I am in Steamboat Springs, just two days from
exiting Colorado. Colorado has ravaged me like a Viking.
I’ll share two tales that sum up Colorado.
However, before I do that, let me sum up our planet’s
history in an unusual way. I think about this often and it
is one of the tricks I used to keep me going in challenging
times.
The Pilgrim’s Perspective
Many people ask me, “What are you thinking
about when you walk from sunrise to sunset in remote
wildernesses?”
Sometimes I’m just thinking of the next step.
Other times I’m thinking about Paris Hilton.
However, during my pilgrimage I do go into
deep thoughts mode occasionally. That’s what this email is
about. It will lead into my next email which is about what
it means to be human and my perspective on global warming.
Yeah, light topics. Can’t I just talk about the weather?
One of the aspects that I love about
thru-hiking is the sense of perspective it gives you. Most
humans are stuck in day-to-day drudgery, incapable (or
unwilling) to break the chains of their self-centered,
short-term point of view. I confess I’m no better than the
average Joe and that missing one synchronized light can
really send me into a deep depression.
However, when I travel for months in the
mountains I can’t help but have a broader perspective. For
example, when I am walking a ridge on the Continental
Divide, its history is etched into the landscape.
Although the Earth is 4.5 billion years old,
the planet didn’t really start to settle down until it was a
billion years old. And life didn’t really get going until
the Pre-Cambrian era. However, it is nearly impossible for
my puny human brain to relate to that much time. Actually a
million years is too hard to imagine, even if I compare it
with how long my bank puts me on hold.
Therefore, to crunch world history into a
timescale that I can fathom let’s squeeze it into one
calendar year. And I’ll focus on the development of the
Continental Divide Trail (CDT). Here’s what we get.
EARTH’S
HISTORY IN ONE YEAR
January, February, and March
would
be good months to stay in your cabin. The Earth’s
environment was chaotic. Incessant wind and rain would erode
away barren mountains faster than a plastic surgeon can
erode away Michael Jackson’s nose.
Life would spring forth on April Fools
Day! Sure, these single-celled organisms would be stuck in
the warm coastal waters and by the thermal vents, but we’ll
take what we can get. Before the end of the month
multi-cellular life would pop up.
In early May Trilobites (hard shelled
creatures) would start feeding on all the multi-cellular
life. By the end of the month, small vertebrates would start
feeding on the Trilobites. All you can eat restaurants were
invented.
Where would the Continental Divide be in
June? It wouldn’t be a thrusting mass of mountains that
I am walking on today. Quite the opposite! It would be a
broad channel of water. You could ride your kayak down the
channel! In fact, if you flew over North America in June,
you’d see that 60 percent of the land is underwater. Would
you see forests of trees on the land? Nope, you wouldn’t
even see moss clinging to the ubiquitous rocks. Zero plant
life. However, it wouldn’t be a static boring rock-filled
landscape. It would be constantly eroding, pummeled by
endless torrential rains that make the south-east Asian
monsoons seem like a drizzle.
Half the year
would go
by and still no life on the land.
Finally, around the middle of July,
very slowly, the first plants would gain a precarious
foothold on land. For every plant that latches on the land,
many will get washed away by the endless rain. The struggle
of the plants to get established lasts for weeks, but they
finally settle down. Vegetarians aren’t far behind.
In August the seas are crowded with
fish. A few claustrophobic ones develop crude lungs, call
themselves amphibians, and get timeshares on the land.
In early September insects show up.
Since CDT hikers hadn’t been invented yet, the mosquito
started bugging the first reptiles. By the end of the month,
dinosaurs start to stomp around and will continue stomping
for 150 million years.
In October the Appalachian mountain
range starts to rise and will be far higher than any other
mountain range in the USA today. You wouldn’t find cozy
shelters every 10 miles on the Appalachian Trail. But you
might see packs of dinosaurs chasing the pathetic looking
mammals that just start to appear. The dinosaurs thought
these mammals were great snacks.
The Continental Divide would be impossible to
recognize in early November. Instead of the Rocky
Mountains stretching out as far as the eye can see, you’d
see a massive sea that stretched from the Arctic to the Gulf
of Mexico ! The most memorable event of this month is when
an asteroid the size of Manhattan Island strikes the Yucatan
with a force of 100 million megatons. The impact would
release a heat pulse that would set off fires across the
planet. The result: a planetary dinosaur barbeque. Their
“two month” reign comes to an abrupt end. In the last days
of November the Rocky Mountains would finally start to rise
and tower over the surrounding land. The CDT wasn’t well
marked then either.
In December you’d see the rapid
proliferation of mammals. On Christmas Day the
Colorado River would start its tedious process of slicing
the Grand Canyon.
The sun would rise on December 31 and
still no sign of humans. Finally, around noon,
somewhere in east Africa, the first clumsy hominids would
stand up. During the last hours of the year, you’d see
massive sheets of ice, as tall as mountains, cover America
and Euroasia. Like an accordion,
you’d see the ice sheets (glaciers) come and go four times
in just a few hours. It would look like a global warming
yo-yo gone wild.
