2021 Pacific Crest Trail Thru-hike

29
Apr
2021

Big Bear Lake -> Wrightwood

Tuesday A. 2.5 access trail @ 7:15 AM B. 26 on trail done by 4:00 PMish Getting back on trail I knew that to make my Friday 5:00 PM Wrightwood deadline (post office) walking 22 to 25 miles per day would be minimum, with probably a bit more to provide cushion and time to enjoy town. With my friend Peter coming up from Los Angeles on Saturday morning to spend some time, I had a firm commitment. Most of the day was downhill and that was pretty good for my body although my quads were often burning. The IT bands were okay, although the aforementioned tendinitis from my previous post was definitely flared in both legs. The new insoles helped, so I am thankful. All of us on this beautiful stretch of trail today saw an amazing array of scenery from big boulders hugging steep cliffs to meadows and marshes to canyons to gentle hills peppered with scrub to pine forests and some seriously massive pinecones that were at least the length of my forearm. Most of the day I was trying to catch up with Halo, Chief and QC, three ladies whom I met a couple of days ago and camped/hiked with into BBL. They hit the trail yesterday while I was taking that additional day in town, and it was not until they passed me this afternoon when I was in my pitched tent eating dinner that we traded tails of the day. They actually ended up going to a malt shop some distance away because a kind Trail Angel gave a lift. I was camped four miles from the infamous Hot Springs and they were two, so at first light if slightly before, I turned on the headlamp and broke camp so I could catch up with them to share breakfast at the pools. They also had re-supply boxes to pick up at the post office so we had the same timeline of urgency met with enjoyment of the trail. Following up on my earlier post about changing plans with the full PCT, I just have to be realistic that my body is not built at this moment for a hard-core sustained fast effort of getting it done so I can return to Maui not too many weeks late into the new school year. When I get into Wrightwood, I’ll contact my Yogananda volunteer opportunity that is building a meditation retreat center in Northern California. Wednesday A. 28 done by 6:00 PM This was just simply a beautiful day of hiking. Yes, another long day of miles, which is my modus operandi no matter what I try to do to lessen them, but hiking with the crew was simply lovely. It was soft trail but not beachy, contours of high valleys with sweeping views, hot pools and lakes, gentle breezes, and good temperature. Really, one could not have asked for just a lovely day of walking. Late in the day I asked the crew if at this moment what food they could have, a variety of answers emerge. Something with ice cream, mozzarella sticks and marinara sauce (me), Dr Pepper, and some sort of breakfast toast. As it turned out, after QC and I were camped atop a ridge at sunset, Halo and Chief arrived at camp with...you guessed it, mozzarella sticks and marinara sauce! I had already brushed and flossed, so this time I just flossed. Thursday A. 9.5 done by 9:00 AM B. Nero in Wrightwood Blazing the trail today with the ladies, I had to seriously ask myself the question I was already pondering yesterday: Am I being premature in changing plans to move from a full PCT walk to other stuff? Essentially, I’m stepping off trail. Essentially, I’m ending the hike. On the one hand, I feel like I could pursue another couple of town and go so far as Kennedy Meadows without too much difficulty in the legs. At the present moment, the IT bands are tight but not beyond discomfort, and the tendons are sensitive but not in dire pain like previously. On the other hand, I have really come to favor the idea of using this gift of time before the next school year, and again, returning to the next school year on time rather than a month late, by exploring a handful of other meaningful experiences that would be equally rewarding in their own right. I am going to go with the latter, as plans are in motion and my situation has been announced. What I have learned, been reminded of in all of this of late is that one can predict, plan, anticipate, and even expect a certain actualization of reality (as a practice I try to never harbor expectations, although anticipations are okay), only to welcome something along the way that offers an equally valuable opportunity for change. It’s easy to be a side liner and couch disappointment in not having walked 2660 miles or to express disappointment in the fact that someone is injured/possibly even taken as a challenge of authenticity. But you know what: get out there and do it yourself. Walk almost a thousand miles in less than two months with 20-25 pounds on your back and live all the joy and challenge thru-hiking demands to be able to have the conversation. Friends and family who appreciate, care, and love you will congratulate that which you rocked rather than latch onto that which you didn’t. I’ve received supportive and wise counsel. I am thankful. I sit here in my Wrightwood Airbnb fortified with food and drink, warm and very relaxed. I am totally at ease with what’s about to come for the rest of these next few months. I have a bit more of exploring and random hiking in California by renting a vehicle and driving around, volunteering at a retreat, wwoofing a farm ir two, staying with friends whom I deeply appreciate and love in Montana, North Carolina, and Ohio, visiting my parents in Florida, and returning to Maui with a renewed admiration and value for the gifts I have been given as well as cultivated across all aspects of my life. The upcoming school year will benefit from this time away. Recall, I hiked the majority of the Arizona Trail before the PCT, and that was a great experience with those fellows. Friday A. Zero in Wrightwood Saturday A. p/u by buddy Peter...

