Day 16 – Back in the High Country

Just some weak rain last night, guess the first part of the storm petered out.   Packed up the tent, had breakfast, and joked around with Dan, Bottom, and Blackfoot.   Phd untangled his tent from mine and others, said a few words then left. 

Bottom and I were getting ready to clear out when we noticed that Phd left his hat and pack towel.   That guy keeps dropping stuff.   Yesterday he lost a trekking pole.  Few days before it was something else.   Bottom was ranting that he was not going to carry another guy’s  #%@@#! stuff again.  Apparently this kind of thing keeps happening to him.   I said fine and packed Phd’s crap. 

Plan today was to do hard miles, get through the burned area, over the 8k passes, and down to a campsite at Deer Springs (256.1).   17 miles and a lot of vertical feet.   Storm was supposed to be coming in which had all of us a little nervous.  

I took off alone and started up.

Middle of the burn area looking back on the trail

Blackfoot passed me after a few miles, then I found him rolling a blunt on a pass.   Chatted for a while with him and a couple new faces Tim and Sharon from Orange county.   Didn’t see any of them again after that.  

Then the sky became angry.  The dark clouds started rolling in.  

Stopped and put on my rain jacket, gloves and a buff.   Hiked for a bit then the sleet started falling around mile 245.

Here it comes

This is where the layering story gets interesting.   I kept a vigorous pace through the storm, but the temp kept dropping and my feet were getting cold.   I pulled over and put on some long johns under my shorts and went back at it.   Soon my feet were warmed up, but my fingers were now freezing.   Hmm.   Pulled over again and put on my puff jacket under the rain jacket.   Hiking again, my hands started to get warm.   As long as I was moving I was in perfect balance.  Not to hot, not too cold.   

Around this time and Australian guy and I were lapping one another.   He didn’t say much, except that it was “hailing” and the snow sucks.   He had on shorts and no gloves.   Didn’t see him after he passed me for the third time.  Perhaps I mistook his body for a snow covered rock.

The sleet turned to snow and it fell for the rest of the day.   However, I was having one of the best days of the trip.   I wasn’t cold, everything was super quiet, and nobody was around.   I counted 3 maybe 4 passes each over 8.3k.   I only used 4 liters of water on the whole trip.  Compared to the desert, this was heaven.        

Happy Hiker

I had some interesting flashbacks to my childhood here.   Growing up in Indiana, I’d often head out to the woods to help my Dad cut wood, fix a fence, or whatever during the winter months.   Many times it was in conditions just like this….   A couple inches of wet snow on the ground, sticks and leaves poking through.   Funny I’ve never had a reason to be in this kind of environment since moving to California.   I’ve only wanted to see snow if I can ski it.    

Trail was easy to follow so the whole segment was groovy.  So quiet.

Lost in the Woods, but not really

Coming down to the lower elevations around 4, the snow let up a bit.   Started running into some trail magic posters 

Papa Smurf!

This one should have been awesome, but my hiker-trash brethren had cleaned out all the sodas, chips, and left me with some nasty snacks called “Minees” which totally suck.    There were 3 flats of the things still in the box…guess others agree. 

Trail Magic for some, but not for me…

Last couple miles were a little trickier.   The snow stopped, but the accumulation was higher.   It was hard to judge where the rocks were.   I picked through it and got to mile 256 around 6 where everyone was setup.   Nobody was milling around, they were all snuggled in their bags.   Only folks who greeted me were the Swiss couple.   They seem well adapted to this stuff. 

Pulled 17.5 miles today.   Another good day.

 

 

Day 15 – Climbing into San Bernadino Mountains

Last night Bottom was talking about the no-camping boundary in the San Bernadino’s that started around Mile 238.   So most of us are making a goal of hiking to the boundary today, camping, then hitting the high country.  

I headed out early with Bottom who promptly left me behind.   The snowy bit in this picture below is were we are heading over the next 2 days.

Big Bear, here I come

Since I was out early, several fast hikers passed me on the way up.   Here is Guo (?) a hiker from Taiwan passing me. 

Get some, Guo

Today I was passed by a German, a dude from Taiwan, Tree from China, Sophia from France, a Swiss couple, and a couple Americans.   There were some other smelly fellows from who-knows-where as well.  I’m like 3rd string on the Olympics team out here ๐Ÿ™‚

I see some pain coming

The good news is that the trail crosses Mission Creek a dozen times and the water is flowing good.   On hindsight, I probably should have reduced my water carry. 

Each time the trail crossed the Creek, the terrain got green and marshy.   In one of those marshy spots the trail seem to split.   I couldn’t figure out which one to take and all the foliage prevented a GPS fix.   So I guessed…wrong.   Walked 10 minutes around in the marsh until the trail turned to nothing.   Standing in 3 inches of soggy whatever I managed to finally get a fix on the trail which was 30 feet away up 10 foot shear sandy wall.  Got a few scratches climbing that one.  