With one hour to go before the year ends,
the Neanderthal shows up to the primate party. At 23:30
the French start showing off their artistic talent:
Cro-Magnon man draws cool paintings in some caves. At
23:45 homo sapiens figure out
how to make weapons of mass destruction: sharp knives and
spears.
Around 23:55 civilization begins.
Prostitution shortly follows. Egyptians, Babylonians,
Greeks, and Romans each spend a minute
building touristy buildings. At 23:58 and
43 seconds, Jesus tells everyone to behave. We kill him
a nanosecond later.
With just 20 seconds to go before the
year draws to a close, Columbus bumps into America. Dick
Clark is born and starts making a living counting down the
seconds to the New Year. “Just 7 seconds to go!” announces
Dick, and Americans sign the Declaration of Independence. In
the final 7 seconds we finally arrive at the crown
jewel of billion of years of evolution: Paris Hilton.
Whew! Now you know what kind of thoughts run
through my head when I’m walking across endless mountain
ranges. See, I told you I think of Paris Hilton! But usually
I’m fantasizing about Oreos.
Whenever you’re feeling pretty important in
your cubical, or you’re pissed off that your spouse is late,
or you’re frustrated that you don’t have everything you
want, then perhaps it’s time to think about this timeline.
James C. Rettie wrote a similar
timeline over 50 years ago. I think about this timeline
everyday during my 5,600 mile walk on the Continental
Divide, especially when a lovely rash develops near my
groin.
Put your life in relationship to the
timeline. Put whatever event that you think is a big deal
and place it next to this timeline. Watch its importance
shrink to nothingness. This might make you depressed, but it
can also liberate you from the shackles that bind most of us
to the unimportant issues of the day. It might help motivate
you to make the changes in your life that you’ve wanted to
make.
Go out and have fun. Hike your own hike. And
enjoy the time you have on this lively planet.
To illustrate how I use this timeline, I’ll
end this email with two tough tales from the CDT in Colorado
…
TOUGH TALE #1: Climbing the Tallest Mountain
in Colorado during a Snowstorm
The official CDT skirts the base of Mt.
Elbert, but I wanted to summit the damn thing. Mt. Elbert is
the tallest mountain near the Continental Divide. In fact,
if you don’t count Alaska, Mt. Elbert is the second tallest
mountain in America, after California’s Mt. Whitney. The
lure was too great to pass up.
Normally I check the weather forecast before
I leave a town, but I forgot to do that when I left Twin
Lakes, CO . While I slept calmly at the base of Mt. Elbert,
I had no idea that a major snowstorm was headed my way.
I woke up at 1 a.m. to get a head start on
the 14,440 ft (4,401 m) mountain. I wanted to hike through
hard, frozen snow so I could get up and down the mountain
quickly. As soon as I got above the tree line, it started
snowing. The higher I climbed, the windier it got. A dense
fog settled in while it snowed, creating whiteout conditions
and limiting my visibility to 10 meters.
In short, I had the worst conditions you
could get on Mt. Elbert in May: sub-zero temperatures, high
winds, snow, and whiteout conditions.
Stubbornly (and stupidly), I continued to
climb.
After a few hours I wondered if I was
climbing the right mountain. With the whiteout, I had no
idea what mountains were around me, so I couldn’t get a
reference. My altimeter was steadily going up: 11,000 ft…
12,000 ft… 13,000 ft… 14,000 ft…
But I knew there were other 14ers in the
area. Finally, my altimeter showed 14,500 ft.
“OK, I know that’s wrong because Mt. Elbert
is only 14,440 ft and I can’t be higher than that unless I’m
jumping 60 feet in the air!”
However, air pressure had been dropping
during the snowstorm, which would artificially boost the
elevation my altimeter displayed. Was I on the right
mountain?
I climbed a few more feet and found a three
meter wooden stick planted at the summit. It had names
engraved in it. It didn’t say anything about Mt. Elbert. I
didn’t see a register. I remained confused.
Fortunately, the snowstorm abated a bit and
so I could quickly take a few victory photos. I felt odd
because I wasn’t even sure I could declare victory since I
wasn’t 100% sure I was on Mt. Elbert. Occasionally, the fog
would lift for a few seconds and I could see mountains below
me and nothing above me, but it was hardly conclusive.
“Well, in the worst case, I climbed some big
14er,” I told myself as I began to descend.
Within 30 minutes, the snowstorm intensified.
Thanks to the blizzard I got lost on my way down and wasted
a couple of hours wandering aimlessly around the mountain,
postholing often. Finally, I
found the CDT and got down to the lowest point I could go:
10,200 feet, relative safety.
I had reached Mt. Elbert, but I didn’t come
down with much wisdom.
TOUGH TALE #2: Stuck Between a Rock and a
Cold Place
I started climbing at Berthoud Pass, heading
toward Rocky Mountain National Park. Most of the day I
avoided walking the official Continental Divide Trail (CDT);
instead, I preferred hiking the actual Continental Divide.
