[pct-l] JMT Query from AT Forum

Ellen Shopes igellen at comcast.net
Thu Dec 3 04:31:24 CST 2009


Ya know, I feel the same way about the 'invasion' of my pristine desert by 
Californians...:-)
Ed Abby said it better: in speaking about the wilds of the desert, he was 
appalled that anyone would go out there where 'there's nothing but nothing'. 
And more than one unpleasant way to die...
Elderly Ellen

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bob Bankhead" <wandering_bob at comcast.net>
To: "tom aterno" <nitnoid1 at yahoo.com>; "PCT List" 
<pct-l at mailman.backcountry.net>
Sent: Wednesday, December 02, 2009 12:28 PM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] JMT Query from AT Forum


> Thanks. I knew I'd forgotten a few things.
>
> Not trying to make fun of east coast hikers; just trying to reduce the 
> size of the JMT herds. Sorry if any took offense at the humor.
>
>
>  ----- Original Message ----- 
>  From: tom aterno
>  To: PCT List ; Bob Bankhead
>  Sent: Wednesday, December 02, 2009 10:22 AM
>  Subject: Re: [pct-l] JMT Query from AT Forum
>
>
>        Bob,
>
>        You forgot to mention the JMT also has evil Trail Pirates.
>
>        Tom
>
>        --- On Wed, 12/2/09, Bob Bankhead <wandering_bob at comcast.net> 
> wrote:
>
>
>          From: Bob Bankhead <wandering_bob at comcast.net>
>          Subject: [pct-l] JMT Query from AT Forum
>          To: "PCT List" <pct-l at mailman.backcountry.net>
>          Date: Wednesday, December 2, 2009, 9:43 AM
>
>
>          Someone on the AT forum wanted to know where the JMT was and how 
> long it was. 
> http://www.whiteblaze.net/forum/showthread.php?p=927639#post927639
>
>          After reading the glowing replies and picturing a possible 
> gold-rush coming our way, I felt they needed to hear "the truth". Here's 
> what I wrote, minus the emoticons:
>
>
>
>          The JMT is a mosquito-ridden dust-slog up incredibly steep slopes 
> covered with little ball bearings disguised as pebbles. If you do survive 
> to reach the pass, all you can see is more rock. Savage bears, sneaky 
> marmots, and silent rattlesnakes lurk nearby, just waiting for your first, 
> inevitable stupid move. The abundant deer (see "hunters" below) and grouse 
> are their scouts, sent to locate potential prey.
>
>          Most water crossings are readily and preferrably swimmable; 
> packrafts are optional. Escape routes are almost as bad and take at least 
> 2 days, being their own mini-versions of the JMT tread. Did I mention the 
> rampant hunters that stalk the woods, desperately seeking something at 
> which to fire their new rifles?
>
>          Resupply options are almost non-existant since the outrageously 
> overpriced horsepacking outfits have bought up and closed most local 
> roads - of which there are pitifully few - and towns, which they use to 
> shelter the stuff they rake out of their horse barns.
>
>          Yosemite? It's a tourista trap - lots of loud kids and rude 
> parents in shorts and Hawaiian shirts packing 20 pounds of camera gear 
> they have no idea how to use. Concessionaire price shock is the #2 cause 
> of sudden death in the Valley, second only to being run over by shuttle 
> buses driven by under-paid, legally blind, former NASCAR drivers.
>
>          Mt Whitney? Yes, it is the highest point in the lower 48 states - 
> that part is true. What they don't tell you is that Sir Edmund Hillary 
> decided Everest was an easier and safer climb. The only rangers that go 
> there are the ones being punished by their superiors for morality reasons. 
> Forget the ice axe and crampons; bring oxygen tanks - lots of them.....and 
> be sure your life insurance premiums are paid in full.
>
>          Decades ago, the western states decided that it's cheaper to just 
> drop their convicted psychopaths and serial killers in the middle of the 
> wilderness and let nature take its course. If they're innocent, they will 
> survive, if not............ Unfortunately, a few have proven stronger than 
> the local wildlife and even the Grizzlies and rattlesnakes turn and run.
>
>          Be smart - stay away. Better yet, stay east of the Rocky 
> Mountains. This is the REAL wilderness out here.
>
>
>          The rest of you posters, STOP pontificating; let's keep our 
> secret to ourselves. We don't need no stinking east-coast hikers.
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>
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