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[pct-l] Conversation with Dave Toms (very long)
- Subject: [pct-l] Conversation with Dave Toms (very long)
- From: rellinwood at worldnet.att.net (Robert Ellinwood)
- Date: Mon Oct 31 15:25:43 2005
2nd attempt to post:
I recently had several very nice email exchanges with David Toms, who
as you know successfully thru-hiked continuously north through the
snows of the Sierra with his wife, Michele, this summer. He made
some observations that might be of interest to other hikers on the list.
The following is an edited distillation of several exchanges between us.
Dr Bob:
I noticed your "rat-infested bear boxes" picture. Do you remember
just where that rat/bear box was? Or where there more than one?
Most?
Dave:
The rats had taken up residence in a bear box as somebody appeared
to have cached food there from the prior year, and there was a
horrific mess of food, rats, poop, etc. in the boxes. We could not have
used them. The rat box was Glen Aulin (Yosemite) where apparently
bear sightings are guaranteed. We didn't see any :-( We didn't
check any other bear boxes, although contrary to our expectations
and what we'd been told, we saw many that weren't buried by snow -
it tended to melt out around them. We're very glad we didn't plan
to rely on them, because their locations would not have fit our
schedules at all; the canisters were essential.
Dr Bob:
I noted your Stephenson Warmlite 2R tent. I, too, have one
(my 3rd one) that my wife and I usually use when hiking together.
Did you have tons of condensation inside in cold snowy weather?
I have never seen our tent so wet inside as in the semi-blizzard
we had in the Sky Lakes Wilderness. Condensation is no big issue
with me, except as it wets down the sleeping bags. But if I am
going to deal with that much wetness, I might as well get a Henry
Shires Rainshadow 2 and save a good pound in weight. (My Shires
Virga 2 worked really well for me alone this summer.) What did you
experience with your Stephenson?
Dave:
The 2R is great - we have some condensation but it was never really
bad in the Sierra - only a bit on the Silver section in the snow when
we were snow camping, and lots on the single-skin end cones
(as always). We spent 36 hrs in the tent on Fuller Ridge in a snowstorm
(inc cooking) and it wasn't too damp at the end. Condensation was
worse later on when we camped in damper areas like Washington.
It was only a problem when it rained a lot for a couple of days and
the tent was wet inside and out. Opening the windows helped a lot,
but reduced the insulating value of the tent.
We find 2 huge advantages to the Stephenson : 1) it's WAY warmer
than even a normal tent, let alone a tarp, saving us a lot of weight on
our bags (we had only 225g, 8oz, of down each in our bags, yet were
never cold. Our sleeping bags are Rab Quantum 200, a British bag
with no US equivalent that I'm aware of. Just over a pound each,
8oz down, no zip, and warm enough in the Sierra at 12,000ft. Michele
sleeps pretty cold, so would wear her down jacket inside
her bag in the Sierra. 2) It's a very tough tent, so we could put it up
in exposed locations without worrying. I would definitely use it again.
Only problems we had were: his laser/hot knife fabric edging is
rubbish. Most of the fabric edges frayed at least once, and needed
re-melted with a lighter. Also, the zips would sometimes freeze and
then would need to be squeezed together with pliers to get them to
work properly. Still, no tent like it for the weight.
Dr Bob:
What kind of camera did you use? Any filters?
Dave:
Pentax optio s40 4MP digital, 3x optical zoom, AA batteries, metal
body (drop-proof in our testing!). no filters. The pics on the web
haven't even been photoshopped.
Dr Bob:
I noted your canister stove. I'm still using alcohol, in that I've been
leery of the canister availability-shipment-resupply problem. How
did you solve that?
Dave:
We had no problem. 2 of us could get 4 weeks use out of a 225
canister. We resupplied at:
1) start (half full can)
2) Idyllwild
3) Agua Dulce (and bought a 450 canister to mail to KM for the
sierras)
4) KM with a 450 canister as we didn't know how much we'd need for
snowmelt etc. - I'd always carry too much fuel in the snow
because if you get tentbound at altitude in a bad storm for
even a few days, without enough fuel to melt water, you'll be
coming home in a box. Turned out we could have got by easily
with a 225
5) VVR - didn't resupply here but you could - they stock them, also
Mammoth stocks them
6) South Lake Tahoe, and mailed one to Burney falls
7) Burney falls (unnecessary - old one had lots in it)
8) Ashland and mailed one to Cascade locks
9) Cascade Locks (unnecessary - old one had lots in it - could have
done Sisters instead)
10) (Sisters - didn't, but could have; there's an outfitter in town)
11) (Stehekin - unnecessary as we had enough)
TBH, The whole alcohol stove thing struck me as one of the great herd
instincts of the PCT (no offence intended!). We found that most
alcohol stove users were carrying as much weight of alcohol solo as we
carried in gas for 2 people. Alcohol is a really low energy density fuel,
in a really inefficient stove. If the worst had happened and there had
been no canisters somewhere, I'd have made a pepsi stove and bought
some alcohol, but this proved unnecessary.
