Destinations & Things To Do
Week 13: NorCal Blues and Butterflies

Day 86
Hangover CITY! Wow I was not expecting to feel it as much as I do. We drank a 40oz, then a pitcher, then cowboy camped right by the trail. I woke up with a dry mouth and I was ready to get the miles done.
The first bit of today was tough but really beautiful! We hiked up a mountain that overlooked another with the famous Donner Tunnels. They’re these old train tunnels that are out of service and people now graffiti and paint murals in! We were hoping to go but the beer guided us elsewhere.
We hiked to I80, where there was water and restrooms. There was also a Donner Party plaque that told me they got lost only 5 miles from where I stood!
We did 18 miles total today which is less than what we planned. The elevation wasn’t too bad but we did climb for a while. There was a lot of up down up down up down and in snow! I’m ready to be done with the snow.
I’m looking forward to getting to Sierra City tomorrow! We have about 20 miles to get to the campground there and were debating camping close to the trail or getting a ride into. Either way, we’re dropping off our bear cans and warmer clothes at the post office! We are very excited to make our packs lighter.
Songs today: “Edge of the Earth”- The Beaches, “Tieduprightnow”-Parcels
Day 87
We did the 20 miles to Wild Plum Campground! It’s been a lovely day, even if I was itching to get to town and it felt super long.
We woke up at our usual time and hit the trail quickly, punching in the miles with little to no snowy sections. We had quite a bit of ridgeline walking today, which was super beautiful because the wildflowers are starting to be in bloom! It was pretty windy up there, but I’d rather that than deal with the heat.
We had a huge descent into the valley of Sierra City. All I wanted to do was swim! I felt pretty gross. We walked along a dirt road for what seemed like forever but had insanely beautiful flowers and butterflies along it. We came to the Wild Plum Campground and took our swim there. It was nice and cold on my muscles, but having to walk after that was not enjoyable.
Once we started hiking towards the exit of the campground, we saw a sign for trail magic! We met John and Sandy, who gave us ice cream, fruit and a beer! We sat and talked with them for a while and it was really nice. They even invited us back for breakfast tomorrow! Teri the camp host gave us a free campsite right on the river. It had a fire ring, so we had our second fire of this section and ate the rest of the s’mores we packed out. Another beautiful day on the PCT! I’m so grateful for the community of people who go out of their way to brighten our day.
Songs today: “Walking on Sunshine”-Katrina and the Waves and “I’m Like a Bird”-Nelly Furtado
Day 88
Today we had a forced day of rest. It’s Juneteenth and we didn’t realize and forgot that the post office would be closed. We want to send our bear cans and extra clothes home, so we took the day off and had a lovely zero in Sierra City!
We woke up at Wild Plumb, packed up and headed over to John and Sandy’s for that breakfast they invited us to. It reminded me of summers with my parents, camping in the RV and having breakfast together. ❤️ John made bacon egg and cheeses on english muffins for us. We had some DELICIOUS coffee and juice too. Again, we stayed for an hour and had a great conversation with them. They’re so happy to be doing this!
We walked into town afterwards and picked up our resupply. As we were splitting it up, we heard from Benoit that the post was closed today. Immediately realizing we couldn’t just grab our resupply, hit the post and leave, we grabbed some beers and took a breather.
Resupply finished, we ate lunch (delicious deli sandwich!!) and had a few beers. Max showed up and we hung out with him for a bit before heading down to the swimming hole we kept hearing people talk about. As we were on our way, we ran into Mikey and JoJo! It was nice to see them and chat.
Swimming was BEAUTIFUL. It’s been one of those perfect days where the breeze hits just right and the sun warms every part of you. The landscape was gorgeous. The riverhad a waterfall flowing right in front of us, and the butterflies were flying back and forth all afternoon. We swam and explored and drank a beer and just relaxed. It felt so freaking good.
Once the sun left the valley, we headed back up to eat a large burrito and check out the local bar. Upon arriving, we were told that the town was having their weekly potluck! There was so much food offered to us but we were stuffed from the burritos. We sat at the bar, had a beer and chatted with a really nice woman from the town.
