Thursday, March 31, 2022

Day 151: Milton Segment (Part 2), Janesville to Milton Segment, Rock County

Day 151: Thursday, March 31st, 2022

Total Miles covered for the day: 6.2

Location 1The Milton Segment, from the intersection of Storrs Lake Road and South Janesville Street to the West Trailhead
3.2 miles of trail covered

Today's hike was a little unusual. Usually when I am hiking a section alone, it's because Theresa got there ahead of me and had time to hike it first while I was working. Today was the opposite. Since I was coming from Madison and Theresa was coming from Wausau, I had the opportunity to do some hiking on Thursday afternoon knowing that she wouldn't be able to do it until the following day. 

When we previously hiked to my starting point on February 4th, at the west end of the Milton Segment, it was a cold, wintery day with blasting wind and snow. The snow and ice weren't gone today, but at least there wasn't any new stuff falling when I arrived. It was 2:07 in the afternoon, and the skies were gray. It was 20 degrees out, and I was on my own. 


The walk through Milton is about what you would expect from any city hike. There are just enough blazes to keep you walking in the right direction, but there were occasional spots where the turns were a little ambiguous. The right turn through South Goodrich Park could be missed if you don't know you need to go that way. 


And the direction to go after reaching the little shelter house isn't clear at all. But if you persevere you will find yourself walking along College Street, where you will not be surprised to find large buildings associated with Milton College. 


At the intersection of High Street and Hilltop Drive there is nice Memorial Park, which I explored only at a distance. 


When I got to the north end of Hilltop Drive I passed the Post Office and reached King Park, which had a portable toilet available for people on the sledding hill. This came in useful, since the route to this point surprisingly didn't walk me past any gas stations or other commercial areas where a restroom (or even food) was available. 

The west end of Municipal Drive has a Dollar General within sight, so the route through town is not entirely without commerce. Then, after a few sharp turns I headed south on Vincent Road to the end of the Milton Segment. There I saw the start of the Janesville to Milton Segment, which turned out to be a real delight. 

Location 2The Janesville to Milton Segment, from the North Trailhead to the intersection of West Rotamer Road and Ohara Drive
3.0 miles of trail covered

I reached this point by 3:00 pm, and I had another four hours before darkness would start to descend. Even so, the sky was so heavy and overcast it felt like the whole world had shifted to the black and white of winter twilight. The trail ahead had an otherworldly feel to it. I have walked many bike paths, and many trails where there were branches leaning over the trail from both sides. This path was unique in some way, and it felt like a very healing place to just walk quietly through and listen to the wind in the branches. 


And for quite a while, I was setting down the first set of tracks since the recent snowfall. 


Where the trail crosses EMH Town Line Road, there is a parking area, a kiosk, and a carving of a mammoth on a post. 




Beyond this spot, the trail continues as it did before, and is no less charming.


This one could be an Ansel Adams photo, except that it wasn't taken in black and white. 


This looks more like an elephant than the 'Elephant Stone' found elsewhere on the trail. 


I don't know why people stack rocks, but I'm glad they do. 


Another road crossing leads to more of the same. 



And there is even a sign here explaining to new Trail visitors exactly what the blue and yellow blazes are there for. 


I reached the end of the 'Trail' portion at 4:06 pm. 


From there I finished the segment out by walking down NW Rotamer Road, until I reached the intersection with Pheasant Run. It was there that we stopped walking north one extremely bitter night in early February, and it was there that Theresa had pulled up not five minutes earlier and was waiting for me to be my trail angel. 

Perfect timing. 

Theresa took me back to my car, and together we made our way to Whitewater Lake, where we would be staying for the next several nights at the lake house of another trail hiker, Jan Hincapie, whom we met along the way. Jan's gracious gift of a cabin to stay at has made it possible for us to come down and make plans to cover a lot of ground over the next few days. This was day 1 of our trip, and I'm already six miles ahead of where I would have been otherwise. 

Theresa came and hiked this same stretch of trail the next day. Her experience was much the same as mine, with perhaps a bit more sunshine. We both found this to be one of our favorite bike path hikes on the whole trail. 


Running Total: 1014.6 miles of trail covered, 149.6 miles 'extra' hiking/biking. End of Day 151.

