
It was a hot, humid July day and I had just delivered two of my paintings to the Arts Center in Old Forge, New York. Heading home, since I was in the midst of my Independent Study in the Humanities project, I checked my maps and chose an alternative route, a back road that would perhaps lead to some interesting or scenic place. My study topic was “A Personal Investigation of Contemporary and 19th Century Landscape Painting of the Adirondacks and St. Lawrence Valley”. The basic question I was seeking an answer to was why had landscape painting suddenly become so popular in 1825, as well as why I have always personally felt so drawn to the land. On that hot July day, with the air conditioner working overtime, I’d actually driven past the small brown trail marker before I skidded to a dusty stop on the gravel road. Backing up, I found the small parking area of the trail head to Black Bear Mountain. While it was only two miles to the summit, it wasn't even marked on the map in my booklet of short day trips in the Adirondacks. I’d already made one climb that day, Rondaxe Mountain, but for several reasons, it had been quite uninspiring. It was only a one mile hike, located right alongside a major highway, and it had been crowded. Obviously a popular outing, there were many small groups and families on the trail, and what probably would have been scenic views of the Fulton Chain of Lakes were masked by the haze and humidity of the day. Much of the summit area was barren, open expanses of ancient Adirondack granite, worn down to its current level by eons of glaciers and tens of thousands of years of wind and rain and snow. It is said the Adirondacks are among the oldest mountains on the planet, once surpassing the Himalayas in altitude. Now, Rondaxe Mountain was not much more than 2000 feet in elevation. The most disturbing part of the hike, however, were the scrapes and skid marks along those bare summit rocks, left by enthusiastic mountain bikers. It just seemed a shame that these rocks had withstood the forces of nature for so many million years, only to be scarred by humanity in less than a generation.
But the trail to Black Bear Mountain was quiet. No other vehicles had been at the trail head, and while it was evident others had used the trail, I met no one. Perhaps it was the threat of afternoon thunderstorms. The easy walk began to climb, twisting around tumbles of boulders and the tangled branches of broken or uprooted trees. Sometimes it went down, always to turn and climb even higher, following now what appeared to be a dry stream bed. I could imagine the rush of torrent crashing over the boulders during the spring run-off season.
Then the trail narrowed
further, turned away from the rocks,
and climbed steadily through dense spruce and pine. It was now just a
foot
path, worn through the thin fragile loam of the forest floor to the
bedrock
below. Gnarled roots grasped tenuously to the rock, and the air was
noticeably
cooler. Feeling the whispering breeze of open sky, I knew I was nearing
the summit area. Is this what it was like for Thomas Cole, the young
artist
who had hiked into the Catskills in 1825, then returned with sketches
to
his New York City studio to produce his now famous paintings of the
pristine
wilderness?
I’d
been wondering why it seemed like Americans had waited until then to
notice
the beauty of the landscape of the New World. My own heart was pounding
harder, due to the increased altitude as well as the anticipation of
what
I would discover at the end of the trail. Winding through small,
stunted
spruce, I could sense the approach of the summit as there was now
nothing
but bare rock in front of me. Eagerly climbing it, my breath was taken
away by the vast solitude that greeted me. Directly ahead, across the
valley
that separated us, was another densely forested mountain, with
additional
peaks and ridges stretching back, one behind the other, all the way to
the horizon. I supposed the tallest, distant ones to be the High Peaks
of the central Adirondacks. To the right, the valley and mountains
continued
unbroken. To the left, the valley spread and opened up to a meandering
stream and what appeared to be a beaver meadow. Further on was a second
clearing, then mountains once again climbing to the horizon. Nowhere
was
there evidence of humanity. It was incredible to think this is what
Verplanck
Colvin had witnessed as he surveyed the Adirondacks for the first time
in the 1830’s. A raven glided along the currents above the tree tops in
the valley below me, arcing up to circle back towards the rocky cliffs.
The silence was only broken by the gentle hissing of the wind in the
branches
of the pines clinging to the summit rocks. I could have been the only
human
being in the world.