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CDT NM 7th Section

Day 74: Source of Cañada Jose Maria (near Mogote Peak)

I woke at 6:15 but was so comfortable, I ignored my alarm and dozed off again until nearly 7. It was a comfortable temperature and most of the condensation stayed on the rainfly instead of the inner tent ceiling. There was a nice breeze that would continue throughout the morning. I ate some and made my breakfast shake with the last of my water before packing.

When I came out of the tent, I could see the sky wasn’t as clear as the previous day, but it wasn’t quite yet overcast either. It was a thin sheaf of hazy clouds that allowed the appearance of direct sunlight so while taking the hot edge off of it. Basically, it was perfect hiking weather. If only it could last.

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CDT NM 7th Section

Day 73: Ridge Above Cañada Jarosita

Somehow I slept in until nearly 7. It was good it hadn’t rained overnight because the upper part of my mattress had slid the head of the tent out from under the fly. There was still plenty of condensation on the ceiling though.

When I emerged to put on my boots, I noticed the sky was almost completely clear for once. I wondered how long that would last. As I was taking down my tent, I noticed a rip on my glove was growing, so I stopped for another emergency repair. After all that, I didn’t get started walking until 9am.

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CDT NM 7th Section

Day 72: Rio Tusas Source

The rain let up before midnight. My overhydration woke me at 2:30, and I had trouble getting back to sleep thanks to what sounded like a mouse scurrying around in my vestibules. I didn’t do anything about it as it could just as easily have been the wind, and all my stuff was under me except my shoes, stove, and bear can.

I woke again before my 6:30 alarm and started getting ready. The clothes I was wearing had indeed dried while I slept, but the ceiling was covered with condensation, so I guess that’s where it all went. There was a herd of cows slowly coming by, rattling rocks, until it suddenly started running down the hill for no obvious reason. It was loud like a stampede, but they didn’t run over my tent.

Meanwhile, I had to spend twenty minutes or so repairing my left gaiter. It wasn’t the only thing that needed repairing, but it was the most urgent that was easiest to do in my tent. I finished packing and hiked out at 8:50.

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CDT NM 7th Section

Day 71: Brazos Ridge

I got up at 6:10, showered one last time, made breakfast and coffee in the room, dressed for hiking, and headed to the office before 8am. I chatted with Julio’s wife (Sandra?) about the town and the work of operating such a property while waiting for him to arrive. When he did, he made some coffee himself, then we loaded into his Jeep and set off up to the pass. On the way, we chatted about fires and floods, bureaucrats and babies, trailers, trains, and tourism. We climbed through a verdant but clouded landscape, occasionally slowing for cows in the road, until he dropped me at the trailhead at 8am. He refused any gas money for going so far out of his way saying it was just a service they offered.

As you might expect when starting from a mountain pass, the first part of the trail was a rapid climb on a series of switchbacks, but I obtained the ridgetop quickly, where a short spur granted access to the top of a tall rocky prominence with views of the entire valley below and mountain range above. The trail was as wet as could be and my socks were instantly damp. The muddy trail was occasionally deep enough to sink into or slide across but was mostly in good condition. The wildflowers were loving the monsoon season though. The unusually late rains were making up for lost time and the grasses were taking full advantage. Julio mentioned having to mow twice a week, but up here it just meant color everywhere.

Coming along the ridge a few minutes later, I popped up over a rise to see a small herd of elk in the field below, and they immediately saw me as well. They started to leave hastily, but not so quickly I wasn’t able to snap a few quick photos.

Just past that point, I arrived at the Colorado/New Mexico border, my last border of the CDT. I may have said I finished the Colorado part of the trail last month, but I lied. I still had these two miles. In other words, within a week (by half a day), I finished up three states on two different trails. One more state to go on the CDT.

At 10:30, I stopped for a break on a big rock, and by the time I was ready to leave again, I could hear the whistle of the Cumbres & Toltec coming up the valley below. It was on the other side of the hill where I couldn’t see, but it was absolutely operating.

The trail went the other direction though, across a creek or two and into the woods where I found more plump, ripe strawberries, though they weren’t as sweet as some of the ones up north. The trail here was extra wet and muddy, frequently crossed by streams. It climbed until it joined a road just below another ridge, a road immediately crossed by several huge deadfalls. I was feeling pretty peckish by now, but I climbed the hill to circumvent the mess and escape the cloud climbing over the hill before seeking a spot to sit for lunch.

I propped a large rock on a log for a seat, scratched my knees furiously from all the trail grass I was walking through that my immune system wasn’t fond of, and set to making wraps. While I ate, I had a few brief moments of direct hot sunlight before the clouds returned. No serious rain yet, but it seemed sure to arrive later.

On the bit of overgrown road following that, there was occasionally so much water and tall grass it was indistinguishable from a meadow. But between those sections grew some of the biggest reddest strawberries I’ve seen this year, and some of them were actually quite sweet. Strawberries kept showing up in the trail mile after mile, and I occasionally tried them, but they were often so disappointingly bland I eventually stopped.

Throughout this section, the sky got clearer and the moments of bright sunlight got more frequent. There were still fat clouds across the sky, but there were rivulets of blue between them–it was no longer a solid mass.

Soon, I arrived at the highest point in this section, and indeed, the highest point on the CDT in New Mexico. It wasn’t a mountain top. It wasn’t even a hilltop. It was just a spot where I turned off a road that was climbing and started descending into the woods on a single-track. It was, on average, all downhill from here.

