Monthly Archives: August 2013

Day 88 – In memory of Pat

July 29, 2013
10 miles
mile 1616

PCT annual conference post ice cream

PCT annual conference post ice cream


The usual mammoth town breakfast lured us from bed. An early start back to the trail dismissed without discussion. All to errands and resupply. Having to print, sign and fax a document sent me hunting. The library closed, I despaired. I asked the checkout lady at the supermarket. “Oh, go down to the Shell station, walk in the back office, ask for Shana, and tell her Marilyn sent you.” I love small towns. On the way down main street I passed a deer eating a front yard. Assuming it was a pet I tried to pet it. It wasn’t.

Shana took care of my business in a saintly way. She refused payment and said “just pass it on.” Living near the PCT makes people very nice. Packed up by noon and headed for the old-fashioned soda fountain for a chocolate malt. There hikers gathered like flies on….ice cream. The day drifted. The magnet for nonmovement a free barbecue in the park that evening. We tried to break away and made it to the pizza joint next door. A simple meal and then we go. Damn, it had a pool table and beer. The struggle to depart crushed.

And then a hand from the heavens. The woman running the restaurant offered us a ride to the trailhead when she closed up shop at 3:30. Fate beckoned, and we helped her shut things down. A sad farewell to the boys. I motivated them by leaving the first half of a novel. May their testicles soon return to even harmony. A quick drive up, filled with stories of a lifelong Etnaite and then we were back at it.

Unfortunately, my water bottle returned to Etna. Always a problem, do I have, with water bottles. Thus my first 10 miles were waterless. The hike was cool as the Earl Grey fire skies screened out the sun. Slack and I had a long conversation about the transitional point in life he found himself in at the age of 21. I did my best with answers.

Purple haze

Purple haze

Haze daze

Haze daze

Day 88_Christmas tree
Bells heralded our arrival in camp. A large herd of cows being busy polluting the only water source. Dinner and to bed early in an attempt to recapture sleep lost to horseshoes. The bells rang on. I pretended I was in Switzerland, which made the sound romantic, and led to my desired destination.

In memory of Pat Taylor who died today. Pat told me that there was a speed between walking and running. I laughed at her. Then she showed me on a furious hike up the San Francisco peaks. “What the hell are you doing?” I screamed from behind. But I wasn’t laughing anymore nor was I keeping up. In essence Pat taught me how to hike the PCT before I even knew what it was. Everyday I do my Pat Taylor impersonation on the PCT in appreciation. Today I added a rock to my pack. I’ll carry her to Canada and leave her at the trailhead. It’s the best I can do.

So Pat, piss on traditional dying. Keep on hiking like you have a naysayer on your tail. The image I’ll keep is of you pulling away and disappearing round the bend.

Sunset attempt

Sunset attempt

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

If you’d like to help out and donate, please click here!

Day 87 – Killer Quail and Horseshoes

July 28, 2013
21 miles
mile 1606

Time for the morning commute. The town of Etna on the agenda. Orbit off first. Slack without movement. Then some groans about a mule kicked stomach. I listened to the symptoms. Could be my old nemesis Giardia. A parasite that causes sulfur belches mustard shits and swollen belly. Many of the water sources yesterday had been visited by cows. There, they made no distinction between toilet activities and drinking. Perhaps that was the origin of Slack’s distress.

The two of us got going but it was soon apparent that Slack’s hiking day would not be long. Fortunately, we crossed a highway after a few miles where Slack lay down to his illness. Being horizontal was his only relief. Which is where he stayed, as the traffic was nonexistent. I passed the time speaking with a history teacher who was doing a sectional southbound hike. He told me about the state of Jefferson and it’s near formation.

Tired sign

Tired sign


Jefferson was to include a large chunk of northern Nevada, California and Southern Oregon. The residents of these areas felt that they were being ignored by their respective state capitals. The idea was to break away and form their own state. It was to be named after Jefferson, an advocate of states rights. It’s symbol two crossed axes, because they have been doublecrossed by both politicians and judges. The announcement of succession was made, toll booths were set up on incoming highways, and government structure implementation begun. One small problem, the founding fathers horrific sense of timing. The announcement was made on December 4, 1941, three days before Pearl Harbor. World War II patriotism squashed the dream, but the sentiment runs strong still.
First signs of fire haze

First signs of fire haze


The first vehicle by stopped and whisked Slack away to his fate. His condition worsening, I figured whatever lay ahead had to be better than hiking. The trail confirmed this as today was an up-and-down affair. I climbed to a ridgeline where I caught up with Orbit. She announced that she would hike slowly and savor nature. This was genetically impossible. She tried, and her effort was admirable but her heart wasn’t in it. Soon she was back to the blur of 4 mph. I however stayed with the nature viewing experiment. A fire in Southern Oregon had brought haze. Valleys filled with gray as though the skies had fallen into them. I breathed it all in, and coughed a lot.