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25
Apr
2021

Hmmm.

Disclaimer: This post is a lot of me thinking out loud, so if you read this you’re tapping into my processing. I left Idyllwild on Friday daybreak armed with hot cider and a gluten free lemon blueberry loaf care of a generous ride from the great Rick Carlton (sevachild.org). He brought me down from town to 207. Yes, effectively I bypassed 151-207 in the name of giving three days relief to the IT bands and not immediately shocking the system with insane thousands of feet elevation climb/decent. I’m not a purist hiker. That’s me hiking my own hike. The time off did wonders for my right side, but the chronic left—rooted to a 2006 Honolulu Marathon—that has occasionally flared throughout the years, was much abated albeit not fully released. I did a “gentle” 22 on Friday followed by 27 on Saturday, in part because I didn’t want to dry camp and the idea of a truly low 10 miles rolling into Big Bear Lake today/Sunday was quite appealing. Sure, I expected some consequence of such a long walk, but it was not what the it-just-so-happens-foot-and-ankle-professional specialist/side-hustle-Uber-driver from the trail head at 266.1 who gave me a ride into town was able to assess and relay to me today: “You have peroneal tendonitis due to decreased ankle dorsiflexion because your talus is not positioned properly because you over pronate. You should consider getting a shoe that is more supportive that helps to eliminate over pronation.” Read: “new” injury where I can’t flex my left foot up past the horizontal axis; all is still interconnected with the IT. Hmmm. Where’s that analysis been from my Maui training support team...in all of the training two years ago and especially this past year? Sure, at some point the passing comments of a supportive shoe were made, but not deeply pushed and explained in detail related to the effect of over pronation. And yes, upon reflection I have felt this before, but not to such searing pain and limitation. Those instances I merely tossed it off to overwork or stress. And part of that is also on me for not researching more deeply. Okay. Now I’ve got a whole external side systems issue stretching from hip/butt to toes. I was grateful and perturbed getting this news from a complete stranger who was immediately able to assess my situation and kindly offer on the spot adjustment to temporarily relieve some of the discomfort. No blame to the good Hawaii people, but there are lessons to learn in this experience and that is what the trail does well. What to do? These words of assessment came late in the day by text when I didn’t have the language to understand what she told me during the morning car ride because hiker hunger was on my mind. In the morning they were self-summarized as: Hey, do I want to create a worse situation in the short run and possibly something worse for the long run of decades ahead if I keep hiking? And how much on again off again hiking/hole up and rest is sustainable? But when couched that the right shoe might be the simple answer and allowing for some time of adjustment to figure that out, maybe the situation is not soooo dire. But these are maybes and I’m out in the field on a First World extended playtime of indulgence designed to offer personal growth in many ways...it’s not singularly about walking all the 2660 miles. Plus, even if I get the new shoe there is a recovery time to let the inflammation in all tendons up and down the left side to subside. Guess where the one shoe I’m willing to entertain, more of a low cut hiking shoes than trail runner, which is fine, happens to be? Almost two hours away, west, midway between Big Bear Lake and Los Angeles. This means after picking up my hopefully arrived resupply box at the post office first thing in the morning, I would have to rent a vehicle and drive to a particular REI mid-morning and try on three different sizes of shoe. There might also be snow overnight. There is no provider of well-designed, supportive hiker footwear in Big Bear. What then, I must ask, is the opportunity cost of reappropriating this arranged time away from teaching/next school year to pursue a variety of enriching experiences rather than just the PCT? After all, at this point I have done 3/4 of the Arizona Trail (that was awesome) and an acknowledged 10%, or so, of the PCT. I fully understand and appreciate life of a thru hiker, even if it has not been for several months on end. Bottom line, I need a better shoe. So somehow that has to happen. After that, it can be the PCT, slower, differently than planned. Or maybe gentle day hikes unrelated to the PCT in other great spots of Americana. Or maybe I jump around and do select snippets of the PCT as my permit allows. Maybe I visit important places and monuments that I may never get the chance to see just in the normal flow of life. Maybe (certainly) I c/should visit with family and friends as well. I guess the next day or so will shape up the plans. For whatever it’s worth, the nature of these past two and a half days has been truly among the best on the PCT. Canyons with creeks. Lush forests with tons of birds. Gentle and gusts of wind. Rolling hills and healthy climbs. Multiple sets of nice people to hike with. Good times.

