A few weeks ago, my partner and I spent a week traveling The Mountain State and taking some of the coolest selfies ever. I plan to make a blog post about each of them, and I wanted to start with the one that had affected me most. This journey certainly tested me physically, but it especially tried me mentally. If you called me foolish, I would be inclined to agree with you, but this experience left me feeling braver and more empowered than any other tango I've had with Mother Nature. Here is my tale of ascending Seneca Rocks.
Seneca Rocks is a big craggy formation of Tuscarora quartzite looming over the town that shares its name in Pendleton County of the Eastern panhandle of West Virginia. It stands 900 feet above stream level and is a very popular site for rock climbers on the East Coast. It's an object of geological and historical interest. I will include the Wikipedia link at the bottom of the page for those of you interested in the sand that was deposited 440 million years ago at the edge of the Iapetus Ocean and the training of soldiers for action in the mountains of Italy in the 1940s. Seneca Rocks was also a significant landmark to Native Americans of the Algonquian, Tuscarora, and Seneca nations who traveled the Seneca area near the Potomac River for purposes of trade and war as far back as the 1400s and 1500s. It is also believed that the Native Americans were the first to scale Seneca Rocks. The officially documented climbing history begins in 1935.
My ascent did not involve scaling the cliffs with ropes and spikes, as I am the equivalent of a fat housecat on my best day, but I'm going to attribute my inability to fearlessly scale it with my bare hands to the fact that I broke my shoulder in my childhood and my right arm can't lift anything over thirty pounds for more than three seconds. Otherwise, I would have climbed that thing like Spiderman.
We reached the top of Seneca Rocks via switchbacks and stairs. It's only 1.5 miles each way, which seems simple enough, but if you're a human goldfish like me, 1.5 miles uphill with a 1000 feet gain in elevation is quite the battle. I spent the better half of the day panting on various boulders along the trail, and fending of the hundreds of...centipedes?...millipedes?...some sort of revolting "pede."
What is this thing? |
View from the overlook. |
Maybe. |
I was up there. |
On top of the world! |
If you would like to share your existential revolutions or awesome selfies, feel free to get in touch at mountainbloodwv@gmail.com or like me on MountainBlood WV Facebook.