Chipmunks and Quail were everywhere. Earlier Orbit had a baby Quail run into her leg. Slack saw a big chipmunk eat a smaller one. My interactions with chipmunks was limited to long stare downs. Lunch was served promptly at mile 16 next to a warm Lake filled with newts. Newts are a cross between salamanders and tadpoles. They’re brown on the top and orange on the bottom and can reach seven inches in length. Endearingly, they bark when caught. Swimming in a lake full of them is superior to the more mundane swimming with dolphins, manta rays, or sharks, etc., foisted on tourists everywhere. I did so with delight.

Directional lake

Directional lake


Town fever hurried the five miles and soon I was looking, downing Cheezits at Kirby’s love van with Seminole, Emily and Orbit. The first van by obligingly stopped and we were on our way to Etna. Our ride givers were hippies fleeing a commune filled with sickness and headed for a rainbow gathering at the Buddha Hole by Mt. Shasta. That sentence was probably a first for the English language. Dropped off on main street where humans were apparently banned on late Sunday afternoons. We beelined through the movie set to the soon closing brewery. The first order of any town visit being liquids and solids. For the record I inhaled through three root beers, one stout, one ham sandwich, one hamburger and one towering root beer float.
A Viking on the right who has breached the city wall and has pillaged the city market

A Viking on the right who has breached the city wall and has pillaged the city market


Next a roof, but not before Slack appeared, looking semirecovered. We made our way toward the Etna motel. On the way I passed Viking sitting in front of the market vacuuming ice cream. Since Viking carries enough food for the apocalypse, he is never seen in towns. I captured the unusual event on film to confirm that even Vikings are weak for luxury at times. He growled that he would return to the trail within the hour or after four beers whichever came first.

The Etna motel was very fine and appeared empty. The anomaly was we just got the last room. The explanation—a motel full of hikers has an empty parking lot. There we cleaned up and relaxed to a TV reality show called “Naked and Afraid.” The premise being two naked and afraid people are dumped off the bush somewhere to survive for 21 days. Having once been on a reality TV show called skinny-dip I knew that 80% of what happened on such shows is not. So I gave up quickly and went to work on the journal.

Soon Veggie, track meat and Ole turned up and the night quickly veered toward the only business open on Sunday evenings in Etna. With only three locals in residence comparing work place notes, the bar was ours. The following entertainment to choose from darts, jukebox, pool table, bartender storytelling and Horshoe pits out back. We took advantage of all.

Ole, who once made a living airbrushing nipples out of fishnet bras for a lingerie company to protect the sanctity of teenage boys’ squinting eyes, filled me in on recent history over beers. The boys were waylaid in Etna because they were waiting for antibiotics to fight a most unusual affliction. Both Track Meet and Ole, not a couple, were struck with swollen left testicles. Admirably, no jokes were made about this sensitive issue. I wish them a return to balance in their lives.

Our bar

Our bar


A good night passed well, with a soundtrack from the 60’s and 70’s, ending in the early morning where it must, out back in the Horseshoe Pits. There, the bartender told stories of his import export days, back in the Go-Go 80’s, delivering a certain South American product for certain rock stars. A local guy serenaded on his guitar about love and loss. And Orbit and I took on Veggie and Ole in shoes. All were hopeless at the game and the target score was constantly lowered. But to see Ole throw a shoe was spectacular. The process. At 6’7″ he would stand ramrod straight, and christen the throw with a name. For example, “The Hurricane,” then he would explode in spasmodic motion winging the horseshoe in a SideArm, reverse discus maneuver that endangered all spectators but rarely the target. It was visual beauty. Orbit, always the fierce competitor, finally and mercifully ended the night with a ringer. To bed I went unrefreshed, unrested and happy.

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

If you’d like to help out and donate, please click here!

