I'd rather hike on trails built by someone with a bent for art than science and an eye for the mountain scenery.
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0812/0812.1536v2.pdf
The science behind trail building September 17, 2009 06:45PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 564 |
Re: The science behind trail building September 17, 2009 07:14PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,111 |
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KenS
I'd rather hike on trails built by someone with a bent for art than science and an eye for the mountain scenery.
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0812/0812.1536v2.pdf
Re: The science behind trail building September 17, 2009 07:23PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,918 |
Re: The science behind trail building September 17, 2009 08:06PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,942 |
Re: The science behind trail building September 17, 2009 08:32PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 2,321 |
Re: The science behind trail building September 17, 2009 08:59PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,111 |
Re: The science behind trail building September 18, 2009 06:19AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,882 |
Re: The science behind trail building September 22, 2009 09:21AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 179 |
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tomdisco
I noticed multiple trails in the large meadow approaching lower Cathedral Lake. More direct routes to the lake are used as the meadow dries up but more indirect routes are required when wet and the stream is full. An August path will not work in June. This would be true in many other locations. As far as Cathedral Lake is concerned there may never have been an official trail once you hit the meadow.
Back east on the Appalachian Trail I've noticed that often when the trail has the option of going over the crest of something (even a modest hump in the forest) it will mostlikely take the tough way instead of going around it. I never saw the advantage of that in deep woods where going over a hump provided no views. Apparently, the AP trail builders believed a "varied" experience was preferable when there was nothing to see but trees.
Jim
Re: The science behind trail building September 23, 2009 06:22AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,882 |
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bpnjensen
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tomdisco
I noticed multiple trails in the large meadow approaching lower Cathedral Lake. More direct routes to the lake are used as the meadow dries up but more indirect routes are required when wet and the stream is full. An August path will not work in June. This would be true in many other locations. As far as Cathedral Lake is concerned there may never have been an official trail once you hit the meadow.
Back east on the Appalachian Trail I've noticed that often when the trail has the option of going over the crest of something (even a modest hump in the forest) it will mostlikely take the tough way instead of going around it. I never saw the advantage of that in deep woods where going over a hump provided no views. Apparently, the AP trail builders believed a "varied" experience was preferable when there was nothing to see but trees.
Jim
I think Eastern U.S. trails are notorious for not bothering with switchbacks or obstacle avoidance. They are almost maniacally airline. Try climbing Mount Monadnock or Washington or Katahdin some day, and see what those trails do - switchbacks are nearly unheard-of, and only used to skirt vertical cliffs and boulders. Otherwise, it's straight up...
Mount Katahdin, in particular, is well-known for its ridgetop trails, especially the Knife Edge, the Helon Taylor Trail and the Hunt Spur. Except for the Tableland (where there is a spring, Thoreau Spring), the entire mountaintop is practically one big arete, sculpted on all sides into cirques, and the trails are accordingly routed. The Hunt Spur, which makes up a large part of the last 5.2 miles of the AT (North End), is very steep bouldering all the way up just a short way above Katahdin Stream Falls, and the other trails mentioned are not much better, if not quite as steep.
Re: The science behind trail building September 18, 2009 07:22AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,942 |
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eeek
From what I've seen they are caused by hikers after the mule/horse trains tear up the trail into un-walkable mud.
Re: The science behind trail building September 18, 2009 03:02PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,232 |
Re: The science behind trail building September 21, 2009 10:14AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17 |
Re: The science behind trail building September 21, 2009 11:40AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,876 |