Sunday, March 27, 2022

Day 150: Madison Segment, Connecting Route, Dane County

Day 150: Sunday, March 27th, 2022

Total Miles covered for the day: 5.0

Location 1The Madison Segment
3.1 miles of trail covered

We spent last night at a great Airbnb in Verona. Our hosts were a pair of young men, one of whom had an eclectic and apparently insatiable appetite for artwork, which was displayed in cramped groupings on every wall, tabletop, windowsill, and other conceivable space. The majority of works were framed, either paintings or photographs, but there were works of clay, glass, paper, wood, feathers, papier-mâché, and a host of other mediums. The collection  lacked space more than taste, as the works individually were interesting and thematic when taken in small groups. But to be appreciated, they would have been better off spread around a space with ten times as many rooms, to afford the eye a chance to absorb each piece without distraction. 

My favorite piece among the collection was a large, 4x5 painting above the guest bed, an original oil done by a now-deceased artist depicting a small cluster of four demons in pseudo-military garb in conference with a witch doctor-like creature, created entirely with red, white, black and olive drab. I found the piece evocative and fascinating, though Theresa really didn't like the placement over the bed. 


Now onto the hiking...

Today was another beautiful day for hiking, so long as one didn't mind cold temperatures and a little wind. Yesterday was in the mid twenties, and today was much the same but with fewer clouds. In fact, if I could have cut the wind down just a tiny bit I would say it was perfect. 

We had fewer people today given that we had nearly 20 show up for yesterday's hike, but I guess a lot of people were avoiding the cold and the wind. You can tell from the group shot below that layers were still the order of the day. It was 9:30 am on a Sunday, and it was time to get moving. 



The snail gathering was at the large parking area at the south end of the Madison Segment on McKee Road. After handing out patches (I think only three of the hikers were new Snails) we broke up into groups based on the distance people wanted to walk. The Madison Segment is only 3.1 miles long, with a 1.9 mile connecting route on the west end, north of which is the Valley View Segment. We had to jostle around a bit to make shuttle arrangements because people wanted to start from a variety of spots, and in the end only four of us ended up starting at the other end of the Madison Segment. 

We parked our cars along the edge of Woods Road, where there is enough off-road parking for at least 20 cars, assuming the winter hasn't dumped too much snow out there. By 10:00 we were on our way. 


Hiked west to east, the Madison Segment starts out with a two-mile walk through the University Ridge Golf Course. In theory, dogs are prohibited through here, and I can understand why. Having dog presents on the golf course would tend to irritate the golfers (and the grounds crew) and a loose dog could create a distraction for those trying to spend a peaceful Sunday chasing dimpled white balls around. 

(Side note: At a macro level, golf reminds me of my cats playing with their little dingle ball cat toys. They bat them around a bit, push them into holes, fish them out, carry them off to a new spot and start batting them around again. Just - something to muse about.)


The path cut through the golf course is remarkably isolated, considering that the purpose of the property is to create an unbroken chain of eighteen large, grassy fields of play. The trail makes excellent use of the wooded areas surrounding the holes, and it's almost possible to forget at times that there is a golf course just off to the right and the left. 


Even in cold weather, hydration is important. Below is Rebecca Waga, Theresa, and Jan Hincapie taking a break on a log.  


Occasionally, and unavoidably, the trail cuts across more open hillsides. They were windy today, but they afforded a great view of the surrounding landscape. 


The tread running through the golf course is quite good, and the brush is kept at bay. The terrain is not at all hilly, though there are a few mild ups and downs. 


The east end of the golf course boasts a small covered bridge, which seems perfectly silly in wintertime, but actually spans an intermittent stream. Beyond this is an underpass making it possible to get past the four-lane County Road M with no difficulty. 


East of the golf course, we followed the trail through Flagstone Park, following the course of where Badger Mill Creek would be flowing, had there been any water in it. This meant we were walking along a low, level wooded area that could be muddy at different times of year. 


And here was some minor evidence of that mud, a footprint that had filled with water and iced over. 


After crossing Raymond Road, the trail takes a long, slow uphill climb through a semi-wooded area surrounded by signs of civilization. We used to live very near this spot, on Cimarron Trail, and it was interesting to see our old apartment building a short ways off in the distance. 