Day 86 – Kermit serves lunch and we dream of rattlesnakes

July 27, 2013
30 miles
Mile 1585

Awoke a survivor. Orbit passed by. The storm had pinned her about a mile back. From her perch much higher on the mountain she had seen a triple rainbow. She also witnessed the clouds try to funnel up into a tornado. Today I will keep an eye out for earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.

Let the sun do its drying work for a while. When I got bored of watching steam rise, I hit the road. The path was mostly level, my knee pleased and the pace strong. I zipped along. We had entered the Cascade Range and the PCT didn’t like it. For many miles the sun rose on the left which meant I was headed back to Mexico and the PCT was in retreat. I thought of Obit and her hostility toward illogical trail directions. She loves and believes in maps. She thinks unrealistically that trailmakers should pay attention to them when designing trails. For me I generally ignore cartography, but today was outrageous.

The Kermit Mobile

The Kermit Mobile


The path dropped to a road crossing. There Kermit and June Bug had set up trail magic shop outside their lime green VW bus. I stopped in for a feed and a chat. Their daughter Weebee is hiking the trail this year and they wanted to help out. We talked of their years of missionary work in South America. Just recently they had returned from Guatemala where they had built efficient cooking stoves in remote villages. Good people fighting the good fight on many fronts. They glowed with pride when talking about Weebee and her life in a cabin she had built in Alaska. June Bug wrapped it up with an amazing statement “We’ve learned so much from our daughter.” That I’ve never heard from a parent. Good on them.

Recharged, I charged up the hill. Had lunch with Fun Size and conversed about his life in Portland. How he had ceased drinking and smoking on the same day. Quite a feat. Off again, following a herd of cows who all appeared to have dysentery from the amount of deposits on the trail. Spent the afternoon vista hopping, Which goes like this. Look out at a vista, follow a big inverted U along the mountain curve and come to another vista at the next point. Repeat process. Mountain horseshoes basically. Good fun.

Picture framed

Picture framed


As I pushed uphill a long chain of very young backpackers made their way down. Politely, and according to trail etiquette, they stepped aside for the uphill hiker. They were part of a church group and pumped up by their backcountry experience. Their enthusiasm was energizing and I finished the day strong. Caught up with Orbit at a spring around mile 29. We found a camp at mile 30 and settled in. Slack soon showed up with video of a six-foot rattlesnake he had just run into. All went to sleep with thoughts of unwanted night company.

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

If you’d like to help out and donate, please click here!

Day 85 – Owiiiieee! And then I fight with the rocks.

July 26, 2013
30 miles
Mile 1555

Hitching out of Mount Shasta

Hitching out of Mount Shasta


Up at six. For whatever reason, the sunrise had wings. Decided to shake up my hiking strategy. Condensed, I’m going to put the hike first. Get up and go. Everything secondary to movement. So I skipped writing and was on the path by 6:30. My goal, 30 miles every full hiking day, as long as my knee cooperates. We will see, which sounds much better in Spanish – Vamos a ver.
Flying sunrise

Flying sunrise


Enjoyed hiking through the cooler hours. Passed a couple of hikers that I had passed a couple of days before. My pace is quicker, but their superior ability to limit town exposure will have us arriving in Canada at roughly the same time. Savored the light show that brings the world into focus every morning. Ran out of water long before the 9 miles had passed to the next water source but the coolness kept me from uncomfortable. Still it was nice to see the wildflowers that always surround a spring.
Owwiiieee !

Owwiiieee !


Lunch was at Deadfall Creek around mile 17. As I put mile 16 in the books my mind and stomach were already sitting down to dine. My left foot, however, was still in the present, which was a rock that halted it’s forward progress. A backpacker is by nature top-heavy. Two things happened simultaneously. I tilted forward. And my right foot rushed North to compensate. The rush ended quickly when the right foot met the rocks ambush twin. Nothing left but the fall from grace. Managed to get my hands, but not the necessary unutterable, out. The landing was hard and skidding. I lay stunned for a long time listening to the rocks I dislodged  rolling down the hillside. Took note of the blood on the trail and a deer upwind grinning at me. Got up very slowly and searched for the bloods exit points. My arms and hands were torn up and a couple of good shots to the ribs but I would walk on. The anger welled. I tore the offenders from the earth and threw them down the hill wishing they were full of nerve endings like me.
Tornado forming?

Tornado forming?


