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Hiking in the mind

Posted: Fri Apr 09, 2010 8:23 am
by balzaccom
There's something really, really seductive about looking at a trail map. The mind wanders from stream to lake, looking for great places to fish. The climbs all seem steep, but pefectly doable on the kitchen table. Eight miles? Ten miles? Twelve miles, but most of it downhill? It all seems so easy. The views from the passes are always amazing, and the campsites are always nicely isolated.

We've just spent a few hours planning our summer adventures, and from the maps we've seen, they should be perfect trips. Of course, our packs always seem lighter before we put them on at the trailhead!

We have plans to explore the northern reaches of Yosemite this year, going where few people go, and seeing parts of that park that are reputed to be both isolated and magnificent. And we're also planning to re-trace a trip I took 35 years ago, up into the Cloud Canyon of Kings Canyon NP...with a hope of seeing some Golden Trout and the Whaleback again.

Add in a few shorter trips, one in Desolation Wilderness for a weekend, and another exploring the Wire Lakes in Emigrant Wilderness, and we've got a lot of fun in store.

Assuming that the trails are all passable, we don't get any blisters, everybody stays healthy...

But what about that other trip--the one that goes right up over the top of the pass, and then cross-country above the treeline...do you think we could get down the west face of that mountain...

hmmmm.


From our blog:

Re: Hiking in the mind

Posted: Sun Apr 18, 2010 9:52 pm
by Cross Country
The first 10 years of my backpacking life I would do this so many times each winter I could only take a wild guess as to how many. I did it obsessively, despite taking much time playing lots of completive sports. It seemed to take forever for the beginning of BP season to arrive. I was so hyper. At last summer would arrive, and being a public school teacher I would BP 25 - 45 days, seldom more than 8 days at a time. After the first 10 years I took up skiing. I could then stop going over the same potential trips repeatedly. By then I had planned nearly every trip I would take for the rest of my life.

This Thursday I'm having my 4th shoulder surgery (2 per shoulder) in just 10 months. I probably won't write much for a while after Wednesday.