We headed back just as it was getting dark and set up a bit up from the general store. We’re going to cowboy tonight, even though there are a ton of street lights. I’m looking forward to getting back on trail tomorrow. It’s been a lovely day of rest. The post doesn’t open until 10 unfortunately, but we’ll get some breakfast and then head out after. Til tomorrow!
Day 89
Wow. What a difference 7 pounds makes. This morning we woke up and both ran to the bathroom due to that burrito from yesterday. We laid back down for another hour then packed up at 730 and headed to breakfast at the Red Moose Cafe. It was delicious! The coffee was great and we both got savory and sweet dishes (pancakes, french toast, bacon and eggs). I worked on my blog and Noah read trivia.
We headed back over to the general store where I plugged in and finished my blog. We headed out after mailing home around 14 pounds of stuff combined. Boy can I feel a difference!
We did the first 8 miles after grabbing a hitch from Pipe Dreams mom! She’s meeting him in Belsen. Anyways, we knocked out those 8 miles like they were EASY! Our packs were so light and I could feel my speed quickening as opposed to the few days before that. Some guy told us it was 33 switchbacks to the top but I think he just meant the first 4 miles because Noah counted 41 total.
We took a quick break then did 4 more, seeing Jojo and Mikey on a break! We stopped at the campground nearby for water and snacks. Then we did another 4 to the top of the next hill, which was when I hit my wall. My stomach hurt because we didn’t break for that long so I took it slow and made it up listening to music.
The rest was pretty easy, minus some snowy traverses that were just annoying. We planned for 18 miles, hoped to hit over 21 and ended up doing 20 overall. Not terrible for starting at 11!
Hoping to hit our first 30 tomorrow. I plan on eating lots of food tonight to prepare. Oh, and it’s also solstice today! Overall a beautiful easy LIGHT day.
Songs today: A guy behind us was listening to Mulan’s “I’ll Make a Man Out of You” so that was stuck in my head for a while. Also “Manchild” -Sabrina and “on top of the world”-Imagine Dragons and of course Cha Cha Slide
Day 90
Well we didn’t hit 30 miles today! But that’s okay. Tomorrow will be the day I can feel it. We took a nap mid day and I think that’s what did it for us.
Anyways we woke up and apparently a few people camped near us, including Max and Smokey. We were the last ones out which didn’t do us any favors.
We did an uphill climb, then downhill, and repeat that a few times throughout the day. There were lots of blowdowns (logs on trail) and that was a bit frustrating. We also dealt with some snow in the beginning of the day but we conquered it quickly and moved on!
Around 17 miles in we took our lunch break. it was almost two, and we filtered water and napped until 3 :’). Waking up and attempting another 13 miles was tough. We saw Mikey and Jojo and they were shocked to see us because of our 30 mile attempt.
We made it a marathon today. 46 miles to Belden, so if we do 30 tomorrow then it’s a quick 16 to pick up our resupply and hopefully get a shower.
Anyways, after the nap we had some small climbs but after a bit I could feel myself slowing down. We took some breaks and ate food but I think we both knew the 30 wasn’t happening. Our campsite is gorgeous though! We’re surrounded by tons of flowers and have some beautiful views.
Songs today: “I’ll Make a Man Out of You”-Mulan soundtrack on repeat all day long
Day 91
Did not make it to 30 yet again and feeling so down about it! Which feels crazy because we did 28 and that is more than enough, especially if our bodies had enough. I had a really tough day and it involved lots of tears.
I don’t think I want to say much, other than this:
Hiking can be really hard. Mentally and physically. I want to hit 30 miles so bad but it feels like there’s some invisible barrier once I hit 26 where my body is yelling ENOUGH!!
I need to eat more food. I think my body is yelling ENOUGH and also FEED ME MORE FOOD!! So more of that, please.
Noah is an angel, truly. He is so supportive and understanding. I was feeling so down about not making it to 30 miles and he knew exactly what to say to make me feel better.
I’m having a hard time appreciating NorCal in the way I appreciated the Sierra. I knew it was going to be different, but it’s been mentally tough to get through the day.
