[pct-l] Weather watch now, Class of '17
ned at mountaineducation.org
ned at mountaineducation.org
Wed Sep 14 12:15:13 CDT 2016
Thanks, Marty! I only hope what I share might help future thrus have a safe and fun time out there enjoying the hike of their dreams.
Ned Tibbits, Director
Mountain Education, Inc.
<mailto:ned at mountaineducation.org> ned at mountaineducation.org
From: Marty [mailto:rokcrawlin at gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, September 14, 2016 10:12 AM
To: ned at mountaineducation.org
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Weather watch now, Class of '17
Thanks Ned, Looking forwards to more of these emails
Marty
On Wed, Sep 14, 2016 at 10:08 AM, <ned at mountaineducation.org <mailto:ned at mountaineducation.org> > wrote:
Class of '17!
I want you to pay attention to the weather this September-November because,
for the majority of you, these are the months in which you'll be ending your
thru hikes next year. Watch, now, to be ready, then.
Doesn't matter whether you are planning on going NoBo or SoBo, watch how the
weather comes in this fall and how the high country along the PCT
transitions to winter. What you see this year, you may experience next year.
(Of course, this is not always true, but be aware, nonetheless, to help make
your planning decisions).
The points are,
- NoBo: Get to Manning by mid-September and
- SoBo: Get through the Sierra by mid-November
to avoid cold, wet, and maybe deep powder snow keeping you from your dream
of completing a thru hike of the Pacific Crest Trail.
The premise is this,
- Fall and winter weather bring cold, lots of damp, and maybe freezing rain
or powder snow. The human body does not do well in this environment without
help and that needs to be anticipated by having an awareness of it. If you
spend too much time while NoBo along the trail in the south and find
yourself way behind schedule, these conditions can and have stopped many a
thru hiker just shy of their goal after working towards it for months.
If you want a fun and successful thru hike, among many things, know what
you're up against and prepare for them, know your self and why you're there,
practice the skills required to overcome expected adversity and challenge
(personal/internal and environmental/external), and take lots of
progressively longer hikes, ending with one that is as exposed as the PCT
and long enough to require a resupply (3 weeks).
You will be hearing more advice from me as your start dates get nearer, as I
want all of you to have the fun and safe life-changing wilderness journeys
you hope for, but those come with planning grounded in reality! I will be
talking more about the "Realities of the Trail" over the next few months.
Ned Tibbits, Director
Mountain Education, Inc.
ned at mountaineducation.org <mailto:ned at mountaineducation.org> <mailto:ned at mountaineducation.org <mailto:ned at mountaineducation.org> >
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