[pct-l] Safety on the trail
Ned Tibbits
ned at mountaineducation.org
Thu Feb 7 02:40:35 CST 2013
Dynamite post, Diane! That's the way I felt, too!
Ned Tibbits, Director
Mountain Education
www.mountaineducation.org
-----Original Message-----
From: Diane Soini of Santa Barbara Hikes
Sent: Wednesday, February 06, 2013 8:06 PM
To: pct-l at backcountry.net
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Safety on the trail
I hiked solo pretty much the entire way, nobody to talk to. Sometimes
I didn't even see other hikers for days because I was way out in
front of the pack for half my adventure.
I got used to living out there. It became normal to me and things
like walls and cars became strange and foreign to me.
I felt comfortable sitting right on the ground in the dirt. The water
in the streams and creeks was better and cleaner to drink than from
faucets.
I felt like cars made short distances seem far and long distances
seem short and they went WAY too fast. I'd be holding on to the arm
rest with dear life and we'd be going 35 mph or something ridiculous.
The hardest thing to get used to when I returned to ordinary life was
not talking to people you passed on the street. They'd think I was
weird. We wouldn't know the same people. On the trail, everybody
always knew someone I knew if they didn't already know who I was and
we'd stop and talk for a long time. It seemed so unfriendly to just
walk by without even looking at the other person. It was a strange
adjustment.
Out there is not like anything your "you gotta have protection"
friends and family think it is. It's not like what you read in books
where people are conquering nature, climbing mountains, conquering
their fears, dominating, winning, striving, being eaten alive, dying
of starvation in buses. You are walking. It's quiet. Everything is
really pretty. You only hear birds and wind and creeks, sometimes
scary thundering ones, sometimes ones that sing with voices at night.
You conquer a lot of fears but most of them are in your head and you
have to conquer them with acceptance not force.
I became like a little secret wood nymph, my place was the forest, I
peered behind trees at this strange world of cars and machines and
people who talked really loud to each other and smelled horrible and
never gave me food as often as I hoped. I'd look at it all like an
outsider, then fade back into the trees where I belonged and felt at
home again.
I had a personal rule: Try never to camp within 5 miles of a road. 10
miles was better if it was a popular backpacking location. You'd see
absolutely nobody except other thru hikers after the first 5-10
miles. I broke this rule on the night before town though. I always
liked to be able to into town in time for a big breakfast. A big
breakfast was a joy of civilization that had the strongest hold on me.
On Feb 6, 2013, at 10:00 AM, pct-l-request at backcountry.net wrote:
> From: Dan Jacobs <youroldpaldan at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [pct-l] Safety on the trail
>
> Head outside away from civilization and leave fear at home. Embrace
> the difference that is unique to an experience in the wild and learn
> how to live peacefully with the natural world that is no more a threat
> to you than you are to yourself. Just keep your wits about you, and
> learn from experience. There is no need for fear in the wild. You'll
> miss the difference when you get back home.
>
> Dan Jacobs
> Washougal
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