[pct-l] Thru Numbers
Barry Teschlog
tokencivilian at yahoo.com
Tue Jun 11 11:48:54 CDT 2013
With all this talk about thru numbers, some angels being
overwhelmed, etc, I’d observe that it’s an inherently self limiting situation.
Angels will limit themselves to what they can do. If they’re over burdened, they’ll stop or
limit numbers, etc. I recall several
years ago L-Rod decided to limit numbers at Agua Dulce. I think this was a wise move on the part of Jeff
and Dona to avoid burn out.
To tweak HYOH – Angel your own Angel – AYOA. If all you can afford to put out is water,
then only put out water. If all you can
afford to put out is one load of water, only put out one load of water (and be
sure to go back and fetch the empties so they don’t end up as litter). If all you have energy to do is put on one
cooler load of goodies and to go pick up the empties the next day, then do just
that. No one says you have to help everyone. Unless you have (enormous) resources, in
time, in energy, in money, you simply can’t help everyone – so don’t try. The hikers will get through just fine without one more cooler out there.
Myself, I’ve gone a different path from the (much
appreciated when I hiked) sodas, beer, etc. and I'd suggest other folks consider it as well. As the list already probably knows, I’ve chosen to help the hikers by doing
volunteer trail crew with the PCTA. I’d
suggest to those watch cache / soda / cooler Angels feeling burn out with trying to pay for
sodas, fruit, water, etc, or perceptions (or reality) of entitled behavior, to
try this method of helping the hikers a few times and see how it goes. Your only monetary costs are the gas to get
to the work party site. And the improvements you do
will, on average (bummed for your experience Weathercarrot having the trail you
helped brush burn up only a few days later), be there for many years,
benefiting every hiker – day, weekend, section or thru, NOBO, SOBO, straight
through or flip-flop-flippin.
I'd suggest that all the water caches, sodas, and coolers of goodies, etc are
for naught if the trail isn’t kept free of brush, clear of blow down and kept
well graded and passable. "Yay, I got a beer....after wading through 10 miles of chaparral choked trail." "That soda sure was great after taking 3 hard hours to climb over, under and around those 40 blow downs these last 5 miles." "Mmmmm....fresh fruit. Hey, do you know what the heck happened to the trail back on that mountainside a couple miles south? It kind of just disappeared there for a quarter mile - looks like it had slid away, I had a heck of a time finding it on the other side. Kind of sketchy on that loose stuff."
I'd also suggest that all the sodas, water caches, brushing, tread work, blowdown clearing etc is for naught if the trail isn't protected from external threats as well - new power lines and windmills, housing and other development on privately owned tracts where the trail is but a narrow easement, bikes, both human a fuel powered destroying the peacefulness and tread, idiots and their human caused fires, to name but a few external threats to the trail. Instead of spending money on sodas and beers that benefit but a few today, consider donating that money to the fund to buy up the private lands (for one example) - to permanently protect the trail for every single user in the future (Google "PCT Keene Creek Property" for an example of a success in this regards).
YMMV. HYOY. AYOA. 2 cents. Yadda, yadda, yadda.
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