Early afternoon I caught up with most of the folks ahead of me finishing lunch at another stream crossing.   They took off and I chilled for a while.   Tree and Sophia showed up as I was packing so it was my turn to leave someone behind. 

Lunch

Hit the San Bernadino boundary shortly after.  

The Evidence

Thought this picture was important.   Some kind of super Yucca that folks were talking about in camp that night.

The Yucca King

Made camp at mile 238.6.  The whole crew was here.   The camp site was for 2 maybe 3 tents, but all 8 of us crowded in.   Then the fun began. 

First was Guo cowboy camping when the forecast said rain was coming.   He was laying in his sleeping bag and Bottom starts giving him shit about getting wet soon.   Turns out that Sunshine has some kind of mega tarp tent with some extra room, so he moved under the big-top.  Funny, a guy who speaks little English moves in with a gal who speaks little to anyone.  

Next was a dude that Bottom, Dan and I have talked to but never got his name.   He is a little snooty.  Said he was going to study for his Phd in Cambridge after the hike…we just call him Phd.   Anyway, Phd thought it too windy and crowded, so he sets up next to the creek in an obvious flood area…and a storm is coming in.   He must have heard us laughing about it, because an hour later his tarp shows up practically on top of me. 

Today was a 21 miler.   I’m rocking. 

 

 

Day 14 – Crossing into the San Gorgonio Wilderness

Woke at the break of dawn.  Jared, Samson, and I were planning to hike together, so we all broke camp at about the same time.   Saw a couple hikers go by while we were packing up.   Everyone at our camp site was still snug in their bags when we left. 

We were starting at mile 201.6 heading toward the faucet at 205.7.   All of us were low/out of water.   I had maybe .5 liter when we started.     

Samson and Jared Leading the way

We arrived at the 205.7’s faucet completely dry.  There was quite the party there.    Found Quark and Towanda there filling up, some British gal named Hot Diggity, and a couple of other gals turned up while we were there.    Turns out that I passed Quark/Towanda last night.   

Folks were milling around filtering, but I just loaded up and left on my own.   The sun was rising and I was pretty sure crossing the wash before/after I-10 was going to be harsh.      Quark said we had to cross hell to get to heaven (San Bernardino Mountains).   Better get this over with. 

As I was coming down a short paved road to the gate at mile 206.8, some gal in a Land Rover saw me coming and stopped.   She waited there for a few minutes while I walked up, jumped out, and handed me an Odwalla smoothie!   Don’t know what it was, just green and cold.   I downed it in 15 seconds.    She was headed into work, so this must have been her breakfast.   I was super grateful.  

Please eat my Breakfast!!!!!

Followed the road, then was at the palm desert floor.   The trail was solid for a bit so I was making good progress.    Here is a picture from around 208 looking back toward San Jacinto Peak (around 10k feet I think).   I was hiking just below that peak yesterday.   

Looking back at San Jacinto

The suck really began when the trail dropped into a wash (as I expected).    For those unfamiliar with the desert, a wash is a dry desert riverbed that sees occasionally big floods.   When it floods, it becomes a nasty brown churning mess.   Then it quickly dries into deep sand misery.   While I was walking I calculated that I lost 1.5 inches on each step sliding backward.   Sorry no pics of this segment.   Go look at your kid’s sandbox to get an image.  

Got to the I-10 overpass (209.5) and found a guy named Quarters sitting amongst some trail magic.   Quark and Towanda showed up around the same time.   The big find was some cold cans of Natural Light and bananas.    Turns out that even hell has a beer ! 

Magic !

Quark, Towanda, and I left together.  Fun hiking with them, but the fun could only last so long.   Towanda was in the lead again as usual, which means I lose.  

Bye John

Gradual climb started.   Goal was to get to the Mesa wind farm maintenance shop where there would hopefully be some water.  It was getting super hot.   Must have been low 90’s by then.

Looking back again toward San Jacinto

Ran into Q and T sitting under a tiny bush about .5 miles from the shop.   They looked so sad with their 3 feet of shade, poor things.  Convinced them to carry on for a bit more.   Turned out to be the right call….when I got to the crossing there was a sign that said “Tacos” !!!  Was so psyched I practically ran there arriving around 12.     

Folks in the shop opened up their kitchen room to us and were making carnitas with all the fixins in air conditioned awesomeness.   Gatorade and bottled water was flowing as well as sodas.   I dropped a $20 in the donation jar.   This was heaven. 

Bunch of hikers were already there and others came streaming in.   We all congregated outside in a little grassy area under a tree napping.   I was too comfortable to get up, but I did take a blind picture over my head.   Expand this image by 3x and you’ll get the idea.

This happens when you feed hikers Tacos

Left around 3 with the goal of the hitting the Whitewater Preserve at 218.5.   Only 5 miles, how hard could that be?   Well it turns out to be some really hard miles.   The first segment was a 1k foot climb in 90 F heat.   Going was unusually slow for me.   Here is a pic looking back.   You can see a gal named Sam climbing slowly up.     

