End of San Juan’s Overnight

SnowdenWe’re having a bit of Indian Summer and I was eager to get out in the high country once more before cold, snow and hunters preclude the possibilities. Stanna was off in Utah hiking with her Wednesday “ladies hiking” group for a couple days, so it was a prefect time to do a solo hike and knock off a couple more Audible books. With Durango daytime temps slated to be in the mid 70’s and clear skies, I figured it would be wonderful in the San Juans as well, which it was. Crater Snowden
In fact, I wanted to title this blog post a “Durango Calendar Day”, but realized that many may not know of the archaic expression “Swiss Calendar Day”. Like Switzerland when we have clear days it’s worth featuring on a calendar, like the vintage Swiss Air calendars of the 50’s. We’ve quite a bit of snow and wet weather, as noted in the news, so the trail was snow covered in the shady spots and muddy in the low parts, but outside that trail the views with early snow covered peaks was fantastic.
Crater Lake
Crater Lake, where I camped was snow covered in just about everything excluding the sunny side of the lake (photo above). At about 11,800′ I had to find a clear spot in the trees to stay off the snow and out of the boggy grass. The best part was that no one was at this popular destination at the foot of Snowden mountain and I had the entire area to myself. I arrived in late afternoon and had plenty of time to finish my book, lounging on my Neolite pad against a tree as the sun slid down the western ridge line of Snowden.

Potato
CraterLakeTopoAs it was only 6 miles back to the trail head, I spent several hours in the morning reading the latest New Yorker on my iPad before I ventured back along the trail to Andrews Lake where I started. In case you’re wondering what I’m reading, I read Blink by Malcolm Gladwell (excellent), finished Freedom by Daniel Suarez (my fiction for the month), and started The Tipping Point by Gladwell as well.

Ladders

20130907-170007.jpgLast night’s stay at the Praflaurie hut was super crowded with about 70 hikers. Amazing considering how virtually remote it was and how far it is to get there from Verbier. Actually there were two routes and we took the more scenic and exposed route which afforded the rare opportunity to see both Chamois and Ibex in the wild. I’ll have to do some photoshop cropping to get them to show up in the photos before I can prove our proximity.

20130907-170600.jpg Our room was a double bunk bed with a Russian couple below with whom we never spoke a word but exchanged some smiles. Other rooms had 12 and (we heard) as many as 16 bunks. Dinner is served family style, with soup then salad and then a goulash with mashed potatoes. Surprisingly there was plenty and even seconds and thirds. Construction of the hut was reasonably new but they only provide 2 pay showers and two toilets for that many bunks. Needless to say it was quite interesting to see the line coming away from the bathroom.

20130907-171133.jpgWeather has still been wonderful but stormy weather is forecast. We are about three valleys over from the Mont Blanc massif and can only see the backside when we summit a pass. Another interesting fact about the hikers is that they have solidified into mostly English speaking variety. The French contingent has mostly turned at the Tour du Mont Blanc trail and now it’s almost all English on the tracks. The real interesting group is from Seattle with an 81 year old couple and their sons and families, 11 in total. Of course there are several versions of American tours on the route and they vary from supported luggage and lunches to the guided versions.

20130907-172103.jpgToday’s route featured a Hobson’s choice of 70′ vertical ladders or a long loose gravel climb over the adjacent Summit, followed by a 1000 meter descent in to the town of Arolla with it’s three hotels and single ski lift. The small town square was filled on my arrival with another trail runner’s finish line. Seems to be quite popular, this ultra trail running around here. The field must have been easily 4-500 runners in all categories.

20130907-185738.jpg

Weminuche Loop

WemLoopTop

This jagged red track on the topo represents about 3 of 5 days recently spent in the Alpine regions of the Weminuche Wilderness of the San Juan Mountains just northeast of Durango.  Without a question this was one of the most beautiful (and adventurous) trips I’ve made in a number of years.  Putting my ultralight gear to the test was just one of the features of this high country trek of about 53 miles with approximately 16,200′ of elevation gain and a corresponding 18,100′ of descent.

