Читать книгу Afoot and Afield: Atlanta - MARCUS WOOLF - Страница 38

Оглавление

12 Rocktown Trail

Distance 2 miles, out-and-back

Hiking Time 1 hour

Difficulty Easy

Elevation +/–15'

Trail Use Climbing and good for kids

Best Times Year-round (winter is best for climbing)

Agency Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife Resources Division

Recommended Maps USGS 7.5-minute Cedar Grove and Lafayette or visit drtopo.com for a downloadable PDF of the bouldering problems.

HIGHLIGHTS The Rocktown Trail leads to a sprawling jumble of rock formations that offer some of the finest bouldering in the Southeast, with problems that range in difficulty from V0 to V8. Even those who don’t climb will find Rocktown fascinating, because it seems as if you’re walking through a village ruin where ancients lived among houses of sandstone. Heightening the effect are narrow alleys with steep walls that snake between boulders some 30 feet high. The hike to the Rocktown boulder field is brief but pleasant, with ferns and hardwoods surrounding the path. Once you reach the boulders, you’ll find that the rocks have eroded in curious ways—some with scooped-out, round pockets, others with vertical furrows that make the rock face appear like rows of bones. The lower portions of some boulders have eroded more quickly than their tops, so some appear to be balanced precariously, defying gravity by not toppling. In the Rocktown labyrinth, you will also find arêtes and an overhanging roof.

DIRECTIONS From Atlanta, take I-75 north to the exit for GA 136 (Exit 320) toward Resaca/Lafayette. Take GA 136 west 26.8 miles to E. Villanow St./GA 193. Take GA 193 west, and in Lafayette take GA 193 north 2.8 miles. Turn left onto Chamberlain Road at the CROCKFORD-PIGEON MOUNTAIN WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT AREA sign. Travel 3.4 miles on Chamberlain Road and turn right onto Rocky Lane at a WMA sign. Go 3.5 miles, passing a DNR check-in station, and at the next road intersection, turn right. Travel another 1.3 miles and turn left onto Rocktown Road. Take this 0.6 mile until it ends at the parking area.

FACILITIES/TRAILHEAD There are no facilities at the parking area for Rocktown. The nearest camping area is Sawmill Lake. To get there, go to the junction of Rocky Lane and Rocktown Road, continue on Rocky Lane (about a quarter mile), and turn onto the first road on the right. There are no facilities at Sawmill Lake and no water source other than the lake itself.

NOTE(S) A Georgia Outdoor Recreational Pass (GORP) is required for Rocktown Trail. To get a pass, visit georgiawildlife.com, call 800-366-2661, or visit a license agent. (Find an agent at georgiawildlife.com/LicenseAgents.) Cost for GORP pass: Individual 3-Day, $3.50; Individual Annual, $19; Small Group 3-Day, $10; Small Group Annual, $35. Transaction fee: $2.50 for online, $3 for license vendor, and $5 by phone. The Crockford-Pigeon Mountain Wildlife Management Area, including Rocktown, is closed to nonhunters all day during firearm deer-hunting season. For exact dates, visit eregulations.com/georgia/hunting/region-1.


The strange stone “buildings” of Rocktown

At the north end of the gravel parking area, enter the trail (Waypoint 1). Soon you will cross a branch of Allen Creek and take an easy, pleasant walk over fairly flat ground populated with Virginia pines, oaks, and hickory trees. The forest is fairly open with ferns, as well as stands of mountain laurels, lining the path. At 0.5 mile (Waypoint 2), you’ll soon pass between two rock formations. Keep going, because the main area known as Rocktown is a half mile ahead.

At 1 mile, you’ll reach the first stone formations in the main Rocktown collection (Waypoint 3). The sandstone and conglomerate stones display a variety of colors, from dull grays to shades of red and brown. The rust color in some of the stones hints at the fact that iron ore was once mined in the surrounding area.

Continue ahead to further explore the many “streets,” or trails, that wind among the stones. Those interested in climbing should download the Rocktown map at drtopo.com, which includes sketches of the various rock formations and identifies the locations of many bouldering problems, such as the Scoop (V3), Croc Block (V5), Bermuda Triangle (V7), and the Orb (V8). The topo provides unofficial names for many problems as well as difficulty ratings.

WAYPOINTS

1. N34º 39.537' W85º 23.382'

2. N34º 39.243' W85º 23.359'

3. N34º 38.957' W85º 23.441'

Afoot and Afield: Atlanta

Подняться наверх