[pct-l] Early Mountain Men

bighummel at aol.com bighummel at aol.com
Mon Oct 18 11:15:34 CDT 2010


Oh man, my true worth has now dropped to only a dozen blankets and a couple horses?  Damn, don't tell my wife!


I think you both have this wrong, it was actually Meadow Ed with Reinhold on his shoulders with an old long coat on, making them look huge!! 


Greg Hummel


"Everything in this world goes through change
'cept for love and passion remain the same"



-----Original Message-----
From: Reinhold Metzger <reinholdmetzger at cox.net>
To: hiker97 at aol.com; PCT <pct-l at backcountry.net>; Greg Hummel <bighummel at aol.com>
Sent: Mon, Oct 18, 2010 8:57 am
Subject: Early Mountain Men


NO, NO, NO,....Switchback, 
You have it all wrong!!! 
That was not me, that was "BIG  HUMMEL"  (Strider). 
Big Hummel is almost seven feet tall and the Indians would pay a premium for him. 
I'm just a little guy who would not fetch much....maybe one blanket. 
Now  Big Hummel, he would fetch a dozen blankets and a couple horses. 
 
JMT Reinhold 
Your worthless trail companion 
--------------------------------------- 
 
hiker97 at aol.com wrote: 
> Switchback replies: I remember in the early days of Sierra > backpacking, we just bit off the snake's head and spit it out.  No > problem.  This was back when the last ice age glaciers were > retreating.  Snake kabobs were always a treat at a deep wood's > campfire.  I think that is where I first met Hula-Snow Bunny Boy.  A > bunch of us gnarly mountainmen were discussing the Indians saying we > were just another wave of Illegal Aliens invading their lands.  And in > walks Bunny Boy all dressed up like he is a real mountainman.  We > could tell right away he was really a pilgrim from the low lands.  > Before we could capture him and give him to the Indians as a peace > offering he took off into the woods.  I did not see him for years > afterwards until he showed up in the PCT community --- I rest my case.    

 



More information about the Pct-L mailing list