Whiteside, Richmond County
N 45° 36.487 W 061° 11.180
UTM: 20T E641424 N5052108
(fourth and fifth whiteside falls)
RIVER: Fall Brook
CLASS: multiple stage steep cascadesSIZE: 5, 10, 14, 20 and 30ft
PITCH: 70 deg
RATING: excellent (*****)
PK: 45 N 36.221 61 W 10.531
TRAIL: ATV-trail, bushwhack and downstream hike, some scrambling
DISTANCE: 1.4km
HIKING TIME: 1.5 hours
CONDITIONS: challenging spots
Geocache: none
NS Atlas Page: 34/W2
NS topo map: 011F10 (St. Peter's)
(upper plunge abt 5ft high)
(second and third whiteside falls)
(second whiteside falls)
When you arrive at the top fall in this group of falls, you will be able to see the one that comes after it, and so on and so forth until you reach the largest lower falls which are about thirty feet high. The falls immediately preceding the lower falls are also visible from the base of the these, making for a spectacular sized fall in one of the places you might least expect it.The return to the trail is easiest by continuing downstream a few hundred meters and picking a less elevated wall on your left side to climb to reach the canyon verge. I made the mistake of quickly scaling this, thinking I could make a quick straight bushwhack overland back to the trail I came in on and save myself some time, but faced a maze of small and densely packed evergreens that required a lot of repositioning oneself with the GPS receiver to finally break out on the trail again. Of course, Im the crazy one who actually ENJOYS that sort of terrain, so.....
(fourth whiteside falls, so wide and such a short distance to the the fifth falls below me, I had to use panorama mode on the camera to capture the whole fall)
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