Dr Bob:
When in bear-bagging country, I carry 2 bear-bagging ropes for quick
hanging between 2 trees with no horizontal limbs. I really want to find
lighter ones. What did you use for bear-bagging ropes? In your view,
is the flat spectra cord too binding on branches?
Dave:
We used 60ft of kevlar cord weighing just over an ounce, with a 300lb+
breaking strain. it cut into branches a bit but not badly. The spectra
stuff can be a PITA to tie and untie knots with. Our kevlar stuff has
a sheath so takes knots well. We used bear canisters for the 400 miles
that really mattered (KM to SLT) and only bagged in SoCal and
N Washington - we always managed to find some kind of limb to use.
We tried to minimize the cutting action of the cord by throwing the
bag up and pulling the cord at the same time.
Dr Bob:
Kevlar cord? Is it just called "Kevlar cord" and what is your source?
Dave:
We got it from www.pointnorth.co.uk (where they sell lots of fabrics
as well, like the .6oz spinnaker silnylon we used for our rain pants).
The very best (but very pricey) stuff you can get is actually cord used
on racing yachts, made either of dyneema or (best of all) vectran. A
sailing/yachting shop in the US should have some equivalents. If you
get the stuff with a sheath its heavier but will hold knots better.
Dr Bob:
We have the same Bear Vaults you used. I'm aware of the recent
postings about the one bear who seems to be able to crack the vault,
as it were. Any problems or suggestions, as per your experience?
Dave:
Fortunately we didn't get bear-tested - sensible creatures were still
down in the valleys where there was no snow and more food (at least
in the Sierra). Just hike with some thru-hikers who sleep with
their food and the bear will leave your canisters alone :-) Biggest
problem with the canisters was the unwieldiness of them in our packs -
made it hard to get the balance right. I think people don't always
realize how much food you can get into a can - we got 20lbs into each
Bearvault.
Dr Bob:
One big reason I chose not to plow ahead at KM last summer, as you
did, was not the snow - I've done that bit before - but my fear of the
deep creek crossings. As I look at your photos of Evolution Creek and
Kerrick Creek, I have to ask: Where did you cross at each, in relation
to the trail? The roar of heavy fast water puts the fear of God in me.
Did you cross right where the trail hits the creek or up/down stream
a bit?
Dave:
We were lucky - early entry meant minimal snowmelt until after
Tuolumne. We use the Alaskan technique of river fording where one
person (Michele) stands behind, pushing the front person (me) against
the current - front person creates a big eddy which means the back
person is stable and can hold them much more easily as long as it's less
than waist deep :-) More people = bigger group, either triangle,
diamond or square formations. I'm surprised by the times groups of
people cross individually.
Everything up to Evolution was an easy splash or snowbridge
Evolution: knee deep, easy splash. 20 yds upstream of where trail hits.
Bear: knee-lower thigh, easy splash, at trail
Mono: mid thigh, short and sharp but not hard
Silver: mid thigh, easy with only one 3ft stretch of waist deep water,
I stood in front of the worst bit, creating an eddy for Michele to
cross behind me.
After Tuolumne, the snowmelt started and it got hairier.
The nasty ones were:
Return creek - swam last bit
Piute creek - swam
Kerrick Creek - arrived in evening. Huge mass of Grade 4-5
whitewater. Terrifying. Figured out a plan for Michele to
take a running jump and swim across (she's a good swimmer)
with the rope, then me jump in and her haul on the rope.
Fortunately, the water had dropped a bit the next
morning. Got swept in once trying to cross at the trail.
Grabbed some willows, hauled ourselves out, went 200 yds
upstream and *just* made it across. Never again.
Stubblefield - swam
Cascade - looked bad but was ok where trail crossed, heading slightly
diagonally downstream. This route followed a slightly shallower
bit of the river bed.
Dr Bob:
The Glacier Peak relo: I've researched this as well as anyone can
ahead of time. A) Did you do the old west side, fording the Suiattle
River? B) The regular east side FS relo (Little Giant Pass)? C) The
Jonathan Ley (Napeequa/High Pass) route? D) the road walk around?
Any comments or suggestions?
Dave:
We did the hiker detour - Little Giant Pass. All apart from L. Giant was
very PCT-like. L Giant was tough, but it's only 4 miles up and 4 down -
really not that bad! However, I was convinced the distances for this
route overall were about 10% too low - that or our pace was different
for this c. 40 mile stretch compared to the other 2000+ !
