Day 91: Burney

July 25th
Today’s miles: 15
My total mileage: 1228
PCT Mile 1409
PCT-Section-N_1409

It is a very hot day. We got a 2-part hitch into Burney; including a portion with a park ranger from the Burney Falls State Park. We got a cheap-ish room at a motel, waited for Fancy to visit the Post Office, and then limped to a pizzeria at the edge of town. Yogi’s Guide said there was an all-you-can-eat pizza buffet in town 7 days a week, but the intel was wrong! BOOOOOoooooo.

That night, Howly treated me to a delicious steak across the street. We rewatched old movies from the 90’s in the motel.
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Day 90: Hat Creek Rim

July 24th
Today’s miles: 23
My total mileage: 1213
PCT mile 1394
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We went to the sole breakfast cafe in Old Station this morning. There were so many hikers, we kind of all jostled for access to power outlets. I had to smile at their menu. There is quotation from Cheryl’s “Wild” on the front of the menu….referencing the cafe, and how she had felt “right” about reaching Old Station.

It was mid to high 80’s as we left town, but this stretch wasn’t half as bad as I had expected. It is notoriously hot and dry here for 30 miles. I think we got lucky with a breeze. We had also heard that the famous Cache 22 was no longer going to be stocked this year, but were pleasantly surprised that it was there with ample water. Someone had dragged branches and brambles together and woven a kind of large nest-like shelter around the cache. We rested briefly there with some others. Unfortunately, the cache had a really bad odor of decay…we think some small animals had died within the brambles surrounding it. We pushed a few more miles on and then called it on a stretch of trail with dry cow patties and beautiful view of the sunset.

Mt. Shasta is finally in view!
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Day 89: Old Station

July 23rd
Today’s miles: 24
My total mileage: 1190
PCT mile 1371
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Today was another long hot day, but fortunately it was mostly flat and downhill. (I think we climbed 1,900 this morning.) We are only a handful of miles from a cafe outside of Old Station, where we intend to get breakfast in the morn. Tomorrow we begin the Hat Creek Rim, a notorious 30 mile dry stretch, so we will need to camel up big time, and possibly hike late into the night to avoid the worst of the heat.
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We camped in a small forest clearing just outside of an RV park. They had a little convenience store that had closed early. In this photo, titled “A Tragedy in Two Parts”, we see an anonymous hiker (definitely not Howly) staring forlornly at beer in a refrigerator. While busy scheming at how to gain access, we were saved by friends around the corner who had beer and chips to share.image

Day 88: Drakesbad

July 22nd
Today’s mileage: 18
My total mileage: 1166
PCT mile 1347
PCT-Section-N_1347

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Only our second soda cache of the entire trail! It was such a nice surprise.image

Arrived in time for dinner at Drakesbad. I had heard really mixed reviews about this place beforehand. It ended up being a fantastic experience. There were a couple of weird things….they told us it was really important to make reservations beforehand. So we did, for 6:30pm, and they definitely knew we were hikers. But when we arrive, they told us we need to wait until all of the rest of the normal guests have eaten, and we can eat at 7:30pm. We had heard from other hikers that at lunch, they got stiffed on chicken and salad…that the resort had run out of food by the time that hikers got to eat. However, you don’t have to pay in advance, so it looked like we wouldn’t be out anything if the dinner ended up being just crummy leftovers. However, the all-you-can-eat BBQ included tri-tip, burgers, hot dogs, etc., and they didn’t run out of anything while we were there.

Hikers paid $14 each, while the normal guests paid $28. Plus that $14 included the best shower on the entire trail, and laundry. Such a better deal than VVR! I’m pretty sure a number of hikers didn’t even pay. One of my friends said that when he went to pay, they said, “you’ve been buying beer, don’t worry about it.” Pretty crazy. I felt like my $14 was well spent. Interestingly, nearly all of the help staff were Latvian or Lithuanian.

All of the hikers moseyed a mile back to an official campground area. I had stomach cramps in the middle of the night….I think from having eaten too much food.


