22nd May: Day 32 – Mile 573
Staples: m&ms, tortillas, instant mash, dried mango, cheese crackers. I can’t see it, but surely peanut butter is lurking menacingly in the shadows.
23rd and 24th May: Day 33 & 34 – Mile 618
First view of the beginning of the high Sierra will be over this hill
Can’t see any snow – must be fine..
In real life skunks are less blurry.
25th May: Day 35 – Mile 638
Normally bear protection is defensive – e.g. sealed bags to prevent smell of food getting out. However – my bag has been infused with melted cheese oil and is full of holes.
Therefore I follow the less practiced offensive bear protection strategy. I cover all my food with my socks. And there are few things in the world more offensive.
26th to 28th May: Day 36 to 38 – Mile 652
It’s a difficult hitchhike from Walker Pass to Ridgecrest and it’sabout 25 miles. No one was stopping for me. A birdwatcher called Steve was also up on the pass. I don’t think he’d really heard of the PCT before and was interested in what I was up to – he sort of edged towards me as his sense of pity was balanced by his concern that I might be a madman (remembering I haven’t showered in almost a week of desert walking)
He was going the opposite direction, but in the end drove me all the way to Ridgecrest (an hour and a half out of his way) and then helped me identify all the birds I’d seen so far. Really nice guy – we kept in touch, and I appreciated his messages of support in some of the shitter times to come.
Shoes that have done 650 miles and shoes that haven’t.
Day hikers gave me trouble picking these shoes up from the post office. When you post stuff to collect from the post office, you write that you’re a hiker and what your ETA is, so they keep hold of it for longer. When REI posted it, they couldn’t fit my first name on the label – so instead of ‘Nick Day’ it just said ‘Day Hiker ETA 26th May’. The post office then denied they had it, and I had to queue up twice before they mentioned they had got a package without a name on it and maybe that was mine despite it specifically (and unusually) saying it was for a day hiker rather than a thru hiker
This was the plan for the High Sierra, which I gave to my Dad. I’m not sure this was really going to help except possibly to find my body at some later date. But that is actually a significant (and sad) thing on the PCT, where people haven’t been found and their family are still looking, after two years in some cases, still putting up posters etc.
Anyway, for avoidance of any anxiety now, I’ll emphasise that I do survive and manage to bring my body back to the UK myself
10 days of very calorie dense food. So, unless you like drinking oil, maybe not a fun 10 days. I bought this same thing twice and posted half in a bucket to be (I think) snow mobiled into the Sierra. Though I would never manage to collect it.
29th May: Day 39 – Mile 673
30th May: Day 40 – Mile 693
31st May: Day 41 – Mile 713
Into the Sierra…