I’ve
finished walking the Continental Divide Trail (CDT) in New
Mexico. The trail lives on the extremes:
* It’s
either incredibly obvious (a dirt road) or completely
non-existent!
* Its
water is also extreme: the water is either perfect (e.g.,
from a well/windmill) or most foul (e.g., I’ve found water
tanks with cow feces floating, fishes swimming, algae
growing out of control, and even a decomposing bird).
* The
weather is also extreme: either very windy or incredibly
windy!
I’ve
walked across New Mexico in less than a month, been snowed
on three times, and now I’m in Colorado.
I’ll
share my most memorable story from New Mexico.
A Tale
of Two Dogs
After
leaving Cuba, New Mexico, I stopped by the Circle A Ranch at
7 a.m. Although the hostel was still not open for season,
one of the workers was outside. It had snowed the night
before and the entire town was covered in snow.
Snow
obscured the trail, so I asked caretaker for directions.
After he told me where to go, I set off to climb 1,000
meters to the summit of the San Pedro Mountains (about
10,500 feet). Just as I left him, two dogs started following
me. One was dark brown with black hair and looked like a
husky Dalmatian (white and black spots).
“Are
these two dogs going to follow me?” I asked the caretaker.
“Oh no
they won’t,” the caretaker assured me. “They’ll walk with
you for a little while, but they’ll eventually turn around
when you go too far.”
“You
sure?”
“Oh
yeah.”
Having
seen only day hiker in the last three weeks, I was happy to
have company, even if their English was a bit weak. The dogs
led the charge through the light snow cover. They relished
the walk in the winter wonderland. However, after an hour of
walking, they still hadn’t left me and they were as
enthusiastic as ever to walk with me to Canada. I yelled, “Allez
de nouveau à
votre
maison!” They didn’t speak French either.
After
another hour of hiking and with fresh snow beginning to
fall, I had enough. I love dogs and I wish I could take them
with me, but I didn’t want the responsibility of caring for
them. I turned to them and yelled profanities and screamed,
“Go home! Find your own pack! You’re not my posse! You’re
fired!!!!”
The
verbal abuse seemed to work. Their tails stopped wagging and
their ears drooped. I felt terrible being such a brute, but
I was worried about the deteriorating conditions and that we
were getting too far from their home. The snow levels kept
rising as we gained altitude. I was knee-deep in snow in my
Inov-8 running shoes and thin liner socks. I was wearing
all my clothes: a
GoLite
Drimove T-shirt and a 3 oz
GoLite Ether Wind Jacket. I
was carrying a
GoLite Chrome Dome umbrella
though. All this is not exactly winter gear. I must have
looked funny climbing up a mountain in a snowstorm with an
umbrella.
This was
dangerous enough for me and I didn’t want to endanger the
dogs. I left the dogs behind.
I had
hiked two hours without the dogs as the snowy blizzard
continued. I reached a summit of one of the 10,500 foot San
Pedro Mountains. The winds were disagreeable. The visibility
was about five meters. I hadn’t seen the trail since I left
the Circle A ranch, four hours ago. I was simply slogging
through the snow, heading northeast, figuring it would take
over the mountain range. Then I turned around and couldn’t
believe my eyes.
The same
two dogs, that I had last seen two hours before,
sheepishly reached the summit. They trudged through the snow
and avoided eye contact with me. They had a meek attitude,
looked around, and gave me the impression of, “Gee, nice day
for hike, no? Hey! Look! It’s that same guy that we were
walking with two hours ago! What a coincidence!”
I stared
at them, but they didn’t look at me - they knew they were so
busted. But what could I do? We were four hours from the
Circle A Ranch, I had yet to see the trail, my tracks were
getting covered by the continuing snowfall, and I was
halfway through the mountain range. Like it or not, the dogs
were now my responsibility.
I’m not
sure why they had followed me two hours after I had left
them. Three possibilities:
1) They
were more lost than I was.
Although
they would pee and leave their marks throughout the walk,
I’m not sure if they knew how to get home. They followed me
hoping for salvation.
2) They
came back to protect me.
At the
beginning of the hike the dark dog (I called Chocolate)
would be in front of me and the white/black one (I called
Salt & Pepper) would walk behind me. Sandwiched between
them, I felt like they were trying to protect me at times.
3) They
were out for a joyride.
They had
no fear of hypothermia or the dangers of the mountains. They
just followed me because it’s more fun than hanging out back
at the ranch! “Let’s play in the snow!” they thought. “Woo-hoo!
Road trip!”
Whatever
their true motivation was, they were my dogs now. I was
determined to get them back to their owner safely.
“Are you
guys hungry?” I asked the dogs.
They
wagged their tails excitedly. Surprisingly, I wasn’t
carrying any dog food with me. I threw some trail mix on the
snow. They eagerly devoured the nuts and M&Ms.
“Maybe
you guys are thru-hikers after all…” I told them.