Stumbled to the creek in a foul humor. There I ran into a group of senior day hikers who showed compassion for my dirty, bloody wreck by loading me with leftovers. The trail taketh and giveth away. I cleaned up in the creek and then gorged. Orbit rolled in and we caught up as the weather entered into its own foul humor. Pushed on to Chilkoot Creek as the rain came down. Rain jacket to body and all critical backpack material stuffed in a large trash bag liner. It being July the rain naturally turned to hail. Into the mix entered thunder and then lightning. Timed to my crossing of a pass. The mother of nature having issues with me today.
The hail starts

The hail starts

Hail carpet

Hail carpet


I raced for a home that was low. Robbers Meadow appeared and that is where I called it. Tapped out to the weather. Set up in the rain and easing hail. My core was wet and iced so I got in my bag and hid for an hour. Wild gusts of wind tried to collapse my tent. I wondered why not a tornado? Finally the shooting stopped and it was safe to crawl back into the world.
Bed for the night

Bed for the night


Found enough dry wood under a tree to get my stove going. The fact that dinner was hot was more important than its taste. I looked up. Nature, with its short-term memory, serene to all horizons with stars. I watch the various airplanes fly at each other, but the real show was the vastness of space free from artificial light. Eventually I found it overwhelming and returned to my sleeping bag and death row.

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

If you’d like to help out and donate, please click here!

Day 84 – Climbing fortresses with waterless water bottles

July 25, 2013
19 miles
Mile 1525

Focused to the morning feeling like a kid sleeping in Mom and Dad’s backyard. The big adventure over. A breakfast with the four of us, a departure of three. Red to stay on in Mount Shasta nursing his shinsplints another day. Some last-minute shopping and communicating with the outside world. Farewells with Red and plans to meet again in Oregon. A move towards an on-ramp to the I-5 slowed by last grasps at the products of a manufacturing society. In a couple of miles there will be nothing to buy—a consumers panic.

At the on-ramp we share space with a woman going further than us. Eventually she gives up. We wait in the sun, putting effort into looking harmless. At the mercy of the mercy of others. Finally our PCT sign resonates with a local and we’re on our way. We talked with the driver about life in Mount Shasta. He gets high, which requires both hands. I note that no one is driving. Being interested in myself in the days to come, I grab the wheel and steer. He nods appreciatively through the smoke. And so we arrive at the trailhead at noon.

Castle crag

Castle Crag


A warm day. A long exposed climb. Not much water. The trail in summary. Orbit and Slack decide to wait out the heat. Being solar powered, I push on. Slowly I wrap around Castle Crag, it’s stone buttresses impressive and impenetrable to a potential invading force. The trail trend always toward the sun. By days end the climb will have involved 4,500 feet.
Fortress built to repulse invading hordes

Fortress built to repulse invading hordes


I arrive at a spring carrying a waterless water bottle. refill and drink a half gallon. Always carry my water bottle in my hand because it makes my pack lighter. Don’t even know if that is logical. Talk to Fun size and Zaaa Duke, then push on. Round a corner to a surprise return guest appearance of Mount Shasta. He’s always welcome on my show.
Return of Shasta

Return of Shasta


Finally shuffle in to our pre-arranged camp/meeting spot on spent town legs at around 8 o’clock. Turn on the sunset show and ease into the evening routine. Polish off couscous and veggies then make the free-trade, chemical free, organic, pro earth, anti-Republican, triple the price of Nestlé hot cocoa I bought at the Shasta health food store and Crystal Emporium. Almost did I balk at the expense. The first taste to tongue contact is so amazing that I gasp. Let’s hear it for the small farmers of the world. Damn the expense.
Diversity Twins

Diversity Twins


Time to look for a home

Time to look for a home


As I wait for the others I remember Slack’s story of a friend who bought a didgeridoo in Mount Shasta made entirely of Crystal. What would an aborigine have to say? Or would they just play? A few fat raindrops make a bid to distract and annoy me. But I pay no mind and they went on their way. The others never showed, so I lay down to read a book about a lawyer who fights the death penalty in Texas. That night I dreamed about pushing big stones up a steep hill.

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

If you’d like to help out and donate, please click he

Day 83 – Hippies, crystal, coffee and thai to die for

July 24, 2013
0 miles
Mile 1506

Came to on a bed in air chilled by an air conditioner. Very novel, but not unpleasant. Looked the length of my bed and saw my feet no longer caked in filth. Very novel, but not unpleasant. The perks of civilization are underrated. Hobbled down to a thin continental breakfast and asked for an extra hour to check out. “No extensions.” I surrendered meekly.