I’m still feeling so grateful to be here and for this experience. I do NOT plan on quitting this trail. I will not! I think I’m just in a bit of a valley currently. Time to climb! Hoping tomorrow goes better.
Oh and also – it’s always a visually beautiful day on trail. We had some hard climbs that gave us rewarding views. I’ll always try my hardest to appreciate that.
Songs today:”Island in the Sun”-Weezer and “Not Like Us”-Kendrick
Day 92
A MUCH BETTER DAY HAPPENED TODAY! We were both pretty excited to hike into Belden, so we crushed the miles quickly.
We woke up at our normal hour and quickly got moving, ready to be in town. We made it by 1:30, hitting 20 miles for the day!
The first climb was really gorgeous. We entered Bucks Lake wilderness, an area that was protected by a family for years and years. It was cool to read the history then walk through. The climb wasn’t too tough so we did it pretty quickly.
After this, we headed into the forest and traversed some beautiful meadows with flowers and butterflies galore. The smells are incredible and the nature out here feels untouched by mankind. I’m trying my best not to take it all for granted.
Anyways, we had another small climb and then a seriously intense descent into Belden. My knees were so angry! It was brutal, hiking switchbacks into the valley. It got hotter and hotter, and all we could talk about was the river we were hiking to.
Once we arrived, we realized the festival that was over the weekend (it’s Monday) was still going on. There were food trucks and tons of people! Some gave us water and a lift to the center of town. We ate some pizza, had a root beer float and charged some of our stuff.
Then we headed to the RV park, grabbing a hitch from a nice guy. We grabbed our resupply from my brother and sister in law and had the best time opening it. They sent some really incredible items, like thin mints (!!!!), peeps, jelly beans, and some personal keepsakes (polaroid of my nephew!)
We settled in there for the night, enjoying some milkshakes and dinner, then meeting some of the people that lived there. This guy named Yoda was an awesome dude. He has slingshots and slingshots at a target nailed to a tree. He taught us how to slingshot and we drank some beers and hung out with him. It felt like an incredibly chill summer night. We showered and did our face masks given to us in our resupply (thanks Calamoneris!) and talked to my brother on facetime for a bit. It was a beautiful end to a tough day on the knees.
Songs today: “YMCA”, “London Bridge”-Fergie and “Hollaback Girl”-Gwen
This week was a pretty good one, especially since it started with a bit of a hangover! The towns in Northern California are some of my favorite so far. They’re small and are filled with some of the kindest people I’ve met. While I’m beating myself up for not doing the mileage I want to be ready for, I really am enjoying the landscape. The forests are lush, the views are immense, the flowers smell great and I’m on my way to finishing California. We’ve got a big burn to walk through next, so I’m hoping we can up the mileage and speed through them!
Destinations & Things To Do
South Africa, Botswana among world’s top travel destinations in 2025

South Africa has secured the impressive title of the fourth-best country globally for travel in the 2025 Telegraph Travel Awards, standing as the highest-ranked African nation on the list.
Aerial view of Cape Town/Sharaan Muruvan/Unsplash
This accolade reinforces South Africa’s status as a leading global tourism destination, maintaining its place in the top 10 for over a decade.
Voted for by tens of thousands of Telegraph readers, the annual awards celebrate the world’s most cherished travel spots. South Africa’s appeal lies in its diverse offerings—from the cosmopolitan allure of Cape Town and the wildlife-rich Kruger National Park to the stunning Garden Route.
Cape Town, notably, earned praise beyond the national spotlight, ranking highly in the Telegraph’s city-specific polls. Additionally, the city was named one of the world’s top 20 nightlife destinations in The Times’ 2025 global nightlife rankings, recognised for its vibrant after-dark scene.
From gritty warehouse raves to glamorous rooftop lounges, Cape Town pulses with Afro-house and amapiano beats that keep locals and visitors dancing until dawn.
Botswana also features prominently, placing 10th on the Telegraph’s list. Though its rank remained steady, Botswana continues to captivate travellers with its pristine wilderness and commitment to conservation-led tourism, securing its reputation as one of Africa’s most timeless travel gems.