 

Cold garbIt’s a wonder that we don’t have to go to far-off regions of the world for an alpine experience, because we have such an amazing 488,210 acres of true wilderness so close to home.  The San Juan National Forest, of which the Weminuche is a quarter, is almost 3,000 square miles. Before this trip, I had only “dabbled” in this expansive wonderland, with most trips very near to Trailheads and access roads. Once we got a couple miles in on the Cave Basin trail north of Vallecito Reservoir, we left the beaten trail and rarely trod on designated trails again until we exited the high country at Chicago Basin on the 6-mile downhill route to catch the Silverton Narrow Gauge train at it’s wilderness stop at Needleton.  It’s not unusual to have afternoon thunderstorms come thru the San Juans, but we hit the jackpot of adverse weather the first night, when we had hard hail, followed by wet snow, and then another round of hail for a couple of hours.

Frozen TentHoled up in each of our tents we were dry and warm but the “trim” of the tent shape suffered when loaded down with snow and ice.

tgWISI’ve signed up to be a Wilderness Information Specialist as a volunteer for the National Forest Service and lucked out to have my indoctrination with Will Rietveld a long time resident of Durango and intimate of San Juans.  He prefers to hike off-trail, above tree line, and no longer requires a map. So we spent most of those 5 days high up in the alpine regions of the San Juans, only venturing down into the thinned tree line long enough to contour or traverse up to another pass and on to the next drainage.

We had much in common, most notably an interest in ultralight backpacking gear, as he’s been an ultralight gear editor and writer/reviewer for some online and print publications for over 10 years.  Our gear was very similar and/or he knew all about my choices, their weights and usefulness.  Needless to say I took copious notes on how to tweak my gear and skills.

Alpine Camp

Friendly goatsThe first four days we only saw three hiking parties and that was when we dropped down to drainages that had established trails.  Wearing a Forest Service shirt seems to make folks friendlier and it was fun to “chat them up.” We didn’t see many live elk, however there were numerous mule deer, ptarmigan,and mountain goats, plus the ubiquitous pica and marmots.  We were too high to encounter any bear as the foraging above tree line is non-existant.

Last PassThe high point, both literally and figuratively, was climb up the east side of the pass between Sunlight and Windom peaks at first light the last morning.  Our morning snack at 6:45 am was in the notch at 13,700′ between two of the most popular 14’ers in the Weminuche.

Arrowhead LeftOh, Will did find an arrowhead about 50′ from one of our tent sites. Which, according to the rules of the National Forest, remains right where he found it. Here’s hoping that I can remember his shortcuts and routes across that spectacular country.

 

Weekend Bash

Columbine

On this hike I rarely took time to smell the flowers.  It’s the end of July and the wildflowers are still prolific at altitude and the Colorado Columbine always catches your eye.  It just wasn’t a hike that I wanted to take the time to get the iPhone camera out and snap away.  Besides I’d just done this exact route either last year or the year before on my mountain bike.

The occasion to duplicate a route I’d just recently done, was that it was some place with sufficient distance, close to home and where I could snag a ride to the trailhead without inconveniencing anyone (thanks Christopher).  I’ve wanted to know, ever since I met a thru hiker (incidentally on this same trail while I was mountain biking) who had averaged 33 miles per day out of Denver on the 550 mile Colorado Trail to Durango.  He’s the first UltraLight hiker I ever met and I was fascinated on how it was possible to cover over 30 miles a day with a backpack.

Now that I am an UltraLight backpacker I’ve wanted to learn how many miles I could cover in a day (realizing that he’d done that for over 14 days in a row).  With several time constraints, re-covering the same segment of the Colorado Trail made perfect sense, so I hastily packed my gear and hitched a ride to Molas Pass above Silverton.  Starting just before noon on Saturday I managed to make my goal at the top of Junction Creek by Sunday noon.  (Daniel and grand girls were arriving from Portland late Sunday).

Every hike is a shake down, but this one had several things I wanted to test, besides my body.  New hiking shoes, the iPhone Gaia GPS system, new poles, a SteriPen water purifier and most important how fast I could travel with 8.5# of base weight in my pack.  I’m sure I started out too fast, because at the 3 hour mark, when I took my first break, another UL hiker breezed by and I never saw him again.