Tree growing out of roof

Tree growing out of roof


To return or not to return, that is the question. A full day off from the trail feels like a desertion and indulgent behavior all at the same time. Both negatives. An echo from one failed math class or another came to me—-two negatives make a positive. I’m in California, the center of positivity, so I chose the positive and took the day off. As did Slack, Red Beard, and Orbit, but still there was movement. We jumped on the public bus and shifted to the next town over, Mount Shasta. There, in the shadow of her namesake, we set up base camp behind Base Camp, a local outfitter. Base camp generously allows through hikers to camp behind their shop, as well as use their climbing wall, for free. In return they ask that we don’t start any fires. Deal and so much thanks.
Mount Shasta over Mount Shasta

Mount Shasta over Mount Shasta


I murdered my backlog and was thus free to stroll the streets. The town was thick with hippies. Every other store was selling crystals or coffee. I tried to make the connection but couldn’t. The town vibe was very charismatic. I’m glad I stayed.

At the edge of town lay a little slice of Thai heaven. Finally some real food with bite. I went through the door and did the authenticity check. Pictures of the king and queen on the wall. Check. Buddhist shrine over the cash register. Check. Chai yen sai nom. Check. We’re good to go. The Thai owner/chef to the table. Thai spicy not farang ( foreigner) spicy, please. Okay and so it was. As the pores opened up and noses ran, we shoveled the delicious food, confident of dawns fiery constitution to come.

Worth the walk

Worth the walk


A reluctance to return to our field and tiring of pool, why not see what Hollywood has on tap? A rush walk back into town and then a shortcut across a field and over the railroad tracks would bring us right to the cinema, in theory. In practice, the field was a swamp filled with blackberry briars and the speeding train bore down. We arrived at the theater soaked, torn, adrenalined and deafened by the train horn.

The only flick on tap was “Pacific Rim.” In we went. It turned out to be a film about monsters hitting robots and robots hitting back. The film was horrible as was the acting. It was so bad that it morphed into a comedy. We laughed through it, and continued to laugh as we exited. So we got our money’s worth. But for the drama the film was trying for, I’ll take our shortcut any time. The toughest hiking so far on the PCT.

To the field and bed with laughter still ringing. I thought of some PCT hikers climbing Mount Shasta as I lay down. Earlier I had heard thunder. I wished luck in their direction and turned the stars to fade.

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

If you’d like to help out and donate, please click here!

Day 82 – Swiss Goo convulsions and Bluejay feathers

July 23, 2013
5 miles
Mile 1506

Awoke. For my eyes, Mount Shasta framed by my tent door. For my ears, the groan of the I-5 Freeway some 5 miles distant. For my stomach, hangover convulsions from Swiss Goo. Move, for a town and it’s lures propels. A total downhill experience. Waterless, foodless and flying. The only mystery being a series of exploded Bluejay feather patterns. Perhaps the Ospreys have tired of fish executions?

Exploded Bluejay

Exploded Bluejay


The trail bottomed out at the asphalt. Out went the thumbs. Normally the odds of hitching a ride on a freeway are akin to bankrupting a casino, but fortune smiled and soon we were in Dunsmuir. After a series of break fasts we discussed the collapse of our plan, which was to get in and out of Dunsmuir in a couple matter of hours. Inertia and Red’s injury channeled us into a hotel room search. With only one real hotel option in town, my negotiating position was weak from the onset. My opponent an Indian American woman. “Welcome, no discount.” I tried both traditional and nontraditional gambits. “No discount.” Finally my ace in the hole. “You were born in India. Your caste is Brahmin. You were born in the city of Bodhgaya, also birthplace of the Buddha.” “Wow that’s amazing. How did you know? You’re right on all three! No discount.” Beaten, I had Red Beard pull out his credit card.
Slack mixing up Cirina's care package.  Lunches and dinners for all.

Slack mixing up Cirina’s care package. Lunches and dinners for all.