I think at one point the Ice Age Trail was going to be routed up into and through Prairie Ridge Park, which would have put it literally across the street from our apartment building, but time and urban development have turned farm fields into streets and apartments, and the final route is now more than half a mile from our old neighborhood. 

Along this final stretch, the trail passes by two large oak trees, with an interpretive sign below. They stand out enough from the surrounding landscape that they capture the eye, and I could have almost quoted the sign before I even read it. 


They are old friends, these two oaks, having spent the last 200+ years in each other's company, watching the world go by. In the late 1700s or early 1800s when these first sprang from acorns, they shared just the right combination of sunlight and rain to become saplings. A few years without fire allowed them to become strong and healthy, and for the last 200 years they have lived quietly in this protected nook, providing shelter and nourishment for other living creatures. 

Why ask what these two oaks would say? They have been speaking to us for over 200 years, if we would only just learn to listen.  


Near the southern end of the Madison Segment there are a few erratic boulders. 


And there are interpretive signs telling people about what they are seeing. 




The footbridge over McKee Road marks the end of the Madison Segment and the start of the Verona Segment.


Theresa and I reached this spot at 11:44 am, and it was still in the mid to upper 20s, but sunny enough that Theresa had shed a layer or two. 


Locks of Love on the bridge

When we got to the waiting cars a short distance away, this person was waiting for us. She was too late to join us on the hike but wanted to hook up with us to get her Snail Patch. Her name is Christy Sullivan, and she finished the Ice Age Trail last October with her friend Laurie Martin. We gave her patches for both. 

Christy Sullivan with an extra patch for Laurie Martin

We learned later on that there was someone else who had tried to cross paths with us today, but accidentally walked south from this spot rather than north. We did eventually meet up with them (weeks later) and she told us she and her daughter had a nice hike on the Verona Segment that day. 

Location 2The Connecting Route between the Valley View Segment and the Madison Segment
1.9 miles of trail covered

Of course, since we were in the neighborhood and dressed for the occasion, we wanted to keep walking. We had a car waiting for us on Woods Road, so we drove to the west end of the 1.9 mile connecting route and parked at Shady Oak Lane. Off-road parking up here is a little sketchy, so I'll just say that it was possible, though I'm not sure strictly legal. 

If you look across the T-intersection you will see a sign marking the start of the Valley View Segment. It's basically in someone's yard, and the trail, believe it or not, cuts across their yard and past their windows. I'm sure a lot of people choose to hike the road there instead. 


Theresa and I started walking east at 1:30 pm. The first thing we passed was a large-ish boulder identifying the area as 'Glacier's Wood'. I don't know what kind of tool they use to etch deep letters into giant boulders, but I think I want one. 


It was a gorgeous blue-hued day, and the maple trees were just starting to bud out. 


The rest of the hike was uneventful. Six tenths of a mile south on Woods Road took us out of the city and into the woods, where our car was waiting for us. By 2:22 pm we had reached the end of the hiking day. 



Running Total: 1008.4 miles of trail covered, 149.6 miles 'extra' hiking/biking. End of Day 150.

But that isn't the end of the story. 

The reason we were hiking down in Madison and Verona this weekend was because we had been contacted, many months ago, by Will Bono. He had led a number of Boy Scouts on multiple hikes last year to help them earn their Hiking merit badges. 

But he saw an inequity. The parent/volunteers who hiked with the boys for all 90 miles of their adventures didn't earn a 'badge'. Will wanted to know if he could buy some Snail patches from us to give to the four women and one man who worked so hard and hiked so many miles without a tangible award to go with it. 

Well, we have a policy of not mailing out patches or selling them, so we told Will we would come down during the event and hand the patches out ourselves. 

So after staying in Madison an extra day Theresa and I went to the award ceremony and welcomed these new members to the Order of the Snail. It was a big production, and we did everything we could to make these adults feel honored and recognized for their achievement. 

And we had a lot of fun in the process. 



Saturday, March 26, 2022

Day 149: Verona Segment, Connecting Route, Dane County

Day 149: Saturday, March 26th, 2022

Total Miles covered for the day: 9.3

Location 1The Verona Segment
6.4 miles of trail covered

Oh, what a day! 

There has been a whole lot of work that went into today. Blood. Sweat. Tears. Money. Time. 