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18
Apr
2021

My Breaking Camp System

Forrest Gump designed this app for hikers to hikers and hikers + homer’s to family/friends, and I’m using it largely for family and friends; yes, a few fellow hikers I’ve met and traveled with along the way as well. So let’s depart from what I have been writing about to dip into something different: my breaking camp system. A typical day means I am already awake when it’s dark. But that’s just me. Usually by 5:00 I am stirring by having finished reviewing app notes on the day’s work ahead. I leisurely start to organize the inside of my pack, leading to breaking down the tent, so that by roughly 6:00 or first light—increasingly closer to 5:45—I am on trail. Breaking camp means while laying down I deflate the air mattress, hoiste myself up, turn on the red light of my headlamp if necessary, rearrange some contents of my bag that may or may not be affected by what layers I’m wearing at night versus want to wear in the morning, i.e.: puffy or rain jacket/windbreaker, hat or beanie, dance pants on top of my shorts, thick or thin gloves, etc. I always pop my multivitamin with a sip of water and then start the process of packing up the sleeping bag and inflatable air pillow, folding and pressing out all the air of the mattress then putting it into the pack along the backside as additional padding, rearranging my food bag to stack accordingly with all the other items in the pack that were taken out or need to be moved around which includes my toiletries and not to be confused with my poop kit that lives on the outside, and inserting the electronics bag, cork ball and vitamin/supplements. Items that I don’t need but want to keep dry all go into the dry liner inside my pack. At that point I toss the bag outside the tent. I usually keep the water bottles outside to get a little extra chill overnight. Tent. There’s a system for everything so needless to say I remove the pole, remove the stakes, dust off any dirt or sand and fold up/roll of all items into the compression sack. I tidy up final organization on the outside of my pack, do a dummy check, and head off on trail. While setting up camp the night before, I select all the snacks I want for the next day and place them in the bottom compression pouch of my pack. I also presoak my breakfast after I eat dinner, and depending on lunch will place that meal easily accessible inside or on the outside mesh of the pack if it’s a prepackaged hiker meal vs. load up my cold soak container with the dried goods and water depending on when I eat the aforementioned cold soak breakfast, which sometimes might be on trail after hiking for a little while and not eating a bar. Or eating a bar too. There’s no exactly the same everyday. Sometimes I have a bar within the first 15 to 20 minutes of walking. Sometimes I eat breakfast while sitting in the tent before organizing. It’s really just a matter of how I feel, how hungry I am, temperature inside/outside, and what lies ahead. But I can say, however, is that my special mix of oatmeal, mulberries, Goji berries, Chia seeds, hemp seeds, coconut powder, and honey…(HT: DeLisas) better not get boring for the next few months! Adding in nuts and raisins is already helping after the weeks spent on the AZT. IT Update: Idyllwild rest for three days and back on trail Friday.

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About This Hike

Pacific Crest Trail
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