Once again the post office delivered. My bounce box was there as well as new shoes. Thank you Jill. Cirina’s  care package of real backpacker dehydrated trail meals arrived. They will keep all four of us in nutrition for the next week and relieve me of couscous depression for a while. A large thanks of gratitude. And finally a box of ass blasters arrived. I distributed them to my excited co-hikers for a trail trial run. I’ve always wanted to use those two words in tandem.
Trailhead stopper

Trailhead stopper


Kept attacking my backlog as the day slipped away but didn’t pull it off by dinner. Salad and barley wine, oh yeah. Passed a St. Bernard with his head sticking out of a pick up. His muscled arm draped over the outer door. A cigarette dangling from his mouth would have completed the picture. The day concluded in the inevitable bar with a pool table. There Orbit and I played pool against two Central Americans who won bragging rights. Red Beard talked to the very beautiful bartender and Slack grooved to mystical reggae down the block. The evening ended as expected with Charlie, a Louisiana native, holding aloft an empty glass skull which earlier in the evening had been full of his personal vodka. As the bartender winced for the inevitable shattering drop, Charlie began to recite the graveyard scene from Hamlet. The place went nuts as Red cheered and I translated Shakespeare to the best of my abilities for my Spanish speaking friends. Yep, just as I expected.

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

If you’d like to help out and donate, please click here!

Day 81 – Killer sandwiches and Gatorade bottles adrift

July 22, 2013
29 miles
Mile 1501

Slept in. Repeated the common morning, now down to a 15 minute process. The oatmeal/pack rhythm mindless and calming. Then the first 10 minutes of stiff disjointed walking. Age or 1500 miles, the answer matters less. One by one the kinks fall away. The flow takes over as the walk finds you. Three mph becomes effortless. Up, down or flat irrelevant.  You are free and cruising. Once there, you can forget about hiking and move on to the issues of the day. Later the pack will oppress as will the climb, heat, etc. But for now, the walk is so pleasant. Chills make the run up a scarred spine.

Red sets the pace. If he turns, I follow his current. If he stumbles, I focus on the path for obstacles. But mostly, I zone out, free to juggle erratic thoughts. I snap out  of it when we arrive at the McCloud River and it’s campground. From there, Red planned to hitch into Dunsmuir and avoid more wear and tear on his shins. Capitalism monkey wrenched the strategy. Camping in America is for the weekends. Mondays are dedicated to income. A deserted campground reminded us of this obviousness. Arrival in Dunsmuir was left to us.

McCloud River and its gallons of beverages

McCloud River and its gallons of beverages


At 14 miles, a creek, after miles without one, advertised lunch. Checked out the local eating establishments before settling on some flat rocks by a waterfall. I chilled my cheese and salami soup in the icy water, which returned it to the consistency of yogurt. Spooned it onto my tortilla pleased with nature’s assistance. Ate the last of it and tried not to taste it, but it was clear the grub was exhausted.

Orbit and Slack had been out of the picture for a few days, but as if a meeting had been called, they rolled in mid-lunch. Caught up on trail society doings and then aimed for a stream some 14 miles out. I didn’t get far. Turns out my soup no longer was a member of a food group. Therefore it didn’t understand how to behave entrapped in a stomach. It’s violent reaction to incarceration laid me low for a while. Note to future —- five days and no more for food without refrigeration.

Came to a slot canyon carved by a deep creek. All were halted for a swim. I threw my two water bottles down to Slack for a fill. They landed in the water where the current sucked them downstream. LNT (leave no trace) principles mean what they say. My two traces were headed to the Pacific. I scrambled down a path, ripped off my shoes and plunged into the Chase. Caught one easily and threw it to the shore. The other, though, was hellbent on seeing the ocean, or at least what was around the next corner. I could relate, but a Chase is a Chase. We slalomed through boulders as I closed in. Around a Naipalian bend and then to trouble—-shallow rapids. Both chase parties knew the make or break implications. I stroked hard and smiled inwardly about the obvious outcome. At the lip of the rapids I confidently stretched my hand to capture and hit an underwater boulder with my chest. Sudden deceleration. Six inches from my fingertips the bottle passed into the white water and on to the promised land.

For 1,500 miles that Gatorade bottle and I had been partners. Lips to mouth. The betrayal better. But it had left the backpacking family unit and I had to respect that. Freedom for all. But I have left a trace and for that I will pay in the karmic future. I contemplated that up the next big climb. Then put my head back in the hike as I slipped through the saddle and was presented with a new view of Mount Shasta. Started into the along downhill slide that eventually lands at  I 5 and Dunsmuir. Came upon the agreed meeting stream as darkness set in. Surrounded by ski slope angles there was no sleep to be had there. Pushed on until I caught up with the others and joined the hunt for flat. Eventually a logging road provided sanctuary. A late dinner. Am I getting sick of couscous? And to the pillow mulling over the wisdom of sleeping on a road.

