[pct-l] Have South Africans done the PCT before?

ned at mountaineducation.org ned at mountaineducation.org
Tue Oct 4 20:02:05 CDT 2011


If you need to make the miles in a given day, taking time to figure out how 
and where to safely cross a creek can be perceived as a negative. For those 
who have it in their schedules to hike a bit slower, taking the time to 
stop, catch a bite to eat while surveying the creek for a dry and safe 
crossing, then making the crossing in a fashion that is warm and dry for you 
and your feet is no big deal.

Injury to your feet, whether it is chronic wet and cold or trauma/laceration 
on an under-water rock, can lead to immediate danger and infection later. 
Consider the simple bang-your-toes-into-an-underwater-rock scenario. The 
first thing that happens is your sudden reaction (while mid-stream in 
thigh-deep whitewater) to the pain that may cause you to loose your balance 
and fall into the creek. Immediate danger. Ok, you make it across the creek 
on cut and numb feet only to walk on what little dirt there is and get your 
cut infected. This may cause you to leave the trail for awhile.

Wear sturdy and predictable footwear while crossing spring, snow-melt fed 
creeks in the high sierra!



"Just remember, Be Careful out there!"

Ned Tibbits, Director
Mountain Education
South Lake Tahoe, Ca. 96150
    P: 888-996-8333
    F: 530-541-1456
    C: 530-721-1551
    http://www.mountaineducation.org
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Sir Mixalot" <atetuna at gmail.com>
To: "Frank Dumville" <fdumville at earthlink.net>
Cc: "pct-l" <pct-l at backcountry.net>
Sent: Monday, October 03, 2011 11:20 AM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Have South Africans done the PCT before?


> This summer while doing trail work in the Sierras I was amused at how long
> hikers (mostly JMTers) would take to find a rock-hop crossing or take off
> their shoes.  I'd power right through the water at the trail crossing.  By
> the time they were hiking on the other side of the crossing, I'd already 
> be
> a mile ahead of them.  Multiply that with all the crossings in the Sierras
> and that adds up to many miles per day.
>
> On Mon, Oct 3, 2011 at 10:28 AM, Frank Dumville 
> <fdumville at earthlink.net>wrote:
>
>>
>> Keeping dry at stream crossings
>> In 2006 when I got to the Sierra I tried to keep my shoes and socks dry 
>> for
>> maybe 2 stream crossing before realizing that it was just not practical.
>> There were many places where the trail became a stream, twice I almost
>> stepped on a fish while on the trail tread. It becomes impractical to 
>> take
>> off your shoes. You'll also want something on your feet for the major 
>> stream
>> crossings. Let your feet dry out at breaks and a night. This didn't cause
>> any problems for my feet.
>>
>
>
>> Snap
>>
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