The CDT often doesn’t stay on the geographic Divide for
several reasons, including lack of water, craggy ridges, and
massive exposure to the elements.
However, it is one of those elements (the
vicious wind) that encouraged me to hike Divide and stay off
CDT. The Divide’s violent wind blows the loose snow off the
ridge. Moreover, since the Divide is above the tree line,
the snow is always exposed to the sun’s rays. The
combination of strong wind and sun makes the Divide’s snow
hard and crunchy. The CDT, on the other hand, often stays
below the Divide, under the protection of trees. That is
wonderful in the summer, but in May that translates into a
snow that is deep, soft, and slow to melt.
I had little interest in
postholing (when your foot/leg
breaks through weak snow and you’re knee deep into it).
Therefore, I stayed as high as possible by following the
Divide. I spent most of my day around 13,000 feet and I
could walk faster than on the snow-filled CDT since the snow
on the Divide was either hard or gone.
However, as the sun set I had no place to
camp on the Divide. I use an
MLD tarp and I don’t carry trekking poles. Normally I
always find trees to attach it to, but there aren’t any
trees above the tree line. The rocks on the Divide were all
too short to be a useful anchor for my ridgeline. Although I
could descend a thousand feet to camp in the trees, I could
see that the ground down there was entirely covered in deep
snow.
Hence, my dilemma: I could either camp high,
getting buffeted by cold 40 mph winds, but be on dry rock,
or I could camp low, away from the winds, but sleep on deep,
soft, wet snow. And you thought choosing between Bush and
Kerry was hard.
I decided to camp high. By 9 p.m. I found a
large rock to anchor the tarp’s ridgeline. I planned to use
my ice axe to anchor the other side. The howling winds
sucked my heat away and made it hard to control the tarp.
Imagine trying to anchor a parachute while you’re
freefalling through the sky.
After 10 minutes, I was shivering but I
finally got one anchor down. My clumsy cold fingers
struggled to get the other ridgeline attached to the ice
axe. I finally got it and then tried to shove the ice axe
into the ground.
Thump!
Nothing. The ground was hard as a
rock, because, well, it was made out of rock.
When I picked that spot I stupidly didn’t
consider that I wouldn’t be able to get the ice axe into the
ground. I had wasted precious time and had lost all the heat
I had generated while hiking. I was frigid and I still had
no place to camp. Descending the mountain to wade through
waist deep cold snow was still not enticing. I pressed on,
staying on the Divide.
By 10 p.m. I was navigating by moonlight. The
40 mph winds were steady and getting colder. I hiked
vigorously to ward off hypothermia.
I finally found a jumble of large rocks that
seemed promising. I wedged myself in between them and
immediately smiled as the constantly screaming wind fell
silent.
It was a pathetic and awkward place to call
“camp,” but it was the best thing I had found in the last
five hours. I curled into my
Jacks R Better sleeping bag and fell asleep at 12,000
feet.
Two hours later, around midnight, I woke up
shivering. I tried warming myself up by tensing my muscles
and rubbing my body vigorously. Within minutes I was cold
again. I finally figured out what was going on. The Jacks R
Better sleeping bag is really a quilt, so your bottom is
exposed. Although I use a pad, there were random openings in
the awkward jumble of rocks. Icy cold air was seeping
through these crevices. I hadn’t noticed them when I first
got there because I was comparing it to being exposed to the
40 mph winds head on. However, the crevices created a slow
leak that threatened me with hypothermia in the sub-zero
temperatures.
I couldn’t start a fire because there was no
wood above the tree line. I couldn’t stay put because I
losing heat. Therefore, having only rested two hours, I
packed up and started hiking at midnight.
The moon illuminated my way until 2 a.m. when
it set. I kept hiking, using the stars as my light. I
stumbled often on the loose rock. The wind was merciless –
it never stopped biting into me all night. And I never
stopped walking. The sun rose, I kept walking. I walked
nearly 50 miles over those 35 hours. I eventually got to
Grand Lake, where I could rest.
Colorado challenged me many times. Each time
the trail got tough I would think about the timeline that I
described above and it would comfort me. I reminded myself
that these trials are fleeting events. I focused on the big
picture instead and that kept me happy and positive. The
double dose of Prozac helped too.
Setting a Record
I’m almost certain that nobody has ever
thru-hiked the CDT section of Colorado (about 740 miles)
during the month of May. I entered Colorado May 2 and I am
exiting May 30. So for what it’s worth (not much), that’s a
little record that everyone will forget about after I’m
dead.
By exiting Colorado, I’m also past the
halfway point to Canada. That means I’m 25% done with the
CDT yo-yo. Moreover, the toughest part of the yo-yo (
Colorado in May) is now behind me. The last 75% should be
easier.
Indeed, I’m looking forward to Wyoming in
June. It should be everything that Colorado was not: hot;
dry; and relatively flat. Woo-hoo!
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