I spoke to people who did High Pass and it sounded fine - we decided
it was a shortcut, therefore (for us) not an option. 2 people hiking
with us split off to do the original PCT & we met them after. Was all
fine apart from the Suiattle, where there was a log across, but part
of it was underwater and had a strong flow over it. They enjoyed it
but navigation etc. slowed them down a bit. We couldn't face more
potentially bad fords after Kerrick.
Dr Bob:
A silly question: I can look this up somewhere I guess, but - looking
at your pictures of Thimbleberries and wild Strawberries - how can
you tell the difference between them?
Dave:
Thimbleberries grow on a bush up to about head height and look &
taste much like a raspberry. Strawberries are a ground-based bush.
They were spectacularly good.
Dr Bob:
Looking at your pictures of the snow in N WA, I am prompted to ask:
To what extent did you bounce clothing from section to section on
your hike?
Dave:
The snow was only on our last day - made a nice ending. We dumped
crampons & axes at Sierra City, and from Chester we sent warm stuff
to Cascade Locks. We collected it all there except my down jacket
which I didn't need, tho' Michele used hers. Apart from that we took
all our warm clothes from the start all the way to Chester.
Dr Bob:
Are there other places/spots/routes you can offer "words of wisdom"
about?
Dave:
The alternate routes just beyond Timberline Lodge (before you get as
far as Eagle Creek Trail) are beautiful. Much higher and more alpine
than the current designated PCT. The route over Old Snowy later on
is also a must - I can't believe they rerouted the PCT to avoid it!
The lava rocks weren't nearly as bad as people hyped them up to be.
This held true for most of the trail challenges. Even the Sierra were
nothing like as bad as everyone had told us.
Dr Bob:
You mentioned using Sealskins. Were they satisfactory? Last
summer I carried a pair of Sealskinz AND a pair of Gore-tex socks,
as a sort of test. I wore one set as mittens and the other as socks in
wet snow. Then the next time I switched. I found (and my wife did
also) that the Sealskinz felt wet inside (appeared to leak) after a
couple hours, whereas the Gore-tex socks didn't. You were happy
with your Sealskins?
Dave:
Sealskinz were great for up to about 7 days usage. We've returned 2
pairs under warranty so far, and given up on another 2. They start
leaking after a week or so; we wore big holes in ours after a couple of
weeks, but they're a (I think UK only) 'ultralight' model. Next time
we'd use neoprene socks.
Dr Bob:
A sock question:
a) How many liners? b)How many regular socks?
Dave:
a) 1 pair liners to use either inside the Sealskinz (the ultralights have
quite a rough inner) or as sleeping socks. Nike dryfit mesh.
b) "Regular"... We took a longer pair (light hiker) and shorter pair
(adrenaline mini crew) each. The longer ones are nice when its cold,
or if we needed to tuck the bottoms of our trousers into them (rarely)
for ticks. The shorter mini crews are lighter, slightly cooler, and have
a slightly better fit. Michele switched to just 2 pairs mini crews as
she preferred the fit.
Dr Bob:
We are in the market for that elusive ideal combination of weight and
warmth in a down jacket. I assume that you did a ton of research
before ending up with WM flight vests and/or jackets? Can I save
a ton of research by noting your choice as the probable best choice? :)
Dave:
We loved them. They are quite short, so you can get a cold midriff/
lower back in some positions. Michele's jacket is her favorite piece
of gear. We did notice that the WM material isn't quite as
downproof as pertex quantum - I don't know if they also make a
quantum version, it might be 5-10g heavier if they did.
Dr Bob:
I note in your pictures your Tilley hats...
Dave:
Overall, they were our worst bit of gear- not that they were bad -
I'd definitely use them again, but they were supposed to be infinitely
durable, unlike all our ultralight stuff, but by the end they looked in
a real state. Frayed threads inside, the 'secret pocket' on mine was
hanging loose, & the brims were all wobbly.
Dr Bob:
Mitts? I prefer mitts to gloves (cold fingers), but sent mine home for
weight-saving last summer and regretted it. Could you handle ice axes
OK with mitts, as opposed to gloves? Are yours waterproof?
What brand?
Dave:
Michele used buffalo mitts (a UK brand - pertex shell, fibre pile inner;
they make lots of other stuff). It's not really water proof, just water
resistant and fast drying, but also really warm when wet. I regretted
not bringing mine. I used Mountain Hardware micro ozone fleece
gloves with sticky dots on them. Worked well with the axe, but not
very warm and took ages to dry. Buffalo mitts next time!
Dr Bob:
You mentioned "thermals." What kind? I've tended to shy away from
them because I hate to take layers off in order to add an underneath
layer, as opposed to just quickly adding another outer layer. Your
experience? Did you use them a lot? Worth the weight?
