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Metacomet Trail - 1 member in 8 triplogs has rated this an average 4 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Jun 11 2023
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 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Metacomet TrailMiddlesex, CT
Middlesex, CT
Hiking avatar Jun 11 2023
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking8.10 Miles 1,137 AEG
Hiking8.10 Miles   4 Hrs   13 Mns   2.31 mph
1,137 ft AEG      43 Mns Break20 LBS Pack
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Metacomet Trail: Turkey Hills to Rising Corner. I parked at the Trailhead on Rising Corner Road, and took an Uber to Turkey Hills Road. I think this turned out to be the best segment of the Metacomet Trail, and it is the northernmost segment. There are many good viewpoints and the trail is easily navigated. The trail is wide and has long flat sections along the ridge top, and very little poison ivy. The first viewpoint after leaving Turkey Hills Road has the broadest expanse. I could see all the way down to the Heublein Tower in Simsbury.

This is a popular section. I hiked this on a Sunday, and probably saw about 8 people along the way. I chatted with one guy I met going the other way and joked that he cleared the spiderwebs for me and I cleared them for him.

This segment contains the Windsor Locks Scouts Primitive Tentsite, the only legal camping spot on the whole 51 miles of the Metacomet Trail at about Lat: N 41°58.4051', Lon: W 72°44.3741'. The Metacomet is a subset of the New England National Scenic Trail (NET). The NET website, newenglandtrail.org, provides more information for through-hikers, and discourages stealth camping on private land along the trail.

Just as I crossed the state line, almost to my car, it started to rain.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation None
Not much.
 
Jun 10 2023
avatar

 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Metacomet TrailMiddlesex, CT
Middlesex, CT
Hiking avatar Jun 10 2023
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking4.87 Miles 663 AEG
Hiking4.87 Miles   2 Hrs   40 Mns   2.12 mph
663 ft AEG      22 Mns Break20 LBS Pack
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Metacomet Trail: Kensington Rd/Orchard Road to Park Drive

This is the beginning of the northbound trail section of the Metacomet Trail. Going the other way, the trail is on Orchard Road pavement almost 2 miles to Route 5 where it becomes the Mattabesett Trail and continues on Spruce Brook Road another ¾ mile before turning south. In this area, geologically speaking, the Metacomet Ridge has a huge displacement. Most of the trail is on a relatively straight section north from the Hanging Hills of Hubbard Park. In this area, the ridge makes a big S-curve bending north and east from the Hanging Hills, and then continuing south on Lamentation Mountain on the other side of Route 5. Today’s hike was on the middle of the “S”.

The trail is initially on Town of Berlin land almost to Summit Wood Road, where it crosses the road, goes through the gate, then follows right along inside the rail fence line setting off the power line easement. The trail continues southwest in the woods immediately adjacent to the road until arriving at a cul-de-sac with signs for Berlin Open Space Blue Hills Conservation area.

It takes a sharp left turn, crosses a dirt road, and turns sharp right onto City of Meriden land on a newly constructed segment of trail. In about a mile, after climbing down the ridge on a much older trail, it crosses Chamberlain Highway, and climbs steeply to cross the dam of Elmere Reservoir, the only scenic thing I found today. Staying on Meriden watershed land, the trail finally comes out at the closed gate to Hubbard Park on Park Drive. From there, I followed Park Drive back to my car at the intersection with Edgewood Rd.
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Painted Turtle
 
Jun 09 2023
avatar

 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Metacomet TrailMiddlesex, CT
Middlesex, CT
Hiking avatar Jun 09 2023
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking7.54 Miles 1,282 AEG
Hiking7.54 Miles   4 Hrs   3 Mns   2.41 mph
1,282 ft AEG      55 Mns Break20 LBS Pack
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Metacomet Trail: Wintonbury to Turkey Hills. After parking at the intersection of Turkey Hills Road and Newgate Road, I took an Uber to the Trailhead on Wintonbury Street. Due to the smoke from the fires in Quebec, I decided to wear one of the great N95 masks we seem to have a lot of. AQI started out over 100 this morning. With the mask, it felt like I was hiking at higher altitude. There is quite a bit of poison ivy on this section; I washed everything when I got home.