Top 10 Countries in the 2025 Telegraph Travel Awards:
- New Zealand
- Japan
- India
- South Africa
- Greece
- Australia
- Peru
- The Maldives
- Costa Rica
- Botswana
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ALSO READ: Kalahari in winter: Where chill air meets golden dunes
Destinations & Things To Do
Day 82: Town Days: Zero Miles and 6000 Calories

- Mountain Home B & B (off 972.7) to Front Royal Super 8 (off 972.7)
- 0 feet ascent, 0 feet descent
A lot of hiker hostels include or offer breakfast as an option. In general, there are two camps. Camp 1 is a lumberjack model. Breakfast is hearty with tons of carbs, fat, and sugar. Camp 2 is a fresh model. That breakfast focuses on fresh foods that are hard to get on trail.
Camp 1 breakfasts typically include towers of pancakes drowning in real butter and maple syrup. A Camp 2 hallmark is fresh fruit. Eggs are often served at both. Some breakfasts include both camps and are typically legendary: think Quarterway Inn or Woods Hole, and as we clearned today, Mountain Home B & B.
What Fruit Do You Not Eat?
Last night, well were instructed to select our entree for breakfast. I chose eggs with vegetables and cheese. The Historian selected an exotic pancake and egg entree.
We were also asked the seemingly odd question, “What fruits do you not eat?” The rhetoric was a little strange, so it stuck in my mind. Both of us said there really were no fruits we didn’t eat.
When we arrived for breakfast, prior to our entree arriving, we were presented with tea, coffee, juice and an astonishing fresh fruit plate. I was so excited, I forgot to snap a photo to share with you until I had eaten well over half of the offering. Imagine twice as much as you see in the photo!
After the fruit, our entrees arrived. They were delicious and piping hot. In addition to my fruit and eggs, I was treated to high quality, plain Greek yogurt (in top right of photo).
Packing Up
Our hosts had received a resupply package for our last Virginia segment. I was too hot and tired to deal with it last night so this morning we took it on.
Our process usually includes The Historian sorting food and me inventorying and placing it into our IAGB approved bear bags. We have gotten pretty fast at the job so it was not too tiresome.
Hiker Stink and Dryer Sheets
In addition to our food resupply, we had beautifully washed clothes. They had gotten unscented soap just for us so our clothes didn’t smell of hiker stink or grocery store perfume.
As it turned out, the laundry soap that the hostel used was not chemically manufactured scents, but fairly light, natural ones so we would have been OK without the special unscented soap but it was very kind.
In the Rockies, where we live, we jokingly call freshly washed day hikers “dryer sheets.” It is a little sarcastic, but is not meant unkindly.
When we are hiking, we often smell laundry soap scents well ahead of hearing or seeing other hikers. Occasionally, someone will pass us drowned in perfume but those are usually people where one member of the couple is reluctantly following the other during their “outdoor adventure vacation.”
Mostly, we smell the laundry scents they advertise on television. You know the kind, the actor presses their nose into a pile of laundry and the voice over says, “Smells fresh up to 6 weeks after washing.”
What people who don’t live around grizzly bears rarely consider is that the soap elixirs are usually food based. Here comes a hiker marinated in fresh lemon lime with a hint of peach. We imagine the bears nodding wisely at each other trying to decide which flavor hiker they most desire.
Transferring to Front Royal Super 8
The hostel was going to be closed for a family event so we organized to transfer to the Super 8 downtown. After packing our food and fresh, unscented clothes into our packs, we got a ride to town from the hostel owners.
The Library of Congress
Since it was still early, our room was not yet ready. We had a delightful conversation with the front desk clerk about the history of the Library of Congress. It turns out she was a history buff with loads of knowledge. She and The Historian kept the threads of the conversation going for two days.
After about 10 minutes of listening to these two avid history people go on about its establishment and the impact of the War of 1812, I excused myself to go work on the blog.
What I heard was that Congress wanted a resource library they could consult as they wrote laws. The library was established in the year 1800 with a $5000 approtiation. During the war of 1812, the British attacked Washington and the Library was burned when they burned the Capital.
To rebuild the collection, the Library purchased Thomas Jefferson’s personal library of 6487 books for $23,950 in 1815.
