Thursday, June 16, 2022

PCT Day 34


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PCT Day 34, 15 June 2022 (Wednesday)

”Bubble Trouble”


Start Location:

Wilderness Campsite

Destination:

Kennedy Meadows South

PCT Miles Day 34:

17.2

Cum PCT Miles:

702.2

Non-PCT Miles Day 34:

0.9

Cum All Miles:

731.2

PCT Miles Remaining:

1,950.4



Elevation Gain Day 34:

1,822

Cum Elevation Gain:

121,915

 

One thing that happens on the PCT, especially the first 100 miles, is that you get a bubble of people.  Over time these bubbles should mostly diminish as people spread out, people quit their hikes, and people follow different schedules.  The main reason only 50 permits a day are issued is to prevent very large bubbles.


I am now at Kennedy Meadows, and there is a new, very large bubble of people here.  There are more people than would normally be here, or should be here.  The problem goes back a few days, as I mentioned in a prior post, when unfounded rumors started spreading about tainted water in several springs between Tehachapi and Walker Pass.  Many people skipped about 60 miles of trail and are now at Kennedy Meadows, when they should be several days away from here.


Hopefully, the bubble will spread out again.  But, the first week or so in the Sierra this could pose a problem in finding good tent sites.  Unlike most of the PCT in the So. CA section, the Sierra will also be chock full of overnight and multi-night backpackers.


Anyway, I’m at Kennedy Meadows now, a day early even.  So, instead of tomorrow being a nero, it will be a zero.  Getting to KM, is a big deal for PCT hikers.  In fact, when you walk up to the Kennedy Meadows General Store everybody on the balcony starts applauding.  Everyone there knows how hard it was to get through the thirsty Southern California section.  And we are now on the doorstep of maybe the most anticipated section of the PCT, the Sierra section.

 


I think a juvenile kingsnake

South Fork Kern River… I thought there’d be a lot more water in it

A Beaver Dam on the South Fork Kern River

 

700 Miles and now in the Sierra section

Kennedy Meadows General Store, a PCT mecca for many decades

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PCT Day 33


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PCT Day 33, 14 June 2022 (Tuesday)

“Water Wait”


Start Location:

Wilderness Campsite

Destination:

Wilderness Campsite


PCT Miles Day 33:

20.9

Cum PCT Miles:

685.0

Non-PCT Miles Day 33:

0.2

Cum All Miles:

713.1

PCT Miles Remaining:

1,967.6



Elevation Gain Day 33:

5,109

Cum Elevation Gain:

120,093

 

One thing that’s been consistent these last 33 days is long and heavy water carries.  Today was, hopefully, the last big water carry for some time (there could be more in Northern California and Oregon).


I am now only 17 miles away from Kennedy Meadows, so I should get there early tomorrow afternoon instead of Thursday morning.


It’s funny, when I left Tehachapi my bear canister was completely full of food and very heavy.  I thought that maybe I was bringing to much food.  But now I have just enough to get to Kennedy Meadows, and now I am thinking that it wouldn’t have hurt to bring just a little bit more.


Baby rattler, probably a western diamondback… rattlesnake no. 7

Chimney Creek



Tentsite with Owens Peak in background

 
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PCT Day 32



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PCT Day 32, 13 June 2022 (Monday)

”Toe To Toe”


Start Location:

Wilderness Campsite

Destination:

Wilderness Campsite


PCT Miles Day 32:

28.8

Cum PCT Miles:

664.1

Non-PCT Miles Day 32:

0.3

Cum All Miles:

692.0

PCT Miles Remaining:

1,988.5



Elevation Gain Day 32:

4,406

Cum Elevation Gain:

114,984

 

At the end of today, I am 13 miles ahead of my plan, and, amazingly, 25% done with the trail.  My original plan was to get to Kennedy Meadows on Thursday morning, but since I am far enough ahead, I think I’m going to try to get there Wednesday.


Today’s trail led through Walker Pass Campground, where somebody had left a fair amount of bottled water, which solved part of the water problem for today.  Walker Pass Campground is also another place where a lot of the hikers who got scared off by comments on the springwater between Tehachapi and here are skipping to.  Unless those hikers come back and do this section later, they are not going to have a true thru-hike.


