Start: 1336.1
Stop: 1361.4
Today’s miles: 25.3
Total PCT miles: 1212.9
Another long day done. It was sprinkling when I woke up, and I have to tell you, getting up and out in the rain, when you’re warm and dry in your tent is HARD. I did not want to! Thankfully, the sprinkling was short lived. So, I did pack up and so did Margot. We had to walk 0.7 miles down a side trail and back for water to start our day, which sucked and put us back time wise-we didn’t actually start hiking the trail until 8am. Lord.
The temperature was perfection today. Cool and overcast, but no more rain. The threat was always there, some of the clouds looking more and more angry as the day went on. Apparently Hurricane Hillary’s reach is far. The wind was increasing all day, getting so windy in the afternoon that I was nervous about it. The rain is supposed to come in hard overnight and rain all day tomorrow.. which sucks, yes-but normally, oh well, such is life on a trail. BUT, we’re hiking in burn zones, surrounded by dead trees that snap and fall to the ground over a cough-let alone remnant hurricane winds.. and the burned ground is ashy and so fragile, mudslides and landslides off these mountain tops in heavy rain is a real concern.
Anyway. The views were still pretty, even surrounded by these dead trees. We had a few ridge lines to see out into the abyss, but the majority was just in the blackened trees. I even stopped to eat lunch on the top of a mountain, still surrounded by them all. Thankfully none looked like they were currently leaning my way. Margot joined me and we stayed a while, neither wanting to actually start walking again. I’m just so tired.
Somewhere at the top of a mountain after our lunch mountain, we got service! So, I reached out to the Quincy trail angels to see if anyone would be available to pick us up in Belden and take us back to Quincy either very late tonight or tomorrow morning in the rain. Belden is called a town, but really it’s a tiny campground with a general store, restaurant and cabins to rent that’s only open from 4-8pm everyday. We wanted to get out of the danger of the rain and high winds, but the closer road to Quincy would be over 25 miles tomorrow-in which case, we would have been hiking all day in the bad weather. Not ideal to say the least.
I got some action: Denise would be willing to pick us up if it wasn’t “that late.” I said it would probably be after 10pm if we made it tonight, but more than likely we wouldn’t be able to make it until tomorrow morning.. making it to Belden tonight would be over 30 miles and we decided this way too late.
I never heard anything else, because I lost service and never got it back! Oh no! We kept moving. The trail had prettier views as the day went on, more growth around the dead trees, im assuming these are older burn zones then. We had to put our headlamps on 30ish minutes before getting to where we originally wanted to camp, and we pretty much knew without saying it out loud that neither of us wanted to hike another 5 miles in the dark to town.
The sunset was incredible, and the deer were everywhere, green eyes glinting in the beams of our headlamps. We had a difficult in the dark water crossing right before camp that soaked my shoes. I was so annoyed but had to remind myself that it’s going to be raining when I get up, so they’ll get soaked tomorrow regardless. We found our campsite after walking around the woods with the deer for a few minutes, making sure we got the flattest most “non-flood-able” spots available.
We set up, unpacked, ate dinner. I can hear the river rushing nearby, but I think we’re pretty high up above it. It’s so dark I couldn’t tell how far down the cliff beside us is. I guess I’ll see it in the morning. When we wake up to rain and hike the 5ish miles to Belden. I’m hoping we get there early enough to figure out a ride into Quincy or realize it’s not going to happen and start hiking up the big climb out of there. Yikes. So many unknowns. I wish I had service.
Time for bed, goodnight.