First day there was no rain, only loud clatterings of thunder and lots of lightening south of my track.  I managed 20.5 miles when I quit walking at 8 PM, this was just shy of my first mt.bike camp from the year before.  Next day looked wonderful, and I was doing great until I missed a trail marker when I merged into a forest service road.  Evidently the route was just 100 yards up the road to the right, but I was expecting the trail to go left and missed the trail entirely.  I followed 4 mt. biker tracks I’d seen pass me earlier, down a trail I later learned was Hotel Draw, and it was well over an hour before I realized I was on a descending ridge to the east of where I was supposed to be.  Turning around an hiking uphill an hour was a hard decision, but once I got back on the right trail I was glad I had.

I was trying to make 30 miles that day but fell about a half mile short when I chose a campsite just below a towering scree slope at 8:30 PM, with rain starting to close in.  I’d stopped about 6 PM during a short squall to cook dinner in the trees, so all I had to do was put up the tent and bed down.  Funny thing I learned was, my body was so sore that I couldn’t get to sleep.  No position was comfortable and it took 2 ibuprofen at midnight to settle me down.  Heavy rain all night tested my newest UL tent and proved it dry.  I’ve seldom, if ever, broke camp in the rain but Sunday morning I did, rolling my tent up last and stowing it outside the pack, on top.

It rained the entire morning, unusual for the La Platas, as the thunderstorms generally come in about noon.  Traversing Indian Ridge was exciting with driving rain and hail at over 12,000′ and no trees to break up the torrent.  Just as I headed down from the last pass the rain abetted and I was possible to view the vast forest below.  I used the Spot Locator to signal Stanna that I was approaching the trailhead meeting point and she was there just before I got to the intersection.

Met and saw a number of hikers and bikers along the way.  Most interesting was seeing 3 solo bike packers, one of whom was a racer from the Colorado Trail race which started 7 days earlier.  She had gotten altitude sickness in climbing the first 6,000′ out of Durango and bailed down to Rico on the western side of the LaPlata mountains.  After recovering for 4 days, she set out again to finish the race to Denver.  Wish I’d taken her photo as we talked about 10 minutes at a stream.  Her bike had much the same gear I use on my bikepacking rig.

MolasJunction ElevationsWith the extra mileage down Hotel Draw I’d covered 61 miles in 48 hours, from noon Friday to noon Sunday.  What I learned was: 20 miles is okay, 25 is tiring and 30 makes for a real hard day.  I’m still trying to validate the elevation gain and loss, but my GPS says 34,000′.  My new shoes aren’t that great, I need waterproof over-mitts and I should have loaded the topo maps in my GPS before I left.  SteriPen works fine but I need to modify the wide-mouth bottle cap.  All good to know.

Agressive Marmot

MarmotTook a weekend hike along the Colorado Trail between Molas Pass and Coal Bank Pass which is entirely above 10,500′ elevation.  It was an invitation for Senior Outdoors folks to try out and see Ultra Lite gear in a high altitude hiking and camping setting.  Unfortunately only 3 members of the choir showed up, probably because it was Father’s Day weekend.

breakEngineerNever-the-less, as John Martin’s trip report states it was “just average gorgeous”, if only the three of us took advantage of the weather.  Total pack weights (including food and water) was 15, 15 and 17 pounds.  The night temps were down to 29 or 30°, it didn’t rain but there was a very short period of graupal snow. We all tested some new piece of gear and were satisfied with performance, warmth and versatility.

What was unique to all of us was the tribe of aggressive marmots we found at our first camp choice.  We’d each pitched tents near the edge of a large meadow to cut the wind and have smoother ground.  Almost before we had the tents up the large marmot pictured above started coming after our gear on the ground, with us no less than 5 feet away.  He’d (or she’d) dart away and be back in seconds once they perceived we weren’t a threat.  We became a threat after he picked up my hydration valve and started nibbling on it.  Sticks and rocks wouldn’t keep him away, but he still managed to bite a hiking pole plastic joint, and another plastic item.

