New England Trail Review

Thompson Falls

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 A short hike near the Wildcat Ski Area across from Pinkham Notch. A wonderful though not always easy trail with many pretty cascades. 

 

 Images 1 to 5 of 44

A crisp view of a giant mountain valley with forested slopes. A speck of white in one of the valleys is brightened by sun. There is a line of green trees in the foreground.

Thompson Falls - View of The Great Gulf From Wildcat

This view into the Great Gulf shows a patch of ice and snow remaining from the winter. That section of the Gulf is so well shaded that the temperature remains low enough to sustain the snow through summer. In a way, this reflects the way in which the Gulf formed, since it was created by the action of glaciers tens of thousands of years ago. This image was taken from the parking lot at the Wildcat Ski Area, near the beginning of the Thompson Falls Trail.

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7/22/2002

Sue stands at a post in front of a short but wide wooden stair that leads into a green woods.

Thompson Falls - Sue At The Trailhead Noteboard

The beginning of the Thompson Falls trail is a trail maintained by Wildcat. The trail has a number of informational signs, one of which Sue is reading at the trailhead.

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7/22/2002

A paper under plastic with a pawprint mark printed on it, along with some text.

Thompson Falls - The First Noteboard

This is an example of one of several message boards; in this case, the subject is a bank of dirt that was an early road in the area.

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7/22/2002

A collection of rusty metal bars and housings on the wet ground amidst low bright green plants.

Thompson Falls - Historical Railroad Pieces

These relics from the early days of the area are reminiscent of the many different activities that were part of the history of the Pinkham Notch.

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7/22/2002

A variety of green plants, some with primitive spiky forms, some with broad green leaves and a triad of blue berries.

Thompson Falls - Plants and Club Mosses

This image includes a variety of primitive and modern plants.

The Lycopodium annotinum are the unbranched spiky plants. The branched ones are Lycopodium strobilus. Both of those are club mosses, a form of primitive plant that used to be dominant in prehistoric times (the Carboniferous). These kinds of plant were as large as trees then.

See also…

7/22/2002

Related

Waterfall or Cascade

White Mountains, NH

One To Two Hours

One To Two Miles

Moderate

By Name

Summer

Straight Out, Straight Back

White Mountains, NH - July 2002


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