I set out for a solo camping and hiking trip to the Shenandoah National Park with the goal of exploring the southern third of the park via a few key hikes and a stay at the Loft Mountain Campground.
The SNP southern tip is near Charlottesville, VA and runs 105 miles to the northern terminus at Fort Royal, about 60 miles due west of Washington DC. To enter the park there is a $30 per vehicle fee that is good for one week of reentry. This fee grants access to Skyline Drive which runs the length of the park.
The objective of the trip was to explore a new park and new campground as well as complete hikes to the summits of Turk Mountain, Blackrock Summit, Furnace Mountain, and Hightop Mountain. Hightop mountain being the highest point in the southern section of the park at 3587 feet.
Day 1 was to include arriving at the park and immediately hiking the short 2.4 mile round trip to the top of Turk Mountain and back. After the hike, I would move on to my reserved campsite at Loft Mountain.
Day 2 included the longest hike, an over 7 mile out and back trip that would take me to the top of Blackrock Summit and Furnace Mountain.
Day 3 was a planned morning hike to the summit of Hightop Mountain before heading home.
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Exiting I-64 and entering the park on Skyline Drive, I payed my $30 at the entrance station and continued on to the parking area at the Turk Mountain trail head. Skyline Drive is essentially an extension of the Blue Ridge Parkway. South of I-64 is the Blue Ridge turning into Skyline Drive as you enter the National Park.
It was a beautiful day and the parking area only had two vehicles occupying it. One was a cool looking yellow Subaru Baja.
The Appalachian Trail runs the distance of the park and parallels Skyline Drive, crossing back and forth multiple times as it winds it's way through the mountains. The hike to Turk Mountain begins with a .2 mile hike south on the AT before turning west onto the Turk Mountain Trail. From there it is a fairly easy .9 mile hike to the summit.
Skyline Drive runs the high ridge through the park, so many of the hikes starting from Skyline Drive do not have a large amount of elevation gain. The hike to the 2981 ft. summit of Turk Mountain included about 600 foot of gain.
I reached the summit marker after the short hike, but quickly realized I wasn't at the true summit. When you are standing at the marker but can see higher mountain around you, then you know something isn't quite right.
Turk Mountain Summit marker (but not really) |
View of trail rising from Summit marker |
So up I went to find the true highest point of the mountain. Scrambling over rocks, I soon found what seemed to be the true summit. At the top, I was rewarded with some great views!
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View from Turk Mountain Summit |
The only thing I have to determine the quality of a campground is a direct comparison to those that I am most familiar with, the camps of the Great Smokey Mountain National Park. Loft Mountain boasted amenities such as a grill/restaurant, a camp store, and even showers. My expectations were high. Two of those three, you won't find at any GSMNP campgrounds.
Several things jumped out at me when initially entering the campground. First, the setting was different than what I was used to. This was a mountaintop campground, not something nestled deep in a valley. There were trees, but they were small and provided little shade from above. There was no canopy to speak of like you would find in Elkmont, Smokemont, or Cades Cove. The sites were small. Many weren't level. My initial impressions were of disappointment. I could not feel the magic.
I selected my reserved site (F167) partly because it appeared to be somewhat secluded and private as best I could tell from the online pictures and camp diagram. I always look for a bit of seclusion when possible.
Arriving at my site, it was indeed quite private. It was a "back-in site", surrounded by a thick wall of overgrown brush, with a walk back to a clearing. At the clearing, there was no tent pad, just a dirt spot where you know you are supposed to put a tent. The fire pit was a mess, and looked like it hadn't been cleaned out in years. The provided picnic table was in bad shape and falling apart. My disappointment grew.
One bright spot to Loft Mountain was the wildlife. I noticed three large deer grazing in a nearby empty site as I pulled in. Other encounters at F167 included squirrels, chipmunks, and rabbits.
I went for an evening walk around the campground. I was hoping to see my wildlife and also wanted to check out the restaurant and showers. Although I had not been counting on it to provide any meals, I was not too surprised to find the restaurant closed with a sign stating that it would not reopen until 2021. Interesting.
I found the campground store and the adjacent shower facilities as well. The showers were $1.75 for 5 minutes of hot water. That may seem steep for only 5 minutes of water, but to anyone that has been in camp and/or hiking for several days with no way to wash, it is a small price to pay and very worthwhile. That being said, my plan was to hold off until after my long hike on day 2 before hitting the showers.
F167 - Clearing looking back at parking spot. I must have made this walk 100 times during the 2 days |
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Unkempt Fire Pit |
Lots of wildlife in the campground |
Day 2 started early. I was parked at the trail head and on my way to Blackrock Summit and Furnace Mountain by 7:10. Like the previous days hike and many in the SNP, this one started out on the Appalachian Trail. You walk .5 miles south on the AT to reach Blackrock Summit and then head west toward Furnace Mountain. The early morning air was cool and delightful. There was no one else around.
The hike to Blackrock on the AT was short and enjoyable. I emerged from the forest at 3120 feet above sea level into a huge boulder field covering the summit. According to an informational sign I had seen back at the trail head, the boulders were formed in an ancient pre-historic ocean that once covered the area that is now the Appalachian mountains. Interesting.
I explored around for a few minutes and took some pictures before heading on to Furnace mountain. From Blackrock I would travel .6 miles on the Trayfoot Mountain trail before traveling 1.7 miles on the Furnace Mountain trail before taking a spur for the last 4 tenths to the summit. At the intersection of the Trayfoot Mountain trail and the Furnace Mountain trail I found a marker showing the summit of Trayfoot Mountain to be only .2 miles up a steep and overgrown trail.
Score!
Bonus Summit located!
I decided to head on to Furnace Mountain and take the short detour to the summit of Trayfoot on the way back.
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The stunning boulder fields of Blackrock Summit (These are not small rocks!) |
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Trail through Blackrock Summit |
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View from Blackrock Summit |
Trayfoot Summit .2 - A Bonus Summit!!! |
Trail to Furnace Mountain |
Furnace Mountain summit clearing |
Overgrown trail to the summit of Trayfoot |
The unimpressive summit of Trayfoot Mountain |
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An astonishingly upscale shower facility at the campground |
The rest of the second day was uneventful and after dinner I was in the truck camper by 8:00 pm and falling asleep. Rain and thunder throughout the night made sleep intermittent and I pondered whether my final hike up Hightop Mountain was even going to happen. I wrestled with the decision I would have to make as to go or not if it was still raining hard in the morning.
Early morning day 3 conditions |
Once again the hike was on the AT. It was 1.7 miles of mostly uphill until reaching a trail marker that was the indicator of where to leave the AT and access the summit. I was surprised that there wasn't a maintained trail to the actual summit. Only an unmaintained (and officially unmarked) trail that traveled about a hundred yards to the top of the mountain. Hightop being the highest point in the southern park should probably deserve a little more respect.
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Hightop Summit |