We decided to move the tents into the center of the meadow where we could keep an eye on the marauders (several buddies showed up by now – coming in at various points on the perimeter).  While we were finishing dinner another marmot came so close, John decided to run them off with rocks we’d gathered for just that eventuality.  Unfortunately one rock went “way” wild and my new cuban fiber Hexamid Twin tent took a direct hit, creating a star shaped rent in the top panel.  By this time, we feared that once we went to sleep they’d be gnawing on our tents and lines directly and we de-camped to higher ground a quarter miles up the trail.  No further encounters were experienced.

PassCkCaveAll in all the weather was superb, since the summer monsoons hadn’t begun and at that altitude it was cool enough to enjoy hiking in the direct sun.  We covered about 19 miles in two days with a couple of planned route variances, including a visit to a limestone cave we’ve always heard was in the vicinity.

Love to show you this trail. It is mostly level with only one climb in the middle.MarmotCamp

 

 

Castle Rock

smgNeedlesA friend of our’s is often quoted as saying, “I can’t believe I get to live here!”  Guess we’d like to remember to say that more often.

View of the West Needles from atop Castle Rock on the Elbert Trail.

Elbert Trail HIkeAs a part of our training for the Haute Route this Fall we knocked off a local favorite just north of Durango overlooking the upper Animas Valley just shy of Purgatory (Durango Mountain Village Ski Area).  Just a morning hike of 2.73 miles but the views are outstanding and you’re home in-time for lunch.

I was testing the Gaia GPS app – http://www.gaiagps.com -for my iPhone to see how well it takes and transfers GPX tracks and was very impressed at the ease and simplicity.

 

Sawyer Squeeze Water Filter Fail

Seal leakInitially excited by product reviews and then by actually weighing and including the Sawywer Squeeze Water Filter system in my ultralight gear, I was disappointed and alarmed to see untreated water dripping and squirting directly into the newly treated water.  My hiking companions wouldn’t drink any on my filtered water saying, “your water isn’t clean.  I’d rather pump mine.”

Pin holesThis was the first time I’d ever carried and tried my new Sawyer Filter system.  I noticed it squirting out of two different pinholes mid-bag on the first squeeze and then saw a steady stream flowing between the nylon filler top and the bag.  Good thing we had other filters and Aqua Mira on the same trip.  The sparse weight and convenience to quickly filtering water doesn’t do any good if you still get tainted water into the filtered water.  I’ve written Sawyer and sent photos of the two separate problems with my 1 liter squeeze bag and not heard a word from the company.  A search online shows that other purchasers have had leak problems as well.  Most the forum responses suggest using other manufactures bags. Here is a link to other fails (http://www.backpackinglight.com/cgi-bin/backpackinglight/forums/thread_display.html?forum_thread_id=65866). If that’s the case, then paying for the system and 3 included bags in the first place for $49.95 seems like a rip-off.  Sure you can buy replacement bags but those will probably leak too since they are exactly the same.  And if you need another companies bags why should we pay for 3 Sawyer bags in the first place.  Why risk taking a system that will leak and drip bad water into good water?

Grand Gulch

Square TowerDesert hiking is said to be addictive, but I think it’s just another version of a pastime that offers a glimpse of something many folks don’t afford themselves the opportunity to experience.  Fortunately I’ve had the opportunity to visit our southwestern desert this spring with two guys who’ve spent considerable time over the last 30 years in this region, and between them I’ve managed 4 backpacking trips, giving me just a taste of what resources we have 3 – 5 hours from Durango.  Our local desert, which I always said begins on the south city limits of Durango (while the alpine high country starts on the the north city limits), is just the place to spend your pre-summer shoulder recreation season.