Shasta and its little brother at dark

Shasta and its little brother at dark

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

If you’d like to help out and donate, please click here!

Day 80 – Melting soles and fear of shin splints

July 21, 2013
27 miles
Mile 1472

I fell asleep. A new breed of mosquito was being developed in the area. About the size of a baby hummingbird and capable of stealth I was quickly in over my head. Their tactics both advanced and treacherous. They’d buzz me a few times to inform me that they controlled the air. Then they’d pull back out of range of my flailing, the psych terror portion of the opening operation complete. An absence of buzzing convinced me of my sleep security. Out I would ease from my sleeping bag. With the coast clear I was safe to nod off. Their moment. Detecting the change in breathing patterns they landed in waves on the acres of exposed skin. The blood feast was on, especially around my eyes. Eventually the loss of blood trended toward coma. Which is where I would have ended up had my bladder, engorged with a half liter of hot chocolate, not alerted my surviving reptilian brain.

The angry buzz as the dinner party scattered allowed me to figure out my recent history. Swollen, blinded and screaming, I gave in to mandated fate. In personal darkness I set up my tent in the bright moonlight. Once inside my sight returned and I killed their rearguard with glee. The moon as my spotlight. My body worked through the night to resupply my veins with blood. As is the way of modern war, both sides declared victory, though neither side can ever truly win, as all generals know.

Good morning quiet as I fed my pack. Some good alone time over oatmeal. And then off to my morning constitutional. Which was ambushed by the arrival of Red Beard, Apparently my night stealth maneuvers were so successful that I ninjad right by his campsite. Both our water bottles were on E. The next water source was 7 miles away. So good conversation made a good distraction from thirst and my mashed finger. And I’ll tell you what, seven hot, dry miles makes chilly water taste better than anything—-anything.

The miles passed by lazily. The sun was in a punishing mood. It only went after your strengths and left your weaknesses to themselves. All was push. All toward Mount Shasta. Often through depressing clear cuts. Lunch was welcome, though five days of unrefrigerated heat had morphed my Swiss cheese and salami into a gelatinous goo. What can you do? Pour it on a tortilla, shove it down and wait for the inevitable post lunch havoc. Poisonous calories are still calories.

Mt. Shasta postcard angle

Mt. Shasta postcard angle


Reluctantly back to it. Another long waterless stretch along a high exposed Ridgeline. The same punishment reward cycle awaiting arrival at a spring. Gold spring, as it is called, was a bit hard to find. So I built a cairn (stacked rocks) with a directional indicator to ease location for those behind. I named it Slack’s Cairn in honor of his hatred of all cairns. Back to the process. Crested a pass, ducked under some power lines and voilà the sun started going down as did the trail. The speed picked up. Water was everywhere and all was smiles. For a while.
McCloud River and its gallons of beverages

McCloud River and its gallons of beverages


Since Burney Falls, Red Beard’s feet have been going to hell. A blister, under the callus on the ball of his right foot makes walking very painful. His shoes, as well as mine, are worn out after 800 miles. Blisters have also returned for me. I think our shoes are the culprits. Slack, who is wearing sandals, is in worse shape shoewise. The ground heat has melted his sole glue. Thus he has taken to walking barefoot at times because his sandals no longer resemble sandals. These are desperate times. New shoes for both Red and I are 30 miles away but we have to get there. As Red hobbled along compensating to his left foot to relieve pressure a pain developed in his left shin. He believes it is a shinsplints which is what forced him off the trail 2011 after 1700 miles. His fear of a shinsplints return is palpable.
The work of Gods, the work of men

The work of Gods, the work of men


We spent the night at Butcher Knife Creek where he gave his feet a good ice water soaking. We ran through the various scenarios/solutions. Not very promising. It looks like he might have to get off trail for a while. Which would mean the end of our hiking days together. A sad end to a tough hiking day having this discussion. Let’s hope optimism makes a comeback.

Steve Halteman
On the Pacific Crest Trail
Hiking the PCT for the Kids of Escuela Verde

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