Along this section, there are some nice cliff-top viewpoints, and the trail follows the Farmington River with some photo opportunities. From the crossing of CT-189 to the end of this section, the land is posted as owned by Galasso Holdings, LLC. One might speculate that one day this section of ridge will disappear into the gigantic Galasso Materials gravel pit, which can be seen and heard through the trees from the ridge top.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
Mountain Laurel in bloom
 
May 31 2023
avatar

 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Metacomet TrailMiddlesex, CT
Middlesex, CT
Hiking avatar May 31 2023
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking8.98 Miles 1,440 AEG
Hiking8.98 Miles   4 Hrs   56 Mns   2.46 mph
1,440 ft AEG   1 Hour   17 Mns Break15 LBS Pack
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Metacomet Trail: Hartford Reservoir #6 to Wintonbury Road in Simsbury

The trail started along the flat road on the western shore of the reservoir. Views of the water are filtered by the trees, and even in winter it wouldn’t be very good. I encountered lots of people walking and jogging around the lake. There was lots of poison ivy along the lake, so I reminded myself to stay on the trail. At one point, there is a pipeline dumping a large amount of water into the lake. I have to wonder where it was coming from.

The trail leaves the lake, heading sharply up the hill. Continuing straight would take me on the Talcott Mountain Bypass. What’s the point of that?

Near the boundary between the watershed property and Talcott Mountain State Park, I encountered a deer, close to the trail and apparently with no fear of me. I filmed her as I walked by. As I turned around, I realized I had walked between her and her newborn. Do not try this with a bear. [ youtube video ]

At the top of the mountain, I encountered a paved road. It appears that this is a service road only now. Although there are really nice picnic facilities at the top, you have to walk up. No driving to the top! The Heublein Tower at the top is open for visitors from 10 AM to 4 PM Friday through Monday. I would have gone in, but it was Wednesday. There are outhouses at the top as well. From here north to Wintonbury Road, the route on another famous app is incorrect.

The crossing of CT-185 on foot is a little scary, but eventually I got a break in the traffic and entered Pennwood State Park. The trail follows the shore of Gale Pond for a short way, then heads up the ridge on singletrack. Here, I got a clear recording of an eastern wood pewee. I have fun with the Merlin app.

After passing swampy Lake Louise, humid and stifling, the trail climbs to the Pinnacle, the first good viewpoint since Heublein Tower. This section finishes at the end of Wintonbury Road.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
Mountain Laurel just coming into bloom.
 
May 30 2023
avatar

 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Metacomet TrailMiddlesex, CT
Middlesex, CT
Hiking avatar May 30 2023
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking8.85 Miles 948 AEG
Hiking8.85 Miles   4 Hrs   31 Mns   2.45 mph
948 ft AEG      54 Mns Break20 LBS Pack
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Metacomet Trail, Farmington Reservoir to Hartford Reservoir.

I parked at the Hartford Reservoir #6 lot, which was filled on a Tuesday morning from early morning joggers. There is an outhouse here, just inside the second gate. From here, I took an Uber south to Farmington Reservoir, the parking lot on Route 6. From the parking lot, there is a short segment of blue-white-blazed connector trail to the blue-blazed Metacomet, then shortly the trail crosses Route 6. The double blaze just after crossing the road is a bit misleading. The trail turns right and heads up the hill.

There is a nice bench just before Route 4, then the trail cuts through a fence, across the jughandle of CT-4, and into the Bancroft Memorial Protected Land of the Farmington Land Trust. Leaving the land trust, the trail follows Prattling Pond Road with its nice houses. Here I saw some of the cleverness of routing this trail through suburban neighborhoods. At number 85, the trail appears to leave the road, but actually, the road just becomes invisibile, and the trail continues on its right-of-way down to Metacomet Road, coming out at #32. At #19, the trail begins paralleling the road in front of the houses.

After crossing Talcott Notch Road, the way goes alongside a house with a formidable bear fence. This is one of the areas of Connecticut where the most bears are seen. It follows a flat track for a bit before coming out on Old Mountain Road, then passing into East Hartford and watershed land managed by the MDC, as it works its way north to Route 44 and the parking lot for Reservoir #6.
 
May 28 2023
avatar

 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Metacomet TrailMiddlesex, CT
Middlesex, CT
Hiking avatar May 28 2023
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking6.96 Miles 1,294 AEG
Hiking6.96 Miles   3 Hrs   34 Mns   2.00 mph
1,294 ft AEG      5 Mns Break10 LBS Pack
 
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I needed to squeeze in a shorter day on the trail, so I found a section where the Metacomet Trail almost closes a loop upon itself. Parking near 843 Edgewood Road, I walked south on Edgewood Road and then on Park Drive to a locked gate. Just past the gate, I turned right on Peak Drive to cross the dam at the end of Merimere Reservoir and then left onto the trail at the end of the dam.