After selling his collection to Congress for the good of the cause, Jefferson discovered he could not live without books and so he built a third collection (his original library burned). This library is housed in Monticello and still offers research opportunities to scholars.
Into Our Room and Out for Food
We got into our room around 1 and dumped our packs. Hunger was floating around. We decided to walk to the grocery store and procure food to top off our resupply and for town.
On the way to the store, we spotted rhe Chinese resturant we had desired to order from the night before, when it was closed. We made an on the fly decision to eat then get more food at the grocery store. Perfect hiker hunger logic.
The buffet appeared a little spare when we first assessed it. What we didn’t understand was that the owners placed out small amounts of freshly prepared food every few minutes rather than fill a buffet and let it sit.
My it was good! I worked for 5 weeks in China in 1992. This was the closest to real Chinese food I have eaten in the USA. Some of the dishes were Americanized, but a few were more like I remember the food in China.
Just like this morning, I didn’t get a good photo since I was too busy eating.
Grocery Shopping
Stuffed to the gills, we headed to the grocery store. I was glad to have a cart to hang on to so I could keep my balance with my stuffed belly proceeding me.
The Historian agonized over which fresh fruit bowl he wanted. Melons or berries? With sorrow, he finally put a package of mixed cut melon in the cart. As we went across the produce section, we spotted a mixed melon bowl with berries in it. Hallelujah!
We thoughtfully selected salad to go with our fruit. To that we added freshly baked sourdough and some blue cheese. I also got a quart of plain yogurt. We were proud of our thoughtful purchases. Maybe being stuffed when we arrive at the store kept us on track.
Just Chilling
By the time we got back to the hotel, we had put in an active 10 hour day. Town chores are notoriously harder than the average hiking day. For card carrying introverts like us, all the visiting with others at hostels are enormous fun but also exhausting.
In our lonely, quiet, private hotel room, we closed the door and put our feet up and rested. Then we ate some more. Breakfast is a long time off.
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Destinations & Things To Do
Mosquitos Love Pretzel, It’s Not Mutual

Day 29
Yahoo!!
Yippie!!
Hurray!!!
Almost fell into a creek within .3 of the start of my day! Hulked my way back onto the log and walked the rest of the way across! My left leg was in the water up to my thigh! Adrenaline pumping!!!
Whole situation just made me feel so strong, and incredibly alive.
Creek crossings today were some of the most intense on the trail so far, but nothing I felt uncomfortable doing on my own.
Went across this big, beautiful plateau with panoramic views, and as I walked across I had the constant companion of the wind, stronger than usual. Hair and clothes and backpack straps all whipping in the wind.
All of this was my preamble to FORESTER PASS! Several snow fields, a bit of losing the trail, and relocating it. My little mantra became “Don’t die, locate the trail, put body on trail. Repeat as necessary.”
I eventually made it to the final push and waited for Bubbles to catch up to climb together. Half a dozen or so other hikers all filtered water and gathered at the bottom before the final ascent.
Up was relatively easy, almost no snow. The view at the top was just STUNNING. Then the descent involved several long stretches of snow fields with boot pack that we carefully placed each step in. It wasn’t overwhelmingly frightening, but I wasn’t quite underwhelmed by the challenge either. We decided we were thoroughly “whelmed” by it. Goldilocks amount of fear and focus.
To make today even better, we heard tale of some trail magic at the bottom of the downhill in the valley, despite there being no road to access the area. Lo and BEHOLD, a group of trail angles arranged for HUNDREDS of pounds of cheese, tortillas, sausage, Nutella, and a whole lot more out to this campsite. Apparently they do it every year, and in an EXCELLENT location, because by this point in our resupply, everyone is STARVING. One of the best trail magic experiences I’ve ever had, with so many of my friends around.
Unfortunately, it was also the coldest night so far, and dipped down below freezing. Did my best to stay warm in my 30 degree quilt.
Some days make you feel like everything you did to get here was worth it. All the jobs, saving money and hard work to even be in California, hiking this trail. Today was one of those days. Views, challenge, friends, trail magic.
Chef’s kiss, universe.
