Category: Backpacking

Hiking the JMT in 9 Days

Foxtail Pine skeletons point towards Twany Point, a worthy detour from the Bighorn Plateau.

I walked the John Muir Trail a few weeks ago. I’m not sure if there is anything to say about it that hasn’t been said before. It was just a really pleasant and enjoyable hike.

I was doing ~25 miles per day and still had time for long conversation breaks, swimming and lounging in cool places.

Highlights

  • Did 28 miles my first day. I was unsure about my ability to average 22mpd. The long first day without trouble reassured me that it wouldn’t be a problem.
  • Ran into people I knew: Rachelle, Lills, Joseph, the buds from Sacramento, the guy from a former workplace, Woodrose, Muleskinner, TPL lady and friend, the three rangers who stopped for long chats, the guy who recognized me from my CDT photos, and Rockin’ and Wired. All of you that I didn’t mention. It was nice meeting you too.
  • Running down Mather Pass and across Upper Basin because of dark clouds, hail and lightning.
  • Hiking Silver and Selden passes in a day. Mather and Pinchot in a day. Glen and Forester in a day. Twany Point and Whitney in a day.
  • Swimming.
  • The solo experience.
  • The act of hiking.

Notes

I camped with a father and son who only had onion soup and a small amount of potato flakes to eat with three days to go. Don’t rely on your ability to fish.

People are cheating and it stinks.

You have to be able to fit all of your food in your canister. Don’t carry a tiny canister because “it’s required to have a canister.” It’s actually required to protect all of your food in the canister. Just having one doesn’t fit the spirit or the letter of the law. The idea is that you protect the bears from your food. Not your food from the bears. Save the bears.

Follow permit rules. The quotas prevent overcrowding. Crowds stink. The JMT is crowded and it’s at least partially the fault of people who cheat.

I didn’t treat any of my water.

Resupplying at Muir Trail Ranch was very convenient. You could resupply from the hiker boxes without a problem.

The trees of the Sierra are dying. I confirm this every time I go out.

Greyhound has problems. There is no guarantee that there will be space on the bus, even if you bought a ticket weeks ago. There were 40+ people waiting for the bus that had 3 seats. There were 60+ people waiting for the bus that came 3 hours later.

Photographs

I’m going to ask you to look at my photos.

Head on over to my Facebook to see my best JMT ’12 Photos.

Efficient backpacking resupply

What a whirlwind. I’m hiking the John Muir Trail at the end of the month. Today before work, I planned and bought my resupply. That’s not an easy thing to do in 45 minutes.  At lunch, I rushed to a hardware store for a bucket to mail it in, repackaged the food and divvied it up, packed it, and mailed it at the post office. All in less than an hour. I don’t even think that I royally messed it up.

This weekend I’m heading to the Tahoe Rim Trail to finish the 40 miles that my girlfriend missed when she aborted her trip around the lake yesterday. Yippee!

Larmarck Col, Mt. Solomon, Ionian Basin, Scylla and Piute Pass trip report

Paper maps online?

I’m a firm believer in using plain old maps for finding trips. For trip planning purposes you generally want to start with accurate overview maps. Want more seclusion? Head to the National Forests instead of National Parks.

Designing your own trip based off of traditional maps is often quicker and less painful that reading through online trip reports. You’ll also end up in places that fewer people go to.

Paper Maps Online has digitized many of the West’s National Forest maps. You can zoom in, pan around and view them full screen. It’s great.

They’re coming

I’m quoted in They’re coming and article about PCT thruhikers.

A snippet:

Haskel keeps tabs on the progress of the hiking herd by talking to the trekkers, business owners along the route and trail angels, who give walkers lifts to town, shelter and a hot meal.