 

EXTRA: Joe Brewer has an excellent video showing this stretch of trail from Drakesbad Ranch (Mile 1354) To Mt Shasta (Mile 1507). I highly recommend subscribing to his channel:

Day 87: Farther than Cheryl

July 21st
Today’s mileage: 24
My total mileage: 1148
PCT mile: 1329
PCT-Section-N_1329

Back near Big Bear Lake, a Scottish hiker named Toast announced he was naming his pack, “Cheryl”, so that Cheryl could travel farther than Cheryl did. Hehe. The heroine of “Wild” fame started at Mojave (having skipped the first 500 miles of desert, and later, the High Sierra) and ended at the Oregon/Washington border, putting her around 1,100 miles. Anyhow, I am pleased to announce that, no matter what else, Husk has rambled farther than Cheryl. 🙂 Now time to write a memoir, befriend Oprah, and make millions. MILLIONS. And OPRAH.

Speaking of which, I’ve been quoting Zeppelin’s “Ramble On” in the trail registries. Thank you very much.

We are aiming for 27 miles today, so I’d better stay focused. Big day for the others…we reach the official halfway pylon this afternoon! (I still owe 180 miles before I can celebrate my own, but hope to get good photos and video today.)

BTW, we stayed last night in the vicinity where this happened, hehe, so a little extra on guard.

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Today the trail crossed many times between privately-held land and then back onto federal land. Unfortunately, the privately-held land often looked like the two pics below. The surrounding forest really was too dense to find an alternative course. We had to remove our packs and crawl through on hands and knees.image

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Day 85: We raved! We were raving!

July 19th
Today’s miles: 6
My total mileage: 1109
PCT mile 1290
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Belden had a crazy rave going on, and the PCT goes literally through it. We were given free 24 hour wristbands ($200 for attendees!) Crazy photos to come!

Initially, our plan was to leave early today, but Fancy wasn’t feeling well and the rest of us were happy to spend the day loitering on the front porch of the convenience store, getting as many calories as we could. It was weird to leave while the party was still going…but I kinda felt a little like Willard, and it was time to get back on the PT boat and head downstream….

Special thanks to the Braatens for delivering our packages!
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Day 84: Belden

July 18th
Today’s mileage: 20
My total mileage: 1103
PCT mile: 1284
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Something miraculous happened today.

We pushed all day to reach Belden, a small hiccup of a town about 100 miles northwest of Truckee. The trail goes straight through the heart of Belden, but it’s a small heart. A general store, a bar. And that’s it. It’s more known for the notoriously hot ascent climbing back out of it.
It was Saturday, and we had heard rumors of a beer festival in distant Quincy, some 30 miles east. So the goal had been to push hard to town, and then hope for a lucky hitch. Fancyfeet, trying to keep us to task, had agreed to the beer festival, but made Howly and myself pledge we’d return to trail before nightfall. She was getting nervous that we weren’t getting enough miles in; we still weren’t halfway to Canada.

We descended 5,000 feet through the afternoon, which started out with vast expansive views and the narrowest of trails, thick chapparal and underbrush clutching at our feet. It was dense vegetation and few trees during the early portion of descent. Imagine thick brambley-shrubberies that were chest-high.

For once, I was in the lead. My merry companions were about 5 minutes behind. We’d passed Wu-Tang earlier, lounging on a rock, enjoying a brief swath of cell reception. Our friend, Skyline, was a day ahead, and we were eager to reunite.

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After the first half of descent, the trail transitioned into a more normal forest canopy, with no views per se, but pleasant shade and a series of switchbacks that continued down to the river canyon bottom. Fancy and Howly caught up to me here, and they were on edge. They’re pretty sure that they nearly got rushed by a bear. They had heard a large mammal in the bushes charging at the trail, and then, only 2 meters away, they said it suddenly did an about-face and fled. Their suspicions were confirmed when Wu-Tang later said, “Hey, did you guys see that black bear that was running?” I was glad to have missed the incident.

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We finally reached the base of the hill and crossed a set of industrial railroad tracks. That’s where we heard it first.

boom….boom….boom….

We had absolutely no idea what it was. But as we continued walking on a gravel service road, it grew louder. And then we saw them.

Two women in bikinis.
I should mention, they were the first bikinis of the entire trail.

boom….boom….boom….

We had no idea what we’d stepped into. I asked and they said that a San Francisco outfit was holding a rave here for the weekend.
This gives you some idea.

We walked another quarter-mile, passing a ridiculous amount of tents that were pitched at every angle, in terrible locations. Because there simply wasn’t enough space! There were scores of outhouses.