About 100 yards up the trail, there’s an unmarked fork. I stayed to the left on the blue-blazed trail. After following about 20-40’ above the reservoir for a while, the trail crossed a ravine, and turned right to follow the ravine up the hill. Leaving the ravine, the trail enters Hubbard Park and the town of Meriden and climbs steeply for a while before coming out on a series of viewpoints. About 1.4 miles from Peak Drive, I came out at the parking lot by Castle Craig on East Peak. The views from the top are great, but the people are annoying. One guy was flying a drone from the top and another had a hammock perched in the corner of the platform.

Leaving the castle, the trail follows the road for a bit before heading straight down the hill. There is no obvious reason for the trail to drop 300’ before climbing 400’ to the summit of West Peak, except to give you more exercise or to feed the mosquitoes at lower elevations. West Peak is marked on some maps as “West Peak State Park,” but as far as I can tell, no such park exists.

From West Peak, it was a gentle stroll north, downhill the whole way, back to my car. It is nice the way the hike finishes on wide, shady, flat two-track.
 
May 26 2023
avatar

 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Metacomet TrailMiddlesex, CT
Middlesex, CT
Hiking avatar May 26 2023
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking10.25 Miles 1,684 AEG
Hiking10.25 Miles   6 Hrs   10 Mns   2.15 mph
1,684 ft AEG   1 Hour   24 Mns Break10 LBS Pack
 
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Partners none no partners
I parked on Hawks Nest Road near the lot for Crescent Lake, my finish point. Oddly, on a Friday, the free lot did not open until 10 am. There was no sign indicating hours. I called an Uber to take me to my starting point, the intersection of Edgewood Road and CR-364, Southington Road. At about ¼ mile, the Metacomet Loop Trail intersects from the right. It goes to a public parking lot on the Timberlin Golf Course.

At 0.5 miles, I got my first clue this might not be an easy navigation day. I realized I was already off track, as there were no more blue blazes. It looked like I was headed to intersect the marked trail and continued. I’ll come back and clean this up when I do the guide. As I climbed the first ridge, there were several vultures circling just overhead. I’m not sure, maybe there was a good thermal, or maybe they were waiting for me.

At about 1.6 miles from Edgewood Road, the trail suddenly drops steeply and straight down the fall line, then gives a nod to the idea of a switchback, before traversing along the bottom of a rocky cliff. Soon after, I crossed an amazing bridge with fake flowers in the flower boxes, and a couple of Adirondack Chairs set up with a sign saying, “Welcome Hikers”. The trail then began a short road walk section on Mill Brook, Carey Street, and a private driveway before leaving the driveway to the right.

Shortly before a serious scramble up a chimney to a viewpoint, there is a trail register. It is odd to see the register just in the middle of the climb. From here, it is just viewpoint after viewpoint. At some, I could see all the way to Hartford. The trail wanders for miles in the Ragged Mountain Preserve.

Eventually the trail makes a sharp left turn at an intersection with blue-white and blue-red blazed trails. Here it follows along a berm on the north side of a creek. I missed a point where the trail crosses the creek and stays on the south side from then on. Not long after, the trail crosses a service road going to Wassel Reservoir, then a power line, before coming out on a great viewpoint overlooking Shuttle Meadow Reservoir.

The trail follows more or less level on the hill above Shuttle Meadow Reservoir in an area of extensive blowdown. Staying on the ridge, the trail turns southerly, away from the lake. Then, at an unmarked intersection, the trail turns sharply right straight down the cliff. The turn is easy to miss, but I knew I missed it because the cliff-top blazes switched from blue to blue-red. After dropping about 100 feet, first straight down and then along the cliff, the trail leveled out and headed toward the intersection of Andrews and Long Bottom Roads.

I followed Long Bottom Road generally north and stopped in Rogers Orchards store, where they have fresh fruit and cider. At the intersection of Long Bottom with Shuttle Meadow Rd, I spent a long time confused by the trail temptingly leaving the intersection between two street signs. I saw lots of “No Trespassing” signs and no blue blazes. I had to go left about 100 feet to find the blue-blazed trail.

