Month: July 2015

  • Day 96: Panda Cuddling Trumpet

    Day 96: Panda Cuddling Trumpet

    Every single mile of the PCT is full of amazing wonder and beauty. Well…OK, so, it’s not quite like that. (Cue the look of shock on your face, I’m sure.) It really is beautiful out here, and some moments are absolutely stunning, but, as you’d imagine, at 2 MPH (3 MPH on a really good…

  • Day 95: Down, Down, Down We Go

    Day 95: Down, Down, Down We Go

    Today, we lost over 3,500 feet of elevation, and are camped lower than we’ve been in nearly two months. While this doesn’t mean the trail was some crazy plummet down a mountainside — those 3,500 feet were stretched out over twenty-three miles — it says we’re definitely in different country than we’ve been in before,…

  • Day 94: Cranking Up the Miles

    Day 94: Cranking Up the Miles

    There’s been a big change in how we’ve approached the trail since leaving South Lake Tahoe a week ago, and I haven’t talked about it yet. Up until now, while we’ve had a general idea of about how many miles per day we should be hiking, we haven’t set ourselves a specific per-day goal. This…

  • Day 93: It’s All A-Changin’

    Day 93: It’s All A-Changin’

    As we leave Sierra City, it’s clear we’re in a different world now. It’s not completely clear where the “High Sierra” ends and “Northern California” begins on the PCT, but, if I had to pick a place, this is probably it. Suddenly we’re in different terrain: huge chunks of these woods have been logged, which…

  • Day 92: Rain and Hail, Oh My!

    Day 92: Rain and Hail, Oh My!

    For nearly the past month, we’ve had spectacular weather on the trail. It’s been sunny nearly every day, and the worst days were cloudy or had a tiny bit of sprinkle. This is not usual for the High Sierra, where afternoon thundershowers are almost more the rule than the exception. We’ve been delighted, however, as…

  • Day 91: Another Milestone

    Day 91: Another Milestone

    I know it might sound silly, but the fact that we crossed I–80 this morning seems like a big deal to me. It’s kind of crazy walking underneath an interstate — in what looks like a drainage tunnel, to boot — and realize that if we just got on that road (erm, with a car,…

  • PCT Fitness

    I don’t have a FitBit, but my iPhone does track a number of health statistics. Over the past month, these are the averages it shows (and, of course, this is including zeroes): Walking + Running Distance: 20.03 miles/day Steps: 42,491 per day Flights Climbed: 120 per day

  • Day 90: I Forgot My Skis!

    Day 90: I Forgot My Skis!

    Well, there isn’t any snow out here, either — but, otherwise, we sure could’ve done a lot of skiing today. As we move north along Lake Tahoe, we keep passing steep, bare ski runs, stationary chairlifts, “Danger — Ski Area Ends Here!” signs, and so forth. They’re all pretty bizarre things to actually hike through…

  • Day 89: …And Just Like That, They Were Gone

    Day 89: …And Just Like That, They Were Gone

    It’s amazing how fast crowds disappear. We woke up this morning by a mountain lake, camped right next to three Russians and with easily a half-dozen tents within a couple of hundred feet. Yet this evening, we’re camped all by ourselves, and we saw almost nobody today. In the space of twenty-four hours, it seems…

  • Day 88: A Backcountry Fourth of July

    Day 88: A Backcountry Fourth of July

    It’s the Fourth of July, and we’re in Desolation Wilderness, right by Lake Tahoe. Desolation is one of the most popular places to camp in the entire Sierra — and this is probably the single most popular weekend of the year to do it. This all means we are not alone, and not alone in…

  • Day 87: The Day I Was Mistaken For a Homeless Person

    Day 87: The Day I Was Mistaken For a Homeless Person

    Around midday today, Bucket and I were sitting underneath a gazebo of sorts in a park in Reno, waiting for our clothes to dry. (We’d sprayed them with Permethrin, an insect repellent, and it takes them a couple of hours to dry.) We had our clothes spread out around us, and our backpacks with us.…

  • Catching Up

    I’m trying so hard to catch up on posting these blog posts — it’s been almost three weeks since we’ve had phone service, and that means I have a ton of posts to add. (I’ve still been writing posts every night, so it’s not about writing, but about all the mechanics of posting and adding…

  • Day 86: How are Zeroes Always So Busy?

    Day 86: How are Zeroes Always So Busy?

    The tension between really just wanting to sleep and eat all day, on one hand, and needing to Accomplish Things, on the other, is a perpetual feature of zeroes on the trail for us. Where does all the time go? It’s actually pretty easy: an hour and a half for breakfast, the same for lunch…

  • Day 85: On the Pacific Casino Trail?

    Day 85: On the Pacific Casino Trail?

    Hitting civilization full-blast after spending weeks in the mountains is a profoundly dislocating experience. We woke up this morning in our tent at 8,500 feet, five miles south of Echo Lake on the PCT, yet tonight we’re falling asleep in a swanky hotel room, twenty-six floors up from thousands of slot machines, blackjack tables, and…

  • Hiker Hunger

    Hiker Hunger

    Hiker Hunger doesn’t really begin until about four weeks in. Before that, I ate like I did on days I did long training runs (say, 20 miles and up): I could eat a lot, but usually only for one meal, and then I’d feel more than plenty full. Hiker Hunger is unlike anything you’ve ever…