This climb is excerpted from An Outdoor Family Guide to Acadia National Park, by Lisa Gollin Evans, published by The Mountaineers, Seattle. ©1997 by Lisa Gollin Evans. All rights reserved. The Perpendicular Trail ascending Mansell Mountain is a most unusual trail. Where else can hikers climb a mountain via a granite spiral staircase composed of hundreds of moss-covered stairs? The trail's elaborateness verges on the absurd, but its very eccentricity carries a certain beauty. Built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s, the trail has aged well, and the stonecutters' passion now seems an integral part of Acadia's landscape. Best of all, the trail is wonderfully underused in this busy park, so lace up your boots (this trail is steep!), pack a lunch, and enjoy the marvelous views and wellearned solitude.
Follow the trail southwest along the pond's edge-the Great (Long) Pond Trailmeet immediately a trail to the left signed for Mansell Mountain. Stay right. After 0.2 mile along the pond's edge, arrive at the junction with the Perpendicular Trail. Head left and begin your ascent up the carefully laid granite stairs. Rise under deliciously fragrant cedar and spruce, with dashes of maple that create bursts of color in the fall.
Switchback through forest, then ascend a rock slide on more artfully placed stairs. Good views of the pond soon appear. Master a particularly steep section with the help of three iron rungs and a short ladder. Rise just a bit further to gain perfectly gorgeous views to the south and east. Consider this spot for a sunrise picnic to watch the color appear over Southwest Harbor. The mood of the trail changes as you follow it through forest. Cross a small stream and follow cairns, blazes, and blue metal flags. Climb a steep and eroded slope and look for a rock outcropping to the right of the trail. Carefully climb atop the outcropping for fabulous views west across the pond to Beech Mountain (spot the fire tower) and south to the Eastern Way and offshore islands. Then follow the trail as it swings to the left (west) into a thick stand of spruce, and descend to a moist, green garden of moss and grasses. The path then climbs to reach the viewless summit of Mansell at 949 feet, 1.2 miles from the trailhead. From the summit head briefly north, following cairns and blue flags on a welldefined, gently descending trail. At 0.1 mile from the summit, arrive at an intersection with the Mansell Mountain Trail to the left. Stay to the right (west). The post indicates you are heading toward Knight Nubble and Bernard Mountain.
Enjoy terrific but fleeting views as the trail quickly loses altitude. Soon the steep trail plunges into a shady forest. After 1.2 miles on Razorback, arrive at its intersection with the Cold Brook Trail. Turn left on Cold Brook, cross a bridge, and in 0.2 mile meet a parking lot at Gilley Field. Pick up the Cold Brook Trail on the other side of the lot and proceed northeast another 0.4 mile to Long Pond on the shady, root-strewn trail. At the edge of Long Pond, arrive at an intersection with the Great (long) Pond Trail. Turn right and walk just 0.1 mile to the pumping station and parking lot where the hike began.
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