On a hike this long you’re going to have to deal with some issues.  One thing that’s been bothering me for several days now is numb toes (digitalgia paresthetica or, as some people call it, pins and needles).  This is pretty common among long-distance hikers, runners, and other people who abuse their feet.   It’s actually been pretty bad.   On a numbness scale where 1 is my toes can feel it when you breathe to 10 which is you might as well cut it off because I can’t feel it at all, mine have been at least a 7, especially the small right toe.


I remembered a trick I’ve done before, which is wiggling/curling the toes when walking.  You just alternate between curling the toes in and straightening them out.  Between doing this and massageging my feet every morning and night, the numbness has been greatly reduced.   It’s feeling almost, but not quite, normal.

In the far distance the first real view of the Southern Sierra
 

 

And if you turn around 180°, you’ve got desert.  At this point, I’m glad to be heading north.

 
 
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PCT Day 31


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PCT Day 31, 12 June 2022 (Sunday)

“Peach Slushy Syndrome”


Start Location:

Wilderness Campsite

Destination:

Wilderness Campsite


PCT Miles Day 31:

23.3

Cum PCT Miles:

635.3

Non-PCT Miles Day 31:

0.2

Cum All Miles:

662.9

PCT Miles Remaining:

2,017.3



Elevation Gain Day 31:

6,058

Cum Elevation Gain:

110,578

 

So, as it turns out yesterday was kind of a strange day.  My overall pace was about 15-20% less than usual.  I was trying to figure out why, and I first thought it was because of the terrain.  Although there was a decent elevation gain of over 5,000 feet, it wasn’t so much the overall elevation, it’s that most of that elevation gain came in steep ups and downs instead of more gradual ups and downs.  But I noticed even on sections where I should be going relatively fast, I would look at my GPS watch and notice my pace was still much slower than it should be.


Then I started thinking maybe it was because I had to conserve water last night and for the first 15 miles of the day.  But then that doesn’t explain why I was still going relatively slow after I got water at Robin Bird Spring.


So then I started thinking this morning that maybe there’s something deep in the subconscious that’s trying to draw a long distance hiker back to a trail town.   Trail towns are nice and necessary, but they’re also a little bit of a trap in that they remind you of all the things that you’re missing when you’re on trail.  Like getting an ice cold, peach-flavored slushy at the minimart.   I think it’s possible that peach flavored slushy was trying to pull me back to town and slowing me down.


But today, I am far enough away, and far enough down the trail, that it doesn’t have the same draw, and I am back to my normal speed.  I am calling this the Peach Slushy Syndrome.  Now, this is just an uneducated theory from a PCT hiker who has nothing better to do but to think random thoughts all day.  So there is that.


It seems the water situation in the 50 miles from Tehachapi to the Kelso Road water cache has gotten out of hand.  There are three springs in that 50 miles that are really the only natural sources of water, one of which I mentioned a couple days ago.


Well, there is so much fear about what might be in the water that many hikers are actually getting off the trail and re-joining it at Kelso Road.  And some hikers are just skipping that entire 50 miles all together and trying to get a ride to Kelso Road or beyond.  When I was at that water cache this morning a truck pulled up with five hikers who had done just that.  The fear mongering is really out of control.


Interesting though, that the person that dropped them off is also the person that maintains this water cache and another one 15 miles up the trail.  His nickname is Devilfish, and he is one of the true all star trail angels.  Like some other water sources provided by volunteers in Southern California, these two caches are vitally important.  It’s hard to imagine being able to do this hike without those water caches.


Though I was back to normal hiking speed today, I was slowed by the wind.  For about the last week, the wind has been blowing hard on and off.  But today, it was really fierce.  It wasn’t just fighting the wind and leaning into it, it was a real battle.   I’m guessing it was gusting to at least 60 to 70 mph.  I was blown off balance many times, and in some stretches, I think I took just as many sideways steps as forward steps.


I kept tightening the strap on my hat until it got so tight I was getting a headache.  Finally, it was blowing so hard that I had to take my hat off all together.  Luckily, I found a nice, semi-sheltered place to set up my tent.  But the wind is still whipping around here, it probably will be like that all night.


Kelso Rd cache, there’s another one just like it in 15 miles at Bird Spring Pass

Just some scenery along the way 
 
 
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PCT End Of Hike Summary

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