[pct-l] how to correctly disobey PCT closure orders
Brett
blisterfree at yahoo.com
Mon Aug 25 00:37:57 CDT 2008
In the future...
As a compromise solution for those intent on disobeying forest closure
orders, one proposal directs that the hiker should willingly set aside
his or her PCT hat and in total anonymity hike cross-country within the
closed areas. By doing so, said hiker may achieve the following:
1) Decreased - though not extinguished - odds of confrontation, fines,
arrest, and other addictive forms of law-bashing mischief
2) Imparts no bad name upon the trail community or his fellow
law-abiding hikers (aka "roadwalking/roadie scum")
3) In active fire areas, sets the fight-or-flight glands into overdrive
- ie, maximize that rush - with the deleterious prospects of having to
literally claw one's way out of the woods upon a sudden approaching
smoke. (No PCTA-approved handicap rails allowed!)
4) In the friendly spirit of tradition and commiseration, demonstrates
one's willingness to honor at least the closure order's inherent drag
upon the hike, even if not the pesky, roadwalk-inducing proclamation itself
5) Most importantly, disavows any sense of entitlement that may be
ascribed to those who would view the PCT - consciously or otherwise - as
belonging to the individual rather than the collective. Accept the harsh
reality that in 2008 those wayward, swashbuckling days are long gone
from the PCT, but are yet alive and well along a distinct corridor of
one's own choosing.
Go ahead, own that cross-country route, the theory goes; it's yours for
the taking and private glory. What's more, if you live, only the
supernal ghost of Smoky the Bear will haunt you.
- blisterfree
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