[pct-l] your experiences with fear on the trail

aslive at charter.net aslive at charter.net
Thu Dec 29 11:13:42 CST 2011


I also found that some of the high ridge portions of the trail in the 
Sierras were covered with layers of ice, especially in the morning. 
These were slippery and the fall in many cases would have been Hundreds 
of feet.  Moving very slowly with my poles and with either Micro Spikes 
or Yaktracks was the way to go.  Sometimes I just climbed either up or 
down off the trail to get around an ice shoot.  Patience and careful 
footing were very important too.

Shepherd


On Thu, Dec 29, 2011 at 8:31 AM, Edward Anderson wrote:

> Great post Schroomer.  Good advice for those who want to go through 
> the Sierra in June.
> MendoRider-Hiker
>
> ________________________________
>  From: Scott Williams <baidarker at gmail.com>
> To: Sir Mixalot <atetuna at gmail.com> Cc: pct-l at backcountry.net; 
> p-gottschalk at comcast.net Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 7:47 AM
> Subject: Re: [pct-l] your experiences with fear on the trail
>  Stream crossing in the High Sierra in a heavy melt off was 
> consistently the
> scariest in 2010.  Some of those were the deciding moment for a number 
> of
> folks who jumped forward rather than risk another.  We had a committed
> group of 5 who stayed together over the High Sierra and helped each 
> other
> across, sometimes making human chains anchored to a tree or rock on 
> the far
> shore.  Frightening, and in fact plenty dangerous, we did our best to 
> hunt
> up relatively safe crossings, and attempted the worst crossings in the
> morning when the water level was much lower than later in the day.
>
> The other was following Smiles as she stomped new track up the face of
> Mather Pass (so scary I got no pictures of this ascent) and then we 
> hoisted
> her over the rim of the cornice where she anchored herself back a ways 
> with
> an ice axe and hauled me over.  We then anchored the axe back even 
> further,
> lay on the cornice, again making a human chain out to the edge, and 
> then
> hauled the rest of the bunch over the edge.  It was imperative that we
> spread our weight and move it back from the edge as a cornice collapse
> might have killed us.
>
> We got to know folks in the desert and were able to choose those we 
> trusted
> due to experience and displays of good judgement, and banded together 
> at
> Lone Pine, and promised to stay together until Sonora Pass.  For us,
> banding together was one of the best decisions any of us made all 
> summer,
> and turned the hardest and most dangerous stretch of trail into the 
> most
> fun, most rewarding of the entire hike.
>
> Shroomer
>
> On Thu, Dec 29, 2011 at 12:57 AM, Sir Mixalot <atetuna at gmail.com> 
> wrote:
>
>> Near the end of Section A I had a young cougar visit within 15 feet
>> frequently while I cowboy camped solo.  I was plenty scared, but by 2 
>> AM I
>> said "eff it" and went to sleep.  I walked out very quickly the next
>> morning.
>>
>> I learned not to put my food bag on a boulder less than 15 feet from 
>> where
>> I'm sleeping.  Fortunately I was using an Ursack.  Now I always put 
>> it MUCH
>> further away and tie it to something.
>>
>> I also got scared at Warner Springs during the Easter Earthquake.  I 
>> wasn't
>> if the cabin was adobe.  Adobe doesn't work well in a strong quake.  
>> I'm
>> from California, so I was already moving towards the door while I was
>> thinking about the construction of the cabin....and yelling at my 
>> hiking
>> buddy that was trying to get dressed!
>>
>> On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 6:53 PM, <p-gottschalk at comcast.net> wrote:
>>
>>> Would you share with us where and how you felt fear on the trail?
>>> As a newbie I'm very appreciative of this forum. Thank you so much.
>>> Paul
>>>
>>>
>>>
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