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[pct-l] Trail Markings
I guess it boils down to this: do you want a guided tour, a total wilderness
bushwack, or something inbetween?
IMO, no one belongs out in the woods without a compass, up-to-date topo
map(s) of the area, and the skills to use them properly. A GPS is a handy
tool if you know how to use it AND the map together, but is it wise to trust
your life to something that runs on batteries? Maps also can be a life-saver
if a situation forces you to bail out quickly (where's the nearest road and
where does it go?)
It is your responsibility, not the government's, to keep track of where you
are relative to where you want to be or have just been. Yes, the PCT is
pretty easy to follow in most places - after the snow has gone. However,
there are many spots where it does get overgrown by grass or brush, crosses
large areas of flat rock, gets physically ravaged by the forces of nature,
or criss-crossed with stock trails and ORV tracks that weren't there when
the map or guidebook were prepared. Not every junction is signed - some
deliberately, others thanks to vandals who remove, deface, alter, or
otherwise damage the signs. I have noticed recently that Bubba and his
beer-swilling shotgunning friends seem to love the new brown fiberglass slat
signs in use by many NFS districts. Oh, and then there are those spots
where, for whatever reason, you make a deliberate detour - either a scenic
alternate trail, a peak to be bagged, a "brief" search for that elusive
easier stream crossing, spring, campsite, viewpoint, etc.
Those beloved PCT trail markers nailed to trailside trees are becoming more
scarce - thanks in part to souvenier hunters. Many's the time I have
wandered long down the trail, glancing at my map and/or guidebook trail
description and praying that this was indeed the PCT and not some wannabe
onto which I had ventured by having foolishly missed the sign at the last
(and often very obscure) trail junction because I was watching the trail at
my feet whilst hiking uphill with my head down. Great was my relief upon
sighting that green and white marker confirming that all was well.
If you want a guided tour, that's fine; sign up for one, or stick to the
many trails in your local park or forest preserve.
For slightly less signage: take the AT and learn to love white blazes
Even less signage: take the PCT
And even less: take the CDT
Wandering Bob