect on all the amazing places we’d seen along the way. The worlds of the hikers and  horse riders rarely merge in the park, would we have ever visited the trails used by the other half if we’d just stuck to the hiking trails? Would we have visited Buffalo Arch or Pouge Creek if we’d just stayed on the trails in the BSF? And what about all the great campsites that the day hikers never see?

Complete!

Finishing hiking map or completing a long trail is a mixed blessing. Of course, there is the satisfaction of completing a worthy challenge long anticipated. In our case it was likely that no one before us had tried to hike all the BSF trails, much less expanded their goal include all the other types of trails in the park or including the surrounding trails.

But the flip side of finishing a hiking a map is the question of what next? Does this mean that there won’t be any new trails to walk, new features to discover or new adventure to be had? Jean and I had learned from completing all the trails in the Smokies that finishing the park map is more of a start than an end. With all the trails explored its time to learn about the park at a whole different level. In the Smokies we had made the transition quickly to exploring off trail, where story of the pre-park history is more easily seen and some of the park’s best flower display lay undisturbed.

In a relatively young park like the Big South Fork we can watch the impacts of the logging, mining, and farming eras fade from memory as the forests recovery, the old roads are reclaimed by nature, and the stories of the mines and farms become forgotten. But by exploring the park off the maintained trails we still have the opportunity to wonder at the amazing bounty of backcountry geologic features such as arches and caves, visit the nearly forgotten mining sites or the long abandoned farms of early settlers.

With this promise of more adventure ahead Jean and I walked back to the start of the Old Tar Kiln Road and headed out to try and complete our loop. Old Tar Kiln proved to be the remnant of an old road, though not the same one that is shown nearby on the current topo map. Just before reaching the junction with the O&W railroad bed there are a scenic set of cliffs.

The End of the O&W Railroad Grade in the Big South Fork

We could see some horse traffic on the railroad bed to the west so we followed it to the point where the it crosses to the south side of North White Oak Creek. Here the steel frame of the RR bridge is still in place covered by years of fallen branches. As the property on the south side of the creek is not part of  the park, we turned around here and walked the O&W back to the ford at Mill Creek and up the trail back to our car.
Our Route for the Day in Yellow