And then we reached the main thoroughfare. There were probably over 1,000 people. Most of them were spread between the two dance floors or floating on the river. There was also a food court, large mediation spaces, and numerous services such as massage and eastern medicinal services. The dance spaces had 24/7 music. They had flown in DJs from Berlin. There were large-scale props and art pieces, and everyone was in costume, save for us. In fact, it was the first time I had felt so self-conscious about being dirty. Funny that at an outdoor festival of all places, which are not always known as the cleanest of places, I felt the most stinky. I haven’t attended a Burning Man, but it felt like a mini-version of that based on photos.

The kicker is….the trail goes right through the heart of the rave. So the twelve or so hikers who had wandered in each got a bracelet, which cost the normal partygoers $220 each. It was surreal, doubley-so because none of us had even heard a rumor about this event.

A kind San Franciscan man bought us a round of beer. We found familiar faces. Skyline was there, but miffed that he’d waited so long for us, and he set out to ascend during the cooler hours of the late afternoon. (Wish he’d stayed.) Geisha Diamonds and Rebel Biscuit were there. Geisha bragged that he’d slept the night before under the main stage, while Rebel talked excitedly about a massive massage chain that had spontaenously blossomed. Fancy turned to us boys and agreed to a moratorium on the plans, saying in essence, “We can stay for the night, but everyone promises to be ready by 8 AM for an early start.” I think there would have been a mutiny otherwise. We agreed wholeheartedly to the new plan.

The main stage area was up on firm ground, while the secondary stage was down on the sandy beach. I spent most of the evening in the upper area, dancing with a dozen hikers within a sea of proper ravers. I lost my close friends in the crowd, but it was fine, of course. Everyone was friendly and it felt very safe. At one point, I bastardized one of my favorite Bill Murray scenes, shouting out with the most earnestness I could summon, “I’m raving! I’m a raver!” I made it to 1:30 AM, which I am super proud of. I was told I needed to hold on until 4 AM, when the DJs from Berlin would start, but it wasn’t in the cards. I struggled actually to find my bedroll, which was probably a quarter-mile away through a labyrinth of endless slipshod tents, shelters that sometimes even shared the same guylines on account of lack of space. I found my gear and the rest of my night was uneventful. The only one from our party who was already tucked in was Let’s Party, with her dog, Bottoms Up.

In the morning, Howly and I both honored our pledge. We were up and packed by 8 AM. Which is a marvel in and of itself. But the matriarch of our little band was not up by 8, nor 9, nor 10. She, quite understandably, awoke with a bit of a heavy head, and the day passed by in a whirl. Howly, myself and others sat on a bench in front of the general store, drinking beer and chocolate milk and marveling at the variety of life that walked by. Loads of eccentric costumes and personalities. At one point, a hiker named Braveheart approached me and said, “Look at you! You raved! You were an animal.” I think the irony from the night before was lost, and that was ok. I just smiled proudly. I had indeed!

Two of us had packages waiting at the Braatens, a kind local family who hosts dirtbag hikers like ourselves, helping out in numerous ways. Trail angels. The Braatens live on the outskirts of Belden and bring packages to “town” regularly. They kindly delivered Fancy’s boxes, but forgot mine, so they offered to do another trip, which was a lifesaver. Brooks had sent me a pair of Cascadia 10s to replace the 9s that had prematurely fallen apart. (The 9s were known colloquially as Sierra Sandals, on account of how quickly they discombobulated.)

We finally mobilized and got ourselves to leave Sodom and Gomorrah around 5 PM. Climbing up the long ascent out of Belden, it was surreal to turn around see the festival still continuing. The river chock full with scores of colorful intertubes and rafts. The low bass notes still carried on the air. And yet, we had the discipline to still hike. It felt like a scene from Apocalypse Now, where Captain Willard gets off the boat to explore some strange and wondrous point-of-interest, and then manages to get back on the boat and continue on his way, while chaos continues on in his wake.

Spontaneously and unforeseen moments like this represent some of the greatest moments of adventure. You never know what tomorrow may bring.

Day 83: An Unexpected Stay at Buck Lake

July 17th
Today’s mileage: 11 (?)
My total mileage: 1083
PCT-Section-M_1262

We discovered an alternate path that went to the very small town of Buck Lake. One anonymous member of our party was hankering for more tobacco, so the group decided to visit Buck Lake. I was thrilled to buy the trifecta of chocolate mile, Coke and a beer.

We sauntered between all three of the business establishments, and at the end of the night we were spoiled by a family that took 7 of us hikers in, where we showered, laundried, slept and then were fed a wonderful breakfast. Thank you Cricket, Darlene and Terry! We really appreciated your hospitality!
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