Day 30
“It’s the too huge world vaulting us- and it’s goodbye, but we lean forward to the next crazy venture beneath the skies”
Started the day early and accessed Bishop via Kearsarge pass. One of the trail angels from the night before gave me and a friend a ride all the way to the Subway in town. The place I’d been dreaming of all morning. I recited my order as I powered up and over the beautiful panoramic pass, past alpine lakes and snow and wildflowers.
“Italian herb and cheese, double rotisserie chicken, double provolone, double toasted. Lettuce, tomato, bell pepper.
BBQ sauce and so much honey mustard, it’s dripping down the sides.
Baked lays, coke no ice.”
After satisfying my immense hunger, I went to this super lovely hostel in town where I’m staying for the night. Bunks with curtains, awesome shower, laundry, common spaces, big hiker box. Most importantly, walking distance from Taco Bell.
Lots of hikers here, great vibes, decent prices. A well deserved rest and reset after the last stretch in the Sierra.
Day 31
“The pain of discipline is less than the pain of regret”
Officially one month in!
To celebrate (and also because no one can stop me), I started the day with a Taco Bell feast that took about 2 hours to polish off. I wanted to place my order right as they opened at 8, but I politely waited until about 8:25 before dropping $30, and finishing every last bite.
Not long after, I hitched back to Independence to visit the post office. My missing bear canister with my 10 degree quilt was finally located after a great deal of heartache this last week or so, and is now being forwarded to Mammoth Lakes. Thank goodness.
With my resupply picked up, and the lost mail found, I headed across the street to the gas station and cracked a tall boy of Twisted Tea. Had some drinks and shot the shit with Banquet, who I’d met in Kennedy Meadows. We teamed up to hitch back to Bishop, where I decided to take a zero.
Got dropped off at McDonald’s, hit up the gear shop, and befriended a local climber. He showed me the world famous buttermilk boulders just outside of town, that I’ve seen Reel Rock documentaries about. So epic.
Day 32
Left Bishop with a belly full of food, a bear canister stuffed to the brim with a seven day resupply, clean clothes, and a shower.
What more can you ask for?
8 miles up and over Kearsarge Pass again, camped at the intersection of the side trail and PCT.
Bubbles on the north side of Forester Pass!
Day 33
“I love suffering. It brings me so close to god.”
Longgg day, pack feeling heavy. Seven days of food, trying to carry light water. Mosquitos 🦟 were miserable today, doubled down on deet. Had bad, emergency 💩. Probably too much Taco Bell.
Things I’m grateful for- hearing from Andy early today. Having the perfect amount of snacks. Deet. Friends and company, new and old. Rice crispy treats. My sun umbrella. A body that can hike, and a mind that can keep pushing when I’m exhausted.
Thankful for my tent, for keeping the bugs out, providing shelter. My quilt for keeping me mostly warm, and my clothes doing the rest of the job so I can sleep through the night.
Grateful for plentiful water sources, and for making it across each creek today by jumping from rocks and logs, and never getting my feet more than a little wet. Especially considering there were at least half a dozen of those types of crossings.
I’m grateful for going to bed early, which I’ll be doing here in a few minutes.
And most of all, I’m grateful to be hiking the Pacific Crest Trail. To be in the Sierra. To be healthy and strong and capable of doing this. To have worked so hard to save the money for this trip. For being so committed to this goal.
Things I am less grateful for- Clouds of bugs so thick you have to hold your breath as you pass through them, or else risk inhaling them. Having to hike breathing through my teeth, so I don’t choke on a bug again, like yesterday. Sunglasses having to stay on, not for the sun, but to shield your eyes from the winged invaders.
By this point, I have agreed to the terms and conditions of deet. Give me the cancer, destroy my gear, melt my plastics. Just please, please keep these suckers off of me. I’m begging.
You think you’ve covered every last square inch of yourself, and then they bite behind your ears. Your cheeks. Your armpits. Your ass, every time you have to stop to pee. Even coated in deet, stopping to sit means being descended upon by a blood thirsty swarm.
Nightmare, nightmare, nightmare.
Day 34
“Pain nourishes courage.”