Proceeding north, I missed and had to come back for several intersections where the Metacomet Trail turns suddenly. There are many mountain bike trails in this area; it is easy to get off track. Also, that other famous trail site gets it totally wrong here, taking the unwary on an easy, yet boring route along a pipeline. At one point the trail makes a sharp left turn off a seemingly easy road to head steeply up a notch in a rocky ridge. As soon as I noticed the lack of blazes, I had to go back to find the turn. This trail section finished by crossing up and down across several rocky ridges and ravines, before intersecting the red-blue-blazed connector over to the parking lot at Crescent Lake.

Along the way, some of the birds I identified by sound were Hairy Woodpecker, American Redstart, Eastern Bluebird, House Wren, Blue Jay, Tufted Titmouse (they are really loud for their size), Red-eyed Vireo, and American Robin.
 
May 24 2023
avatar

 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Metacomet TrailMiddlesex, CT
Middlesex, CT
Hiking avatar May 24 2023
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking9.73 Miles 1,343 AEG
Hiking9.73 Miles   4 Hrs   47 Mns   2.15 mph
1,343 ft AEG      16 Mns Break10 LBS Pack
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
The Metacomet Trail runs from Route 15 in Berlin, CT north to the Massachusetts Border. The New England National Scenic Trail follows it in this part of Connecticut. I will be doing sections of the Metacomet this spring and summer. This log is for the section from the Plainville Reservoir (Crescent Lake) in Southington north to Route 6 in Farmington. After I hike the whole thing, I'll complete a guide.

There is good parking and an outhouse at Crescent Lake – Sunset Rock State Park on Shuttle Meadow Road in Southington. From the parking lot, there is a connector headed east to the Metacomet Trail, but I followed the lakeshore, and met up with the connector near the southeast corner of the lake. Follow the connector steeply up an old road, and where it levels off, intersect the blue-blazed Metacomet Trail. Turn left to head north.

There were loads of mosquitoes near the lake, but also lots of birds. I identified by sound the American Redstart, Red-eyed Vireo, Ovenbird, White-breasted nuthatch, Blue Jay, and Red-bellied Woodpecker in the first hour of my hike.

Early on, the Metacomet comes out on an outcrop overlooking the lake at a nice picture spot. Soon after, the Blue-blazed trail takes a sharp and unmarked left turn. Although the trail is very well marked, sometimes intersections are not clearly marked. If you don’t see a blue-blaze in 100 yards of walking, you have probably missed a turn. There is a clearly marked junction where the trail was re-routed in 2009. The old route continues with red-blue blazes. Follow my gps track to stay on the current route.

The trail works its way northeast across Sunset Rock State Park. Eventually it comes out on Woodford Ave at the intersection with Esther Street. From here, you have a 1.2 mile road walk to the next section. There is parking along Esther Street. Follow Woodford Avenue east to Wooster Street, then north to CT-372, West Main Street which becomes New Britain Avenue. Turn left on 372 and hike about 0.8 mile to the northbound trailhead, across from 440 New Britain Avenue, where you might consider parking.

Leaving New Britain Avenue, the trail climbs steeply through a couple of different geologic strata, and then levels out for a while, before working its way gently up. Along the way, the views start to open up. At 1.6 miles from the road, not much remains of an old Nike Missile Base. At 1.8 miles, the trail tops out on Pinnacle Rock at 591’. This appears to be a popular place for rock climbing and rappelling.

Heading north off of Pinnacle Rock, the trail drops steeply, eventually descending sharply into a ravine containing some power lines. On the other side of the power lines, the trail climbs steeply again, right up against Rattlesnake Cliffs, 2.8 miles from the road. At the top of the cliffs is a very popular view point and a trail register. About 0.1 mile further is a jumble of boulders containing “Will Warren’s Den,” a cave claimed to be occupied by an antisocial gentlemen in the middle 19th century at 41° 41.94′ N, 72° 49.956′. The opening is extremely small; I didn’t go in, but the cave is said to be quite large.

From the cave on down to Route 6, about 1.2 miles, the trail gets better maintained and easier walking, and much more popular. At the parking lot on Route 6, there were at least 9 cars on a weekday afternoon.
 
average hiking speed 2.26 mph

WARNING! Hiking and outdoor related sports can be dangerous. Be responsible and prepare for the trip. Study the area you are entering and plan accordingly. Dress for the current and unexpected weather changes. Take plenty of water. Never go alone. Make an itinerary with your plan(s), route(s), destination(s) and expected return time. Give your itinerary to trusted family and/or friends.

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