3,186 days ago we were up in Polk County putting on a square dance (yes, we were really square dance callers) and we booked a few extra days at a cinder block motel so we could experience our very first Ice Age Trail hike at the Western Terminus. At that time we set ourselves a goal of hiking the entire length of the Ice Age Trail. 

At first it was a far-fetched idea. Not a lot of thought had gone into the logistics of actually doing the thing. Then as we did a little hiking here and a little hiking there, we started knocking out a few miles and a few segments, and thought, 'Yeah - let's really do this'. 

Time went by. Jobs were gained and lost. The economy struggled and life threw us some curve balls. Eight years later we realized our ten-year plan was at serious risk of default. 

So in March of 2021 we started again in earnest. We had 333 miles under our belt at the time and we jumped back into the thing on the Turtle Rock Segment, a decision that ultimately cost us a lot of grief. But we persevered, and we persisted, and we started hiking at every opportunity. Segments started disappearing. Maps. Whole Counties. By May 1st we had hit 400 miles, and we were rocking it!

Then on May 30th, on the Tuscobia Segment, we ran into 'The Pointer Sisters'. We had done another 79 miles in May, and they told us we really needed to join the Thousand Miler Wannabes Facebook page. 'Will do!' we said, though inside I was wondering what the value would be. Boy am I glad I eventually took their advice. 

On June 11th, we hit 500 miles. 500!! On August 2nd, we hit 600 miles - the mythical half-way point. What I have failed to mention is that for the last 300 miles Theresa had been suffering through an injury she sustained on that very first hike at Turtle Rock. The going was slow and painful for her. Even so, she found a way to continue. 

On August 21 of last year we reached 700 miles while hiking a connecting route in Waushara County during our 49th day on the trail in 2021 and our 93rd day of hiking overall. The 800 mile mark we reached on November 6th on our 115th day of hiking while hiking the very steep Sauk Point Segment on dreaded Map 61. We went from halfway done to two-thirds done in just over three months. 

We continued to hike through the winter, but it took until January 30th before we hit the 900-mile mark on a Connecting Route in Kewaunee County, having completed Gibraltar Rock, Devil's Lake, Merrimac and Lapham Peak along the way. 

Today, after adding winter excursions across Purnell, Arbor Ridge, Loew Lake, Milwaukee River, West Bend, Pike Lake, Scuppernong, Holy Hill and a few others along the way, we finally - FINALLY - crossed the 1000-mile mark. 

We knew it would be a good hike when we arrived at our meeting location 15 minutes early and the parking lot was already filling up. The temperature was only 24 degrees but the hikers of southern Wisconsin were ready to rock. 

By 9:00 we had 19 people gathered in the parking lot on Wesner Road at Prairie Moraine County Park. Some of them came and went so fast they didn't even stay for the group photo. 




This guy said his name was Will Bono, but I think he was the long-lost third Belushi brother. 


It has reached the point where I can't even keep track of names. Here are some closeups of our new SnOTT hikers. 









The hike was broken up into two main options, a long hike and a short hike. A surprisingly large percentage of the group chose to take the short hike with us, driving up to the very large and accommodating parking area on County Road PD. 

With one quick stop to touch the sign, we were off. It was 9:19 am, and it hadn't warmed up any, but at least it wasn't too windy. 


The group was headed south, through Badger Prairie County Park and back to the waiting cars at the south trailhead. 






We started out on a gravel bike trail that seemed relatively new, and was in shockingly wet condition considering the temperature. Though it technically parallels a small creek, the view was anything but scenic. It will be a few years before this grows up enough to turn into something pretty, but that didn't matter very much to all the ducks and geese calling it home. 

I like to be the last hiker in a group, and in this case I was hiking with a mom and one of her youngest kids.



Small though he may have been, he was a fully self-contained unit, and clearly a future 1000-miler. 



Thinking I might have something fun to share with the kids, I pulled out my phone and said, "Hey, I think there's a geocache up here somewhere."

The mom replied, "Yeah - it's ours, actually."

Little did I know that we were hiking with the BlueRoseTaskForce. GC7XVFV They stood there and let us all search for the cache, which turned out to be an easy troll hide. They really got a kick out of watching us all search for the container. 