Long HouseWhile it still can be cool at night even on these desert backpacking trips, the daytime hiking temps are superb. (I’ve finally ordered a 20° ultralight sleeping bag to take more advantage of the high desert nights in Spring and hopefully Fall).  The first March trips still had snow in the shadows and on some trails we were the first trekkers of the season, stepping on puffy humus trails swollen from a winter of hibernation under the snow.  As March rolled on we saw more and more folks making their spring break/cabin fever escapes and taking advantage of desert trails of the southwest just like us.  What is totally amazing to us was just how many hikers were from more than 2 full days away from these destinations.  Evidently the Pacific Northwest hikers take their Spring break in the American Southwest.  And while I’m thinking of it, it’s really worth noting that 96% of the desert hikers we’ve seen so far are over 60 years old, some well over.

The Grand Gulch of Cedar Mesa is so popular the BLM only allows 20 folks a day to enter the area.
Perfect KivaFortunately the groups are generally 2-4 and, like river trips, travel at varying paces and you might only see one or two groups a day, or even none as in our last two days on the trail.  Day hikers start on both ends of Grand Gulch trail as there is a popular ruin within 5 miles from each Inside Kivadirection, so after the first major ruin the volume of hikers falls down to the 1 to 2 backpacker groups.  Of course the major attraction of Grand Gulch is the abundance of “ancient puebloen peoples” ruins, art panels, glyphs, and artifacts.  The Perfect Kiva is a wonderful example of a cliffside kiva community ruin that is totally accessible to any willing to trek down the 1,200′ entry of Bullet Canyon and hike the 5 miles to enjoy Basketmaker living at it’s finest.

Jailhouse Ruin

You’re able to see some 800- to 1,200-year-old examples of our earliest American settlers just about every other mile of the 30-mile route we choose.  Grand Gulch has several access points and one can travel 50 miles if you take the farthest two points.  I’ve been most familiar with the southern-most terminus on the San Juan River where we always camp on river trips.  We’ve hiked up as far as three miles from the river but I’d never realized the cultural experience further up the gulch.  These days not much water travels down the canyons, except those rain- and thunder-storms that frequent the region during the summer and fall.  Torrents have been known to rip down these narrow canyons and evidence is rampant everywhere with leaves, branches and entire tree trunks high up on the canyon walls, above sand benches and river bed.  One notable point about 28 miles into our hike (and very near the western exit at Collins Springs Canyon) is The Narrows, a 10′ wide “pinch-point” for about 30 miles of south-flowing canyon.The NarrowsContemp Fremont ManOf all the intriguing cultural Basketweaver artifacts we saw, the Big Man Panel is a larger than life-sized graphic of an ancient couple stationed promiently high up on a gooseneck bluff north facing wall.  Done in the “Fremont Man” style, this triangular torso’d couple (man with smaller head includes dangling genitals, woman has necklace, purse and waist ornementation) stands not unlike an ancient puebloen people billboard advertising who knows what.  Without the hinderance of formal archeological training and study, I’m wondering if these Fremont Man graphics aren’t just how they saw themselves in the spring morning low-light shadows on the canyon walls, rather than the Abercrombie & Fitch models of that era.IMG_2950

 

Granite Veg Project

GraniteProjectThis sand bank doesn’t look like it has several hundred new plants, but it does.  Prior to the Grand Canyon Vegetation Restoration project this spit of sandbar was primarily Tamarisk which had overtaken the camping and recreational aspects of this unique location on the Colorado River just above a 7-8 scale rapid called Granite at mile 93.4.  A very popular large overnight camp for boaters making the 225 mile run down the Colorado River from Lee’s Ferry to Diamond Creek and beyond.  The camp and beach are also destination spots for hikers descending the very popular Hermit Trail from the south rim to the Grand Canyon and those stopping at the Monument Campground about an hour up Monument Creek to the south.

Our trip was the finale planting of nearly 500 plants where they had spent several prior trips in November and January when they removed hundreds of invasive Tamarisk.  In Feburary they transplanted about 120 Willows and Cottonwoods about 7 feet deep such that their bases were at water table depth.  Two palates of local seedlings which were greenhouse grown on the Rim and later wintered in Phoenix were helicopter onto the beach the day before we arrived for planting.  Plants included Mesquite, Hackenberry, Dactura, Bridlebush, Catspaw and several other for the riparian level plus several grasses at the water level. It wasn’t easy to keep track but I think they planted well over 700 plants in the two efforts.  After planting the most difficult of all was watering each with a 5 gallon bucket of water from the Colorado many steps below.  Ten people could get the watering job done in about a hour the first day, but by the third day it took 50% longer as fatigue set in.