Dave:
Helly Hansen lifa sport. Used them mainly as sleeping clothes. Also
used for river swimming in the Sierra (they function as a thin wetsuit!).
We'd start out each morning in them for an hour or two, then stop and
change into our hiking shirts. That way the thermals stayed sweat
free for sleeping.
Interestingly, there was no point, either hiking or sleeping, when we
wore all our clothes at the same time, so technically we carried a bit
much. With a thermal, thin fleece top, down jacket, windshell,
waterproof rainjacket and hat on, we were extremely warm. We
never hiked in our down gear, just sat around camp or slept in it.
They were definitely worth the weight - Michele can run quite cold,
so she'd use hers more than me, but I'm still a big fan of them.
Dr Bob:
You also mentioned "fleece legs." I assume you mean fleece pants?
Used often? Worth the weight? What kind?
Dave:
Mountain Equipment co-op children's (!) polartec 100 stretch fleece
leggings. Fantastic - light and very warm. Sleeping or camp clothes
mainly, also cold early mornings. Other pants: We hiked in lightweight
beige nylon trousers all the time - better sun, plant bug protection.
We also carried lightweight spinnaker silnylon overtrousers (=UK for
rain pants) which were very water resistant but not completely
waterproof. We used them 2 or 3 times on the whole trip. We had
thought of carrying much heavier, breathable overtrousers for
Washington but instead switched to a slightly heavier silnylon
overtrouser we'd made. Pointlessly I might add - we should have
just stuck with the lighter almost-waterproof ones!
Dr Bob:
What type/make of sleeping pad did you elect to go with?
Dave:
Gossamer Gear Nightlight 3/4 length (-full length for Michele!) 150cm
pads. Fantastic, they last 2 months before the bumps flatten out and
they need To be replaced. We also used a GG thinlight 3mm pad each
which went under the tent to provide extra insulation and stop sharp
things puncturing the tent floor. My experience is that most heat loss
at night is conduction to the ground, thus putting more insulation
there (our pads totaled an inch) is more effective than a heavier
sleeping bag. This is particularly true on snow, which we only camped
on a few times, even in the sierra we could usually find some bare
ground/rock.
Dr Bob:
You mentioned "silk liners." I know they add warmth, but was the
weight worth it, and did you not find them "balling up" around your
body inside the sleeping bag? To avoid the latter, did you "attach"
them to your bag in some way?
Dave:
No too much balling; no attachment needed for us - we're not
particularly violent sleepers. Minimal warmth, mainly through stopping
convection currents in the bag; adding 100g of down would give a huge
amount more warmth. Big plus was keeping the sleeping bags clean -
we've had no loss of loft despite using the sleeping bags continuously
for a year now (we had 6 months traveling before starting the PCT).
We'd hand-wash the liners in every town. Other minor advantage was
we had zipless bags, so on warmer nights we could sleep in the liner
with the bags just pulled over us, without the draftiness that would
normally occur.
Dr Bob:
Finally, what would you and Michele do differently next time,
in relation to equipment, clothing, modus operandi, resupply, etc.???
Dave:
Two copies of the data sheets, so Michele could see where we were.
She still doesn't know :-) Enter the sierras a week earlier to avoid
the nasty snowmelt stream crossings. This would imply in a normal year
entering early May I guess. Wouldn't have carried a water filter 400
miles before realizing it was worthless and just use chemicals instead
(which we had as a backup anyway!) Carried a bit more 'real food'
for the 1st day leaving town. Taken more photos, and taken more time
over them. Neoprene socks for the Sierra (we still have mild frostnip
and numb big toes)
There's some difficult tradeoffs we made that we're still not sure
which way we'd go in future. In particular, we sped up a fair bit from
Chester onwards - 14 zeros till there, 3 after that. This meant we
finished before things got nastily cold and wet in Washington, but we
didn't spend as long in some places as we'd have liked. We also
finished in time to fly to Malaysia for 10 days rest before coming
back to jobs in the UK, which eased our "re-entry" process. If we'd
taken more time, there were some places we could have spent longer at
(Crater Lake, Sisters, Timberline Lodge, Etna). However, the tradeoff
of not hiking the last week or two in rain was worth it. In the end, I
think the weather held at least through September, but it could have
been a lot wetter!
After the incredible beauty and wilderness experience that was
availble on the trail this year, we would only want to hike it again
in a similar year, although priorities probably won't permit. In the
snowy high Sierra, we had 23 days where we saw only 2 people (apart
from the guy we hiked with).
Dr Bob:
I can't thank you enough for all your help, Dave. It helps me personally,
and - in edited form - may well help others also. I'll post this, so thanks
for all of us!