[pct-l] Hiking wet
Ken Powers
ken at gottawalk.com
Tue Nov 24 13:36:58 CST 2009
I agree about the overgrown trails lined with wet leaves. It is a quick way
to get really soaked. We've termed them and the dripping trees re-rain.
We hiked with an Englishman during many of our rainy days in Washington. We
learned from him that it was important to be warm, not dry. He had
several/many layers of clothing. On really rainy days he eventually got
soaked to the skin, but still kept warm.
I keep reminding myself of this when I am soaked. I keep wondering what his
layers were to stay warm. I think my answer is Hike Faster to stay warm.
Then set up camp quickly at night and get into a dry sleeping bag. I have
also found that hiking faster dries my synthetic clothing pretty quickly.
Ken
----- Original Message -----
From: "Diane at Santa Barbara Hikes dot com" <diane at santabarbarahikes.com>
To: <pct-l at backcountry.net>
Sent: Tuesday, November 24, 2009 7:01 AM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Starting Date
On Nov 24, 2009, at 12:10 AM, pct-l-request at backcountry.net wrote:
>
> The river crossings on the other hand can be EXTREMELY DANGEROUS.
Amen! There needs to be a river crossing class.
Seriously, I literally SWAM across some rivers in the Sierra. I was
there earlier than others. In my opinion, the trail crosses Falls
Creek in absolutely the wrong place. (But that's not the one I swam).
Also, a rain course would have helped me. Snow was annoying and
mentally exhausting, but not a big deal even for this snow newbie.
What I had trouble with was rain and pushing through wet leaves. It's
so depressing and wet.
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