There were more caches on down the trail, but this was the only one we picked up along the way. 

A beautiful wooden bridge provided the option to cross the creek, but alas our path didn't go this way. The signage here was a little ambiguous, but we ultimately determined we were supposed to make our way down the bike path to the south. 


After about nine tenths of a mile walking along the bike path (another newly constructed feature that left us exposed to cold winds) the trail took a sharp left turn that climbed quickly to the top of a drumlin, using several switchbacks. 

By the time we reached the top of the drumlin, the group had thinned out considerably, and Theresa and I were bringing up the rear, as usual. It was a long (half-mile) downhill walk to Whalen Road. 


And a pleasant walk along the road after we got there. 



On the maps it looks like crossing Highway 18-151 and County Road M would be a nightmare, but in truth they were very safe road crossings. 


South of County Road M there is a parking area, and a pair of kettle lakes, complete with a bench to enjoy the scenery. This was a very pleasant place to walk, with woods and fields and a nice clear path. 




Apparently, part of the trail runs along an old roadway, abandoned now some 92 years, and only identifiable by the signage. 


Eventually the trail crossed County Road PB, where we spent the next 0.8 miles walking around a terminal moraine and through a gap leading into the driftless region where the cars were parked. 







We kept up with the other hikers by text, but unsurprisingly we were alone when we reached the sign marking the end of this leg of our day. It was 11:30 am, 25 degrees, and there were steady 15 mile per hour winds from the northwest to accompany the gray skies. Not bitter cold, but cold enough. 

For our second leg we worked on the north half of the segment, parking on McKee Road and working our way south to PB where we started the day. We hiked the 0.1 miles along the bike path to the pedestrian bridge where the Segment starts. it was 12:11 pm. 

I think you can tell from the look on Theresa's face that we had experienced warmer March days in the past. This next leg was very out in the open, and the winds were a steady reminder that winter had not left us yet. 


 

It was a pleasant hike along the top of the ridge, with great views. Most of what we were walking through was restored prairie. 



We ran across this posting at a kiosk, telling people about the Dane Drifters patch you can earn/buy after walking through Dane County. I suppose we'll have to sign up and get these some day. 




When we got to the Soccer Fields we passed a group of kids playing some team sport with crowds of spectators. I was a little surprised, because it was too cold for most outdoor sports. I finally came to the conclusion that they were playing Lacrosse, and that the parents watching were nearly as tough as the kids playing. 



There is a Disbursed Camping Area (DCA) on the Segment, and it sits very out in the open and right next to the trail. But there is water and bathrooms nearby, so I know people use it. 


Before the day even started I knew exactly where we would pass the 1000-mile mark. It was basically in a parking lot, but there was a convenient signpost nearby, and there was a genuine feeling of accomplishment as we crossed this momentous spot.




We kept walking, of course, and found ourselves walking behind the very restaurant where we had eaten breakfast this morning. There was a nice safe underpass for Business Hwy 18-151, and in another 0.3 miles we were back at the waiting car. 

No one was with us to celebrate our 1000-mile achievement, but that's just fine. The real celebration will be at the Eastern Terminus, when we finally touch that big rock at the end. 

It was still fairly early in the day, and we felt like we had a little more strength in us, so we drove down to the south end of the Verona Segment and walked off the connecting route between there and the Montrose Segment. 

Location 2The Connecting Route between the Verona Segment and the Montrose Segment
2.9 miles of trail covered

To be honest, I sometimes run out of things to say about connecting routes. We dropped off a vehicle at the Montrose end, then drove back up to the dog park on Wesner Road to start walking. County PB is very busy, and we were happy to get off that road and onto Sunset Drive where things were a lot quieter. 

Here's an oak we spotted along the way that looked like it had absorbed some giant multi-legged monster. 


We met one woman on the walk who told us she was working with local landowners to create a new section of trail that would shorten or even eliminate the Connecting Route, but that there was one or two preventing that from happening. 

Based on some of the signage, there are folks around here with quite the sense of humor. 


The time was now nearly 5:00 pm. We didn't complete any counties today, or even whole maps, but we were extremely satisfied with our accomplishments anyway. 


Running Total: 1003.4 miles of trail covered, 149.5 miles 'extra' hiking/biking. End of Day 149.