So I have decided to “resupply as you go” where I will buy on the trail and mail it ahead. This will allow me to adapt my eating habits over time and distance. To get started from home I have bought and packed food for Warner Springs which I mailed two days ago. So I will bring with me food for the Snow course and for the start at Campo. Then I will buy at Mt Laguna. Next I will pick up my food at Warner Spring. And so forth from resupply to resupply from just buying, to buy and send, and to just picking-up a package. My resupply plan is in the website pages under Mail Drop List.
However I forgot to include maps with my first package to Warner Springs. So today I am mailing those. They are from Warner Springs to Agua Dulce. I will carry with me from Campo to Warner Springs. Then I will have home send me from Agua Dulce to Kennedy Meadows if I need them. I am wondering if I will use them or not. Only time will tell.
On my prep hike today I met some ladies who will be traveling to Ireland for some adventure and hiking. They were out this morning while I was. We first briefly crossed paths as I was doing my Far West – Ladera Norte loop. Then when I was about 100 meters from my car we stopped and chatted. It was nice to hear about their trip. I explained my soon-to-be adventure which elicited “have you read Wild” which I have. I gave them my blog URL. So many wonderful people to meet now and later on the trail. Best wishes ladies. I hope your trip is as exciting as it sounds. May we meet again someday and share our stories.
Update: Only two weeks to go until I start from here…
As I’ve said before I have a preparation plan that I wrote last September and I’m following day-by-day. It hasn’t been easy, because after my hikes my feet have been sore to the point I just sit down, prop up my legs, let them throb and vegetate. However, in the last few weeks I have hiked 20 road miles on Saturday, 15 trail miles on Sunday, and back-to-back 12 & 13 miles each weekday with a 35 pound pack, and guess what… My feet although tired are not painful and I’ve been able to do other things without gimping around like an invalid. So I’m feeling better about the upcoming thruhike and the stresses it’ll place on my body.
I’ve also been working on my resupply strategy, and I’ve decided to “resupply as you go”. This puts pressure on me to buy food and stuff and mail it ahead at certain points along the trail.
Argh! On Saturday as I was hiking on the roads around Austin my left wrist was itchy. I thought I had gotten a mosquito bite, and my watch band was causing it to itch. Not realizing what it was I’d scratch on and off during my prep hike. Now I’ve come to realize that somehow I have gotten poison ivy or oak. However for the life if me I can’t think where I might have gotten it. I didn’t hike on Friday, Thursday was hills on road. That is, I didn’t do any bushwacking, bramblebusting, etc. On Saturday it was just a little red strip, but now it’s a nasty bunch of watery blisters. Oh this is great, because I’ll be starting my hike in just a few weeks. I hope it heals by then. It tells me I had better be careful out on the trail since I’m sensitive to this ucky stuff.
Update: Getting better two weeks later, but it indeed got a lot worse before this picture was taken.
So yesterday I hiked my longest distance, 20 miles, on the roads in Austin. It took me about 7 hours to complete. Afterwards my legs and ankles had blotchy red patches. What is going on? Then today I hiked my longest trail distance, 15 miles, on the Barton Creek Greenbelt. This time it took about 7 hours too, because it is a lot more rocky & uneven and I used my hiking poles. And the blotches are still there. Then don’t hurt, and only tingled a little when I showered afterwards. I looked it up on Google, and it’s known as “Golfer’s Vasculitis” but didn’t find a solution other than to just let them heal. I just started to wear a pair of SmartWool socks. I wonder if that has something to do with it?
It’s so nice that my friends are thinking about me and my upcoming adventure. Just a few minutes ago Kathy F. stopped by and gave me the following present. How nice! Thank you.
Each day I wake and do my hiking as per my plan that I wrote last September. I’ve just passed the 1300 mile mark. And although I’m sore and tired each day, which worries me, I wake and I’m ready to go the next day. So I’m at 80 miles a week and a 35 pound pack, which is less than I’ll have to do on the trail, but I’m as ready as I can be.
I got a pair of Brooks Cascadias 9s (the latest version) and started wearing them today with one month to go before I leave on 4/10. The previous ones were Version 8s. I really didn’t want black because of the desert heat absorption, but that’s the only color choice (except for an ugly red/yellow one). The only benefit is they match my gaiters pretty well. Now I’m breaking these shoes in.
On February 17th-21st I went to Big Bend National Park about 8 hours from home. This was my last shakedown hike before starting the PCT. I did a 30-mile “outer mountain loop” desert hike which went up and out of the basin to the desert floor, across the desert, and then back up and into the basin ranging from 5000 up to 7500 down to 4200 feet.
During it I really began to understand water issues having cached 2 gallons ahead of time which became essential as I was down to 1 liter when I got to the cache and was getting worried. There were no natural springs during this hike and the NPS Rangers required my water caching. At the cache I filled up all my containers and then cameled the remaining 1/3 gallon. Whew did I need it!
I also appreciated having both topo maps and smartphone w/ Gaia GPS to help pinpoint my location and distance to my next campsite/water location.
The trail was very rocky and uneven and I hope the PCT is better – gotta have my hiking poles.
My only item I’ve decided to change is my sleeping pad. Prior to this I was using a ThermoRest Z Lite pad and was uncomfortable (my old bones and I’m a side sleeper). On this trip I brought a Klymit Inertia X-Frame air mattress, but the gaps in it and that I’m short made it not comfortable, so I’ve now ordered a short (4′) Gossamer air mattress.
I found that although I have a fear of heights that I was able to traverse a trail positioned on the side of a steep slope (45 degrees with hundred of feet above and below).
I gotta say that being out there among the massive buttes and mesas makes you feel really really small and insignificant!