By now I
was clearly the Alpha Male of the pack. The dog I called
Chocolate no longer led through the snow. Both dogs followed
my deep footprints. At times I would turn around and just
see their heads peeking out of the snow. They seemed to be
swimming through the accumulating snow.
Salt &
Pepper never took the lead; she faithfully followed me.
Occasionally Chocolate would boldly lead if he could tell
that I was consistently hugging the contour of a mountain on
a northeast bearing. But whenever the terrain got tricky, he
would get behind me and follow my lead. Twice we encountered
bear tracks in the snow and the dogs sniffed and followed
them until I yelled, “C’mon you idiots! That bear will kick
your ass! Get back here!”
Finally
at 3 p.m. the snow stopped falling. However, I had yet to
see a sign of the trail thanks to five feet of snow cover. I
did find a creek heading north, so we followed it, figuring
it should take us down the mountain in the right direction.
As the sun set, my goal was to get low enough so that the
dogs didn’t have to sleep on snow, which could lead to
frostbite on their paws or even death.
At 6
p.m., after nearly 12 hours of stomping through heavy snow,
we had descended to 8,000 feet and found a trail sign next
to a forest service road! We were saved! I screamed in
triumph! I hugged the dogs and they shared my excitement by
vigorously rubbing against me and wagging their short tails.
They probably didn’t know why I was so happy, but they were
just happy that I was so happy.
We hiked
a bit more to find a snow free piece of dirt under a tree.
“Guys, this will be our home for the night. OK?”
They
stared at me, trying to understand me. I set up my 3.5 oz
Mountain Laurel Designs tarp that I had brought “just in
case it rains” in New Mexico. I never expected it to provide
protection against snowfall. Meanwhile, the dogs scouted the
campsite area, peeing everywhere to establish their new
territory. Once in my sleeping bag, I opened a jar of peanut
butter, scooped up a big helping with my finger, and yelled
out, “Hey guys! Dinnertime!!!”
They ran
over and started licking the peanut butter off my fingers
with great gusto. One finger for Chocolate, one for Salt &
Pepper. Soon they had consumed over half my jar.
Their
thick coats were soaking wet from the snow and their hair
fibers were freezing in place as the temps continued to
fall. I rubbed them vigorously with my MSR
PackTowl and invited them to
sleep at my feet under my tarp, but they preferred to rest a
few feet from my head.
I wished
my loyal companions a goodnight: “It’s going to be a cold
night folks! Wake me up if you need anything or get chilly.
Keep watch and I’ll see you at sunrise! Tomorrow, you’re
going home!”
Soon I
heard the dogs snoring.
At
sunrise I was relieved to see the dogs still breathing. I
got up and they sprang up with an excitement in their eyes
that said, “This is fun! Where are going today?!?!”
I
checked their paws and they were in good shape, no
frostbite. I knelt next to them and put my hands on their
heads and said, “Fellas, you’re
going home today. We’re taking this forest service road down
till we find civilization. Then I’m calling your owners so
you can get back home. Sound good?”
They
licked their chops.
For
their breakfast I threw some
Bob’s Red Mill granola on my plastic groundsheet. The
dogs preferred eating it off the dirt.
I told
them, “You must have been thru-hikers in a previous life…”
The sun
finally came out by the time we came to the tiny hamlet
called Gallina. I knocked on the
door of a mobile home. A robust and kind man named Roberto
answered. He let me use this phone and two hours later the
Circle A Ranch owner showed up. She was grateful that her
pooches had fared well. She said she was going to “kill” the
caretaker for telling me that the dogs would only follow me
so far.
The dogs
resisted getting into the truck. The owner put a muzzle on
Chocolate fearing that he would snap when she forced him
into the truck. I had to get into the truck to encourage
both dogs to get in and stay put.
I hugged
and kissed these beloved dogs goodbye. They licked my dirty
face. I whispered to them, “Don’t worry, I’ll be back in
October.”
I waved
goodbye to the truck. The dogs stared at me through the
truck’s windows as they drove away.
Their
sad eyes communicated everything.
I miss
them too.
Next
Email: Entering the Real Snow Playground - Colorado
T.S.
Elliot wrote that “April
is the cruelest month,” but May will probably be the
cruelest month for me. I will spend this entire month
climbing snowcapped mountains and crossing endless
snowfields. I doubt I will camp below 10,000 feet for the
entire month of May. In Chama,
New Mexico, I picked up my ice axe, crampons, my
MLD waterproof rain mitts, heavy socks, gaiters, a long
sleeved shirt and warm
GoLite tights for my legs.
I’m sending my GoLite umbrella
ahead to Wyoming and wearing
Gossamer Gear’s rain suit instead.
I’ve
been hit with snowstorms and lots of snow lately and I
expect the snow coverage to get more intense as I climb
above 13,000 feet in the San Juan Wilderness. Where the hell
is global warming when you need it?
I’m
about 15% done with the CDT yo-yo.
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