[pct-l] Fit for a thru-hike?
Diane at Santa Barbara Hikes dot com
diane at santabarbarahikes.com
Thu Feb 4 20:07:14 CST 2010
I think your math is a little harsh. Most people are able to hike
more than 10 miles per day after the first week, and even within the
first week. You are almost forced to do this, adapt or die of thirst
basically.
Hiking lots of miles is just a matter of how many hours you want to
keep walking. It's not a matter of how fast you go. So to increase
your miles you just have to hike more hours. This is actually quite
easy. You can walk only 2 miles per hour and after 10 hours of
walking, you will have gone 20 miles and still have plenty of
daylight. The real challenge is going less than 20 miles. You aren't
on a camping trip. You're on a hiking trip. The difference will
become apparent once you get out there.
The only kind of shape you need to be in is the kind of shape where
you know you can put on a pack and hike all day. It doesn't have to
be any more than that. If you can do that but you are 100lbs
overweight, that's ok. If you can do that but you are a slow-moving
old lady, you'll be just fine.
People go home early on because of acute blisters or other injuries
or because the trail wasn't the experience they expected or wanted.
Because the trail is so very consistent in the grade and in the way
it is laid out, all it takes is a little blister and you start
favoring your foot and then you start walking a little off kilter and
then the repetitive condition of the trail starts beating that little
off-kilter gait into your bones. Next thing you know, your knee is
shot or you have even worse blisters or your back is whacked.
Eventually you may be totally ruined. Even more than being in tip-top
condition, you have to have awareness of the little problems and take
care of them before they snowball.
I am 45 years old. I'm female. I'm not super human by any measure. I
did not hike the entire trail in one season (I did it in two), but
both seasons that I did the trail, I was able to easily hike between
20 and 35 miles per day. Usually right around 28 was a typical day
for me.
So, yes, get in shape as well as you can, but don't sweat it. Hiking
the PCT is not a super-human endeavor requiring you to grit your
teeth and go all out like a race horse. Even more important than
completing the whole trail is the experience of living 3, 4, 5 months
out there on the trail. It's an amazing and wonderful lifestyle.
Since coming home, it seems most things about our "normal" way of
life are just wrong. We are meant to move our bodies and be out in
nature. Even if I had never seen the Canadian border monument, I
would still have had that wonderful awareness of being fully alive.
Completing the trail is only one reward. The others are much bigger.
On Feb 4, 2010, at 2:14 PM, pct-l-request at backcountry.net wrote:
> I would like to add that starting slow becomes a math problem. The
> trail is 2655 miles long and you have a small window of about 5
> months or 150 days to safely hike the trip. So that is 17.7 miles
> a day..every day (2655/150= 17.7). Start off hiking 10 mile days
> and you have to make up that 7.7 miles for each 10 mile hiking
> day. Think this is easy? It isn't. Look what happens if you start
> hiking 10 mile days for the first two weeks taking a zero day every
> week (10x12=120 miles), then 14 mile days for the third and fourth
> week (14x12=168 miles). You will have traveled a total of 288
> miles in a month. You will have 2367 miles and only four months
> (150-28=122 days) to finish the trail. Taking one zero day every
> week to heal (or to wait for resupply, fun etc.) you only have a
> remaining 105 hiking days. So that means you will have to hike
> 22.5 miles a day (2367/ 105 = 22.5). Hike below 22.5 mile days
> after your first month and you will have to hike even more miles.
> Remem
> ber this isn't including the off trail miles to resupply get water
> etc.
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