It's mid-October and we're back to working our way though all
the 'walks' in our relatively new trail guide, "Hikes & Walks in the
Berkshire Hills," concentrating in particular on the 'walks' as many of the
more ambitious 'hikes' are designed for sterner stuff than we can bring to the
game. We like the walking, all right, but then we like getting back to the
cottage, putting our feet up, sipping warm beverages and thinking about how
virtuous we've been.
After a rainy morning at the start of the Columbus Day weekend we looked for an outing not too far from base camp, the Stockbridge summer (now fall) house that Anne's parents bought many years ago and generations of the family continue to put to good use.
After a rainy morning at the start of the Columbus Day weekend we looked for an outing not too far from base camp, the Stockbridge summer (now fall) house that Anne's parents bought many years ago and generations of the family continue to put to good use.
My son Saul -- (pictured, left, with daughter Sonya) all four of us were attending this Columbus Day reunion -- found a likely candidate in the
miniscule, mostly hidden municipality of Richmond, Mass., a town where you
never tend to go to unless you've taken the wrong road, probably because you're trying
to find your way to the West Stockbridge entrance onto the New York State
Throughway. So it made a change to be actually looking for the place.
"There
is no town center in Richmond," our trail guide informs. When you
get to the top of the hill, it advises, "avoid the left turn" that's labeled Lenox
Branch. We so avoided.
Taking the
other fork, we descend a mountain, eschew another turning at a road we
have in the pat reached while coming from an entirely different destination, and continue to
East Road. Once there, the directions say, "park somewhere" and
"as soon as you can."
It's all
good. East Road in Richmond is the kind of place where you can in fact park just about
anywhere and begin walking. Even on a three-day weekend at the peak of the
leaf-peeping season there is no traffic on East Road. It's the kind of place
where the habitations of man are few and far between, the fields wide and green,
the hillsides wooded and multi-colored, and the sky large and very blue.
The
following day, Sunday, was all things bright and beautiful right from the
start, so we drove down to the Bartholomew's Cobble conservation property
managed by Trustees of Reservations, a site we visit pretty much every Columbus Day weekend. The photos of wooded and grassy paths along the
Housatonic River were taken here. We climb Hurlburt's Hill at the end of the
outing, a classic prospect -- summits, mountain sides and long vistas in all directions (bottom photo).
Other people do this too, but the Cobble property is extensive and absorbs
the modest numbers served by its parking lot well.
On Monday
we decided to stay close to home again, and I
find a trail guide proposal for a modest, but satisfying walk that falls
remarkably close to our East Road outing. We drive up the same
mountain pass blacktop, but this time we take that other fork, Lenox Branch, and
then go down three-quarters of a mile to find a promised
"romantic" vista "tersely labeled," as our guide puts it as "S. Glen" on a wooden sign to indicate the single parking space
for the walk through Stevens Glen. Only to find -- ta-da! -- that the Berkshire Natural Resources Council has been at work
and provided us with a real sign spelling out the site's full name, a decent parking area, and a new
map board showing a loop trail with a "spur."
Living up to its advertisement, Stevens Glen proves to be a deep-woods beautiful trail of big old trees, with their special silence
and soft pine needle powder underfoot. We walk steadily, with occasional photo stops, the day's gray atmosphere serenely filtered by the tall tree tops. We are promised an "outlook"
somewhere, so when we reach the 'spur' we eagerly take it, finding ourselves climbing a
steeper ascent that leads ultimately to an incredibly atmospheric hidden
prospect overlooking a deep, rocky ravine. Is this the romantic heart of the
glen? I'm not sure how these words were meant back in the day. But we looked
with pleasure down into a rippling stream cut deeply between two rocky cavernous sides (a New
England sized 'canyon' perhaps), while enjoying the luxury of an iron-framed
observation deck that upheld us securely while we peered over the side.
And then,
of course, silent as a whisper, a great blue heron flew right past us between
the rocky enfilades at exactly our elevation. The angel, I thought, of the place. If I were quicker I could have
touched a feather.
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