I get it; the point of suffering out here is to learn true appreciation. Mosquitoes worse than you’ve ever experienced driving you NUTS? So grateful for the bug net. Starving all the time? REALLY enjoy that Nutella. It’s astounding the lengths I will go to to clean out every last lick of Nutella.
Feet hurt? Be mind-blown by this magnificent campsite! This is one of, if not the most beautiful campsite I’ve ever gotten to stay at.
You learn the true value of a text from your partner, or having enough phone power to listen to music and audiobooks. Of eating until you’re actually full.
That being said, today was pretty rough for me mentally, and I was very emotional at the end of the day.
Climbed Pinchot pass this morning. Had really low blood pressure, and was slow on the hiking all day. Downhill after Pinchot, I started to catch a groove, and then while admiring the incredible beauty, I trip.
Right foot hits rock, right knee hits ground HARD, and pack shoot’s up over my head and I stumble forward. Somehow, miraculously, my left foot catches me with my face dangerously close to the ground, but I’m still off balance. I then run/ stumble several long, crazy steps to catch myself before coming to a stop standing up.
Looking back, there was a DENT in the gravel where my knee slammed down. Looking at my knee, a few scrapes and imbedded pieces of gravel. But thankfully, I didn’t go face first into the rocks.
Took a lunch break by an alpine lake with the girls I met hitchhiking out of Independence, and Bespoke also joined us. I took a quick skinny dip into the snow melt water, and then made my mashed potatoes and bbq pulled pork packet. A little pick me up after what was almost a really painful fall.
Hiked the rest of the way to the bottom of the valley, and at one point twisted my ankle and fully fell. Later, swatting at a bug on my face- trekking pole hits rocks- trekking pole punches me in the jaw. Earbud goes flying. The trail is literally taking swings at me today, like it’s trying to pick a fight.
Made it about 11 miles today in all. Had a full blown menty B at camp when Bubbles, who had been behind me, passed me at my campsite. As she was planning on averaging over 20 miles a day for over a week, it’s likely I won’t catch up with her again.
So so so many people passed me today, and I feel like I’m not as strong as I “should” be. I’ve been going the same pace as some men in their 70s the last couple days. That’s so disheartening.
Here’s to feeling all my feelings, even the ones that aren’t particularly pleasant. And here’s to tomorrow being a better day!
And quite frankly- how am I supposed to get any hiking done when everything is so incredibly beautiful ?? I look up in awe for ONE SECOND and I nearly break my face on the ground. I mean come ON.
Day 35
“Left, right, left, right, left, right, left, right..”
Sometimes you have to override your mind. The body is capable, but the mind holds you back. Today it’s been a strong focus on left, right, left, right.
Left, this is hard, right, I can’t do this, left, when is the uphill over, right, Canada is so far, left, just focus on the next step.”
With the hours upon hours of walking meditation, I’ve become extra contemplative today. This is some of my inner dialogue while going about my business today.
Bite. Chew. Taste. Swallow. Where did the berries and the nuts and seeds come from? The soil, the sun, the rain. Nutrients of decaying plants, bugs and animals. Cycle goes on and on.
Standing in the creek. Contemplating sunshine melting snow, becoming the water washing over my feet. The snow storm that put it there in the first place.
Breathing in. Breathing out. Walking.
Expectations. They’re why we get so unhappy. Expect to walk far, walk fast, not fall. So when we’re slow, we tire too fast, we stumble, there is suffering. Wanting life to be other than it is. That’s suffering.
Hike as a cork flows down a stream- once you begin to force the walking, the whole thing falls apart.
Expectations for this hike- it’s not any of the others I’ve done before. Release yourself from the grasp of expectations. Simply be. Experience. Relax. Mosquitos annoying? Good. Another aspect of the nameless.
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Did a big day to make up for yesterday. Going to try for another big day tomorrow. Walking toward the promise of warm food, maybe a whole rotisserie chicken or another big subway sandwhich, or a ton of Taco Bell or McDonald’s or Dominos, or literally anything. So hungry.
Thanks for reading! If you’ve been following along, you’ll notice I’ve been falling behind on these posts. Trail life is so busy and exhausting. Even town days are hardly restful with all those chores! More to come ~ sooner or later.
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