Just before 3pm, the trail came out of the woods and opened up into a grassy field with a few stands of trees dotted here and there. I stopped for a snack under such a cluster where it was clear cows often also hid from the sun. Looking ahead, I still had some decent number of miles to put in, so 25 minutes later, I rolled on.

Out in the meadow, the trail crosses and comes alongside a grassy creek so overflowing with water it was coming up into the adjacent trail in places. On the other side of the meadow, a herd of cows decided to take the trail up the hill in front of me, and I had to stop and let the stragglers cut in so they could catch up with the herd. Their tracks and the trail coincided for so long that I didn’t see the trail turn off. A half mile later, I stopped to get out my Packa because the rain had started, and on restarting, noticed I was off trail. By heading backwards at an angle, I met the trail only a quarter mile away. And, by then, the rain had stopped.

The trail wound crazily through open grass crisscrossed by cow trails, and infrequency of markers yielded a lot more opportunities to lose the trail. But now I was on notice, constantly checking the GPS and finding the trail again before I got more than a hundred feet from it. There were all kinds of switchbacks going down a hill that wasn’t steep enough to warrant them. A trail straight down the hill would have worked just fine and there was plenty of open grass to put it in. You can believe I shortcut some of them. On the other side of the road I crossed at the bottom of the hill, more switchbacks climbed another hill, and again they weren’t steep enough. But it didn’t take long to reach the hilltop where my empty stomach bade I find a place to make supper. I set a flat rock on a rotting tree trunk and called it a chair then started cooking.

All day, after the coffee with breakfast, I had only drunk a single liter of water, slowly. The clouds had kept me too cool to sweat, and even by supper time, I still was overhydrated. Water, water everywhere, but never a need to drink.

Speaking of water, although skies were partly cloudy with storms on the horizon over dinner, it wasn’t but a mile or so (during which I saw more elk) before the rain started. I stopped and put my Packa on as soon as even the lightest rain started, and it quickly picked up. My Packa isn’t really waterproof anymore, so while, with the help of my ground cloth, I can keep some portion of my pack dry, I will still get wet down my back and sleeves. It keeps in enough heat to warm the water that gets in at the speed it gets in, so I don’t get too cold. But I was basically as soaked as I was headed into Lake City a month back.

The rain let off a bit as I started climbing Brazos Ridge, but now there was lightning not too far away, bright enough to surprise and loud enough to be heard over the music I was pumping. I put on a two hour playlist with a plan to stop hiking when it ended.

The rain had mostly dissipated by the time I reached the high point of the ridge well after sunset. Yeah, I was definitely missing the long days I had in Montana. I could easily see the trail in the dark despite the clouds, even when it started doing funny switchbacks again. It was mostly open, not dense forest, so the diffuse light came through.

When the playlist ended, it was too dark to be able to judge the ground for camping. It seemed to be very rocky terrain, but there were pockets of dirt or smaller rocks between stretches of large ones. I had to stop, take off everything, get out my headlamp, and put everything back on before continuing until the area looked more camping-friendly. Soon, I left the trail and started wandering among the trees below looking for a decent spot.

Wouldn’t you know it, the rain started picking up right when I found a good one. So I just had to set up my tent while getting soaked through. I didn’t let the hurry dissuade me from setting it up just right, adjusting and reinforcing and redoing parts to create the largest footprint possible, though it’s never quite large enough. I even put my ground cloth under the tent instead of in the vestibule, as I intended to bring my pack inside with me. I managed to do it in such a way that the inner tent stayed dry until I brought my wet self and my wet pack inside. After a lot of adjustment, everything seemed mostly out of the rain, though there are always the corners trying to poke out. And the rain only seemed to pick up more and more into the night.

I put my jacket on over my wet shirt. Rather than change shirts and have a cold, wet shirt to put on again in the morning, I thought I could just cook the water out of it overnight. I did change into dry socks though. Even in the coat and sleeping bag, I shivered a lot waiting for the ground under me (and the air in my mattress) to warm up, but I knew within a few hours, I would be warm and snug.

Four more days of rain to go!

Trail miles: 17.7

Distance to Highway 84 at Ghost Ranch: 76.2 miles

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Off-trail PCT CA Section D

Days 68-70: 3 Days of Sitting

Day 68:Inglewood

I woke with the surprisingly early sunrise and the birds, like 5:30am, and I was on the trail before 7. It wasn’t too long before I saw the day hikers coming up. I took it as a good sign that I would have no trouble getting a ride. I consistently passed them every five minutes or so on the descent, but never said much more than a simple greeting to any of them.

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PCT CA Section D

Day 67: Mt. Baden-Powell

I woke up with the birds at 6am with no particular desire to sleep in. I had 16 miles to Vincent Gap and the sooner I started, the sooner I’d be there. That didn’t mean I didn’t spend a couple of minutes doing an emergency glove stitch and some retaping of my toes. I hiked out around 8am.

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PCT CA Section D

Day 66: Ridge Near Eagles Roost Picnic Area

I woke up at 6 or before, but didn’t really rush into action. All those jalapeños from dinner had some rushing to do, so I couldn’t go anywhere fast. But I did retape my feet, all hiking clothes out and on (wearing the other socks this time), and applied sunscreen before going down to the lobby to grab some breakfast items and coffee to go with the soda I bought from the vending for way too much. I checked out at 11am and called a Lyft.

Ilia picked me up a few minutes later and drove me up the Angeles Crest Highway to the trailhead. Surprisingly, this trip only cost a little over 30 bucks (plus tip). Ilia