[November 27, 2015; Parker Cabin Hollow]  In the mid-afternoon, Dallas and I parked at the White Bar Trailhead (blazed in white) off of Route 106 in Harriman State Park.  We took the White Bar Trail southward and steeply uphill onto Carr Pond Mountain.  Carr Pond does not appear on the map and may be defunct. We had a nice view (although through trees) northward to Lake Stahahe, from a ledge on the northern flank of the mountain.  We continued up to the highest point on the trail and then bushwhacked up to the wooded summit of the hill.  We explored meadows and rock ledges and find one with a pretty good view to the north.  We rested for a few minutes by an old fire ring, and then continued on the trail.  We stopped at another viewpoint, one with a nice view to the southwest.  The still water of the little stream that flows in Parker Cabin Hollow was reflecting the late afternoon sun and appeared as a silver ribbon below us.  The trail descended steeply into the Hollow and crosses the stream by a footbridge.  We could find no sign of Parker’s Cabin, yet the area around the stream clearly had once been inhabited, for rocks had been removed from some of the land to make small pastures.  We explored the part of the stream flowing in from the hills, which has picturesque cataracts. We connected with the Parker Cabin Hollow Trail (blazed in orange) and took it a little ways west, past a phragmites marsh.  We had hoped to connect with a woods road that heads back to Route 106, and after some searching found it, but judged sunset to be too close to allow further exploration, and took the White Bar Trail back.  Just before reaching the car, we stopped to view a little valley just east of the trail.  It has a prominent scarp on its eastern side that has small overhangs and caves. 2:00.