At last, a hike worthy of a trip report. This was my first trip up to the Front Royal, Virginia, area is at least a year. It was worth it. Sorry but there are no photos.
Signal Knob is a mountain less than ten miles east of Front Royal and is at the northern end of George Washington National Forest. There are lots of trails in that area, all more or less of the same difficulty. This was a circle hike of about six miles but that doesn't include actually going as far as Signal Knob, which would add from two to four miles, depending on which trails are taken. There is some kind of electronic facility at Signal Knob, inside a chain-link fence. I had been that far twice before but this time I wanted to take a different trail.
There is a large gravel parking lot from which two of the trails begin. There is a so-called family campground just a little further down the road where hikers can also start. Even further down the road is an old iron furnace, Elizabeth Furnace, with an even larger paved parking lot and picnic benches and shelters and other trails lead off from there in the other direction. There were no other cars there when I arrived in the parking lot at about 6:30 this morning, a little later than I had planned on being there. Anyway, I undressed and started hiking nude. I got back to the car about 11:45, just as it started sprinkling. Here at home, we had a terrific thunderstorm at about 3:00, so timing is everything. I saw no one else on the trail and so was able to do the entire hike nude.
The trail is fairly rough and rocky for most of the way, although most of it is in the shade. This morning was warm and humid with virtually no wind, just the sort of conditions that usually ends in a storm, which was forecast. It is one of my favorite places for a long hike away from home but the roughness of the trails makes it somewhat strenuous. Extreme care must be taken to avoid a fall or twisted ankle, which might be worse. I have long maintained that there is no physical danger in hiking nude, provided suitable footwear is used, but also that the greatest danger of hiking, especially on trails like this one, is in falling.
The different trails leading to Signal Knob have their own names and there is a lot of good information about this hike and lots of others on a website called Hiking Upward, which is mainly about trails in the Mid-Atlantic Region but also includes New Hampshire. My time in completing the hike was maybe a little longer than the time given in the details for Signal Knob on their website.
The first third of the hike is uphill, the second third more of less level, following ridges, and finally the easy part, coming back down, but the entire trail is rough and rocky and in a few places, is virtually unrecognizable as a trail. You also pretty much have to keep to the trail, too. The return trail comes out at the other end of the parking lot and you can begin at either end.
I have been on these trails several times, always hiking nude. I try to arrive in the parking lot just as it's getting light and usually I'm the first one there. But twice I have passed people, one a trail runner, the other some campers, and both times there were no cars in the parking lot. I guess they parked at the family campground. And another time there was a car in the parking lot and yet I saw no one. And finally, on one hike I had just returned to my car, having hiked the entire trail nude, when a school bus full of grade school students, probably 5th and 6th graders, pulled into the parking lot. As I said, timing is everything.