This climb was hellish.

Rest of the hike had some nice high-desert type scenery, but I didn’t take many pics.  

Arrived at Whitewater Preserve around 6.  Crossed this bridge

OMG, Water !

Then got lost and wondered amongst the rocks for a while

Lost

Finally made it to camp and setup with a bunch of folks I hadn’t met before.   There is this German dude here named “Bottom” who is just funny as hell.  Some of his funniest stores are finding stuff on the trail and trying to get it back to people.  Also met a nice young Swiss couple that I *think* were last seen at Warner springs (109).  

Nice Oasis

Did a respectable 17 miles today.   

 

 

Day 13 – Over San Jacinto

โ€‹Quark and Towanda wanted an early start in the morning so alarms were going off at 4:30.   Tried one of my new confetti pop tarts.   God, it was awlful.   Towanda seems to agree.   Tossed Quark a snickers from my too-much-stuff pile, then headed out.   We were on the road at 5 heading to the trail head of Deer Creek.

Alien Growth?

The ascent basically started at the Inn’s doorstep, but Deer Creek was a steep one.   Pretty much stair steps and switchbacks all the way up.   I stuck with Quark and Towanda for the first couple miles, but unfortunately Towanda was in the lead and she was charging (again).   Said bye to their receding backs.   Only evidence of them was a snickers wrapper that dropped out of one of their pockets a few miles up…..Always cleaning up after the kids ๐Ÿ™‚ 

View from Top of Deer Creek

 

This Guy is Back on the PCT!

Reached the PCT trail at around 7500 feet, so probably did a 3k foot climb in 3 or 4 miles.   Still felt good.   After that it was a bunch of mostly mild climbing to the highest point just shy of 9k.   Crossed some pretty big streams and cooked a little brunch along the way.   Met a couple guys who stayed on the peak of San Jacinto last night.   Samson and Jared.

First Snow

IMG_1343

 
Then the pain began. 

Pano from at 8.9k
Looking out over Palm Springs area

I figured, “ok, all down hill from here”.   But that was not to be.   The next 4 miles were a soul sucking series of ups and downs between 8k and 8.7k feet.   Down a switchback 200 feet, up a switchback 200 feet.   There was even one that, if you imagine the shape of a raindrop, was just like that.   Drop 150 feet, walks some flats, then back up basically going backwards.    I actually thought I was turned around on the trail.   How could I be back to the same spot ?    The trail planners are doing the devil’s work out here. 
It going so slow in this section.   Wasn’t out of breath, just had no energy.   I’d stop at every 2 or 3 switchbacks climbing to rest the legs, then shuffle off to the next one.   Cant wait to see my trace on the inreach site….must be pathetic. 
Fuller ridge still had several dozen snow crossings, but they were relatively small.   The melt is almost done here.   Got down to Fuller trailhead and ran into Jared and Samson again.

Bunch of crossings like this on Fuller…don’t slip!

  
At this point I only had 11 miles in and it was 1pm ish.   The guys were also keen to make up the miles, so we all hooked up and walked together.  It was dry slog.   We stopped about 4 miles from the camp site and I was down to 1.5 liters (plus my .5 backup ration).  The guys were a lot less.    We figured we’d get there around 7:30.

Heading Down

 
After the break, I took the lead, well sort of.  Losing the altitude gave me a burst of energy so I racked my poles and started semi-trail running down.   I just wanted this to be over.   Passed 200 and took a Selfie.   Wish the guys were around so I could take more lewd photo.   Maybe next milestone. 

Mile 200 and me sharing a moment together

Made it at 7:10, guys showed up 15 minutes later.   Setup camp, ate something cold, and crashed.  The guys are out of water so I gave them my half-liter bottle. 

 

Day 12 – Zeroed

Today’s agenda is:
1. Get out of bed
2. Drink coffee
3. Wash my nasty clothes
4. Clean some equipment
5. Resupply
6. Eat
7. Drink (a lot)
8. Update blog

I’m deep into the last 2 as I’m writing this. Saw Jim again at the front desk. He is scheduling a ride to the trail tomorrow morning. I’m thinking that walking it will help keep me whole with the Gods. Dunno.

Did my resupply.   I’m looking at it right now.  I love all the things here individually, but seeing them together as part of a 5 day meal plan makes me want to barf.   Do I really eat this stuff?

Getting ready to repackage
Packaged and condensed
Bagged!!!

Towonda pinged me and said that Quark’s feet needed another day of rest. I’ll probably host them on the sleeper tonight. Likely we will go out together tomorrow, which would be a good thing for me. She seems to know a good route to the trail and I frankly don’t feel like figuring that bit out. Once on the trail they’ll probably leave me in the dust. All good from my perspective.

On another note, my system of using the kindle wordpress app together with iphone uploads is driving me nuts.  The apps do a terrible job of syncing with the server, so I end up with dups and failed media uploads.   Going to have to refine this over time, so meanwhile everyone will have to deal with goofy posts.