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[pct-l] Southbound Hike
- Subject: [pct-l] Southbound Hike
- From: David Bergquist <dbergquist@yahoo.com>
- Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 12:44:12 -0800 (PST)
I live in Seattle and am planning a Southbound thru-hike because
leaving later in the spring is better suited for my work schedule. I
will miss spending time with the the many Northbound hikers, but there
is something to be said about going against the flow.
I am concerned about the snow this coming spring. The hype in Seattle
is that this year will be worse than 1997. I did alot of hiking on
PCT in Washington during June and July '97. Following these
preliminary hikes I spent about a month and solo hiked Washington.
That year was a pretty heavy snowfall for the Cascades. It was a
"route find" most of the time above 4000' until the last week of July.
As possible proof of this hype I will offer the following piece of
evidence.
On Friday, November 28th I went skiing at Stevens Pass. Snow levels
at the base of Stevens Pass were already at 50+ inches . Old-timers
were commenting how they have never seen this much snow this early in
the season. One guy said he thought it broke a 30 year record.
Considering all this about heavy snow, I still plan to go south. Even
if I have to leave mid-July (worse case senario), I am certain I can
make it through the Sierras before getting forced off trail by snow
storms. I say this because I hike lite, which allows me to go fast
when necessary.
The weather in the spring and early summer will be a decisive factor
regarding the trail conditions. In spring of '97 there was lots of
rain and cooler temperatures. That is a major factor why the snow
lingered so long. When it finally warmed the last two weeks in July I
witnessed 4-5 feet of standing snow melt in less than two days. This
deciding factor cannot be known until when May and June arrive. Thus,
I will make my plans knowing that even in a worse case senario it is
still a "GO".
I would like to keep in touch with any of you other potential
southbounders. Please reply directly to me and I will send the list
of compiled names and email addresses to PCT-L in a week or so. This
will allow us to keep in touch and discuss possible strategies and
plans for heading south. Since I live in Seattle and ski at all the
ski resorts along the PCT, I can get first hand information about the
conditions.
David Bergquist
Seattle, WA
davidb@speakeasy.org
dbergquist@yahoo.com
---Slyinmd@aol.com wrote:
>
> In a message dated 11/26/98 12:57:43 PM US Eastern Standard Time,
> Jeffzclimb@aol.com writes:
>
> >
> > Looks like theres quite a few people planning a pacific
> > crest trail thru-hike in '99, and from what I read on the
> > list, seems like everybody has planned to start at the
> > Mexican border.
> <snip>
> > I was wondering if anybody has given thought to start
> > at manning park, if snowfall was higher then normal in
> > the sierras and lower in the cascades.
>
> > keep my options open on were to start depending on snow
> > conditions.
>
> That's an excellent idea! Through-hiking any trail takes a
particular kind of
> daring and fortitude within reasonable realms of safety.
>
> One thing that has worried me, from the get go, is an above average
snowfall
> in the sierras. I've heard of others that didn't make it through,
turned back
> and either quit outright or flipped.
>
> My opitions are open, Sly
> * From the Pacific Crest Trail Email List |
http://www.backcountry.net *
>
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