HandSawPlanting took a day and a half and the next days were spent covering (camouflaging) our devastation with hand gathered mulch, stowing tools and supplies in the cache, inventorying, and mapping the site.  Plus we managed several hours each of weeding and eliminating about 200 more Tamarisk that escape the earlier eradication.  As the photo shows Tamarisk can reach a girth of greater than 6 inches in just 10 or 12 years according to the tree rings.  Sawing them off at ground level prior to herbicide treatment is no easy task with an eight inch hand saw.

A number of interesting things took place as we participated in the April venture.  A Colorado River Guides training trip came in the first day and provided us with their camp kit and food for their 20+ and our 10 volunteers.  Accompanying the guides were experts on various topics for guide education such as geology, ecology, fisheries, and more.  We were treated to a number of mini-seminars on the beach ,after dinner and breakfast, during their overnight stay.  One of the best was a professors’ 20′ sand graphic of how the Grand Canyon and Colorado River had different and separate development stages with the earliest Colorado River running eastward to the great inland sea that spanned Utah, Colorado, Wyoming and parts of Kansas.

Last HourThe Hermit Trail down to the Colorado is a formidable 10 1/2 mile hike in itself and so popular that hikers must vie for backcountry hiking permits just to stay in the remote IMG_2809campgrounds.  Out trip down not only featured the daunting one mile descent in altitude thru the eons of stratified canyon layers but we endured a Spring wind and rain storm (with short bursts of snow) that was so strong that you virtually had to “hold on” to rocks at times.  No photos of that downhill trek as it was difficult enough just to unbuckle packs to get on rain gear.  CactusHowever as all things are in the western mountains by afternoon the storm abated and we shed our rain gear and finished the descent into camp under cloudy skies.

Climbing back out to the rim is (IMO) far easier on the legs, than long steps down are on the knees.  And fortunately UP Coblesthe canyon colors and Spring flowers where showing more vibrant color contrasts.  Even without the infamous high summer temps we consumed over 3 1/2 liters of water on the exit.  On the right is near the top of the trail and said to be over 100 years old when the Union Pacific workers improved the trail for train visitors on mules to visit deep into the canyon.  Unfortunately this quality of trail doesn’t last more than a few hundred yards out of the over 10 miles.  See if this Panorama below will enlarger on your screen.GanitePanoMed

Grand Volunteer

hermitTrailLucky enough to snag a trip down into the Grand Canyon with the Granite Camp Planters  on their finale to the 2012 Tamarisk eradication program along the Colorado River corridor in the depths of the Grand Canyon.

According to the National Park Service website Tamarisk, commonly known as salt cedar, is an exotic (non-native) shrub or tree that grows in dense stands along rivers and streams in the west. Tamarisk, introduced to the U.S. in the 19th century as an erosion control agent, spread through the west and caused major changes to natural environments. Tamarisk reached the Grand Canyon area during the late 1920s and early 1930s, becoming a dominant riparian zone species along the Colorado River in 1963 (following completion of Glen Canyon Dam).

The impacts caused by tamarisk in the southwest are well documented. These prolific non-native shrubs displace native vegetation and animals, alter soil salinity, and increase fire frequency. Salt cedar is an aggressive competitor, often developing monoculture stands and lowering water tables, which can negatively affect wildlife and native vegetative communities. In many areas, it occupies previously open spaces and is adapted to a wide range of environmental conditions. Once established in an area, it typically spreads and persists. Exotic Tamarisk Management – Grand Canyon National Park

zPack34#I’ll be trying out my newest ultralight acquisition a zPacks ArcBlast (15.5 oz 52 liter) made of cuban fiber sail cloth.  Unfortunately I’ll have to load it up for the descent on the Hermit Trail down to Monument Creek with up to 34 pounds of load.  My base weight will be 12.3 pounds but we’re required to carry 4 liters of water (8 pounds) and approximately 15 pounds of group food (which isn’t the dehydrated versions I normally carry).  Fortunately I’ll only have the 12# plus 8# of water coming back up the trail and the water weight will decrease by the hour.

Guilt Free

milkshakesThese strawberry milkshakes will always be remembered now when passing thru Blanding, Utah after five days of backpacking in the Escalante and Cedar Mesa slickrock hiking arenas.  These “small” over 10″ tall versions were a fabulous fortuitous find recommended via Yelp! in the first town where we could get a cellular signal on my iPad.  I’ll have to admit the mushroom and swiss hamburgers hadn’t been delivered to the table yet. But that’s the reason we workout and do these strenuous feats isn’t it? So we can binge on those forbidden fruit shakes?  Now I’m eager to head back to southern Utah to burn up more calories and earn the reward.

Actually I’d like to take any of you back to this IMG_0879desert playground for day hikes or even backpacking.  One comment I’ve always made was that I’d get around to exploring our “backyard” for recreation once I got grey and now it’s all the better since I’ve adopted the ultra-lite base weight philosophy.  You really need to try backpacking with the same load you might take for a day hike.  This recent trip my base weight was 10.9 pounds for IMG_0892everything excluding consumables of food and water; a new low for me and I’m soon to go sub-10 pounds once I get my new pack.  Mid March was just about the first week that hiking without post-holing in snow was possible and mid-50 daytime temps were probably as low as I’d like to spend on the trails, but all the hiking and biking in the Durango area is still snow-bound.

Mike Taylor, his lab Ryler and I, first hiked the Boulder Mail Trail between Boulder, Utah and Escalante, which was a 11.5 mile mule-packing trail between those two historic Mormon towns.  What was special about the trail is that the first 6.5 miles is almost all on sandstone slickrock with pinon and juniper offsetting the rich red rocks.  Much of the trail is IMG_2583marked with sandstone rock cairns to keep the hiker from descending a “pour-over” or otherwise unscalable route.  At the mid-point of the Mail Trail you wind thru the Death Hollow creek bottom which on this occasion was backed up by a fresh beaver dam.  We opted to turn round at Death Hollow and search for another loop.

IMG_2604Our second 3-day trip (just over 24 miles) while we were in the region, was to hike the Fish Creek and Owl Creek loop on Cedar Mesa which turned out to be spectacular as well.  Similar slickrock but this time it was along much steeper canyons that once was the terrain of the Anasazi Indians who are now called the “ancient pueblo IMG_0884peoples”.  We saw granaries, cliff dwellings and petroglyphs that aren’t on any of the trail maps.  Let’s go back soon, so we can pause for those strawberry milkshakes on the way.

Sand Canyon

Sand CanyonFinally able to get back on the dirt, but I had to drive west to McElmo Canyon almost to the Utah state line at an elevation of 5,600 where the snow is only in the shadows of the Juniper.  Sand Canyon is a Heritage site of the Ancients that has mostly south-facing trails so the snow is virtually gone and it’s only muddy behind the trees shadows.  IMG_2514There were very few on the trail when I started at 10 AM but the parking lot was over capacity by the time I finished the 7.36 mile loop.  Only saw one other hiker past the one mile point and and two pairs of mountain bikers on the back side of the loop.  Weather was blue skies with scant high cirrus clouds and temps probably hit low 50’s by mid-afternoon.

SandCanyonTrailHad fun Friday getting my gear organized and tweaking my spreadsheet of weights.  Disappointed to learn my empty daypack was 4 ounces heavier than I’d posted last year.  Guess I’ll have to start looking for alternatives since I’m supposed to be going UltraLite these days and that 4 oz is the same as my Spot Locator, which I want to keep using.  (Good thing I got a haircut before the hike or I’d really be carrying too much)  Base weight for day hiking carrying a reserve parka, fleece hat and gloves is right at 4.5 pounds.  The whole kit was 9.4 pounds with two liters of water and food.

Audiobook for the trail was The Drunkard’s Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives by Leonard Mlodinow.  Wish I could say I understood most of the math and theories but it was really interesting and I’d highly recommend it even without comprehending the evolution of probability theory.