Dance with vertigo atop the Northeast's most impressive cliffs. Or crane your neck stiff staring skyward from below. Cragged by jags, dusted by snowfall, these seven vertical landmarks heighten any Northeast outdoor experience. Most are easily accessible, but all of them require caution, especially for a late fall visit. Always prepare for full winter conditions if you're planning a trip this holiday season. Otter Cliffs and the Precipice Trail Granite columns plunge into the foaming sea. Rock climbers spider their way up salty cliff faces. Located adjacent to the main park road, Otter Cliffs is usually abuzz with activity. A network of short paths lead to numerous lips and drop-offs, where you can belly out to the edge and peer straight down into the crashing surf. A few miles away, the Precipice Trail climbs Mount Champlain, ascending nearly a thousand feet via iron steps, ladders, and rails. The trail may be closed during peregrine falcon nesting season, typically spring through mid-summer. Distance: 0.8 mile one-way King Ravine The sheer headwall of King Ravine is akin to many in the glacial-gouged Presidential Range, with one important difference. Perched on the ravine's western lip is Crag Camp, a self-service cabin run by the Randolph Mountain Club on a first-come, first-served basis. Here you can sit for hours, soaking in full views from the cabin porch of the ravine's vertical escarpments. Quickest access is via the sheltered Amphibrach and Spur trails, or you can trace the ravine's full rim, including two above-treeline miles, via the Valley Way, Gulfside, Spur, and Amphibrach trails. Distance: 7 miles round-trip to Crag Camp; loop 9.3 miles Mount Pisgah A thousand feet above Lake Willoughby in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom, the cliffs of 2,751-foot Mount Pisgah soar over the rippling waters. On the opposite shore looms Pisgah's sister peak, the sheer and cracked face of 2,648-foot Mount Hor. Together they pinch the lake between stark exposures of vertical stone. Route 5A winds along the base of Mount Pisgah and provides neck-bending views from the car, or you can tackle the South Trail, which ascends to the summit of Mount Pisgah past airy ledges and vertical drops to the lake below. Distance: South Trail, 1.7 miles one-way Crow Hill The long-distance Midstate Trail runs over the top of Crow Hill in north-central Massachusetts, offering up cliff-top views that extend to the Boston skyline more than 40 miles away. A network of climbers' paths explores the base of the walls, which rise as high as 110 feet overhead. Traverse the area on the Midstate Trail between Route 140 and Stone Hill Road, or wander around the base to check out the scene—and scenery—of this popular top-roping destination (free permit required); access is from Fitchburg Road off of Route 2. Distance: Midstate Trail, 3.3 miles one-way Ragged Mountain Six hundred feet long and more than 100 feet high, the naked cliffs of Ragged Mountain jut from the rolling central Connecticut landscape. Perhaps the most dramatic of the state's basalt traprock ridges, Ragged Mountain has been a climbing epicenter since the early 20th century. The mountain is even owned by a group of climbers, the Ragged Mountain Foundation. The nonprofit manages 56 acres here, including the cliffs and a portion of the long-distance Metacomet Trail, which winds along the summit ridge and past several viewpoints. Distance: 2.2 miles one-way to summit The Trapps Vertical cliffs lurch hundreds of feet overhead along the century-old Undercliff Carriageway. Located in Mohonk Preserve along Shawangunk Ridge (a.k.a. The 'Gunks), these crags are world-famous for their long climbing routes and usually teem with roped adventurers. As you travel along the wide level path, take time to gape at the sheer rock wall, or wander the paths that lead to the cliff base. Access is from the Mohonk Preserve Visitor Center. Distance: 2.4 miles one-way High Rocks Tohickon Creek slices through a verdant gorge hemmed by 200-foot escarpments. The High Rocks Trail curves along the top of the ravine, offering guard-rail protected views into the canyon from atop clifftops. In season, climbers dangle from the rock walls and whitewater paddlers race down the streamcourse. The trail connects Ralph Stover State Park with adjoining Tohickon Creek County Park, and can be accessed from either end. Distance: 2.7 miles one-way More Great Cliffs Maine: Black Head and White Head, Monhegan Island; Tumbledown Mountain, Weld New Hampshire: Cannon Cliffs, Franconia Notch; Bondcliff, Zeacliff, and Imp Face, Pemigewasset Wilderness; Cathedral and Whitehorse Ledges, North Conway Vermont: Mount Horrid, Brandon Gap; Deer Leap, Bristol Massachusetts: Purgatory Chasm, Sutton; Chapel Brook Ledges, Ashfield Connecticut: Sleeping Giant State Park, Hamden Pennsylvania: Worlds End State Park, Forksville Contributors: Joe Antol, chair, AMC New York–North Jersey Chapter Climbing Committee; Malcolm Crawford; Paul Dale; Jed Eliades, chair, AMC New Hampshire Chapter Mountaineering Committee; Mike Lanza, author, New England Hiking; Brian Phillips; Don Savino; Mark Sondeen, chair, AMC Connecticut Chapter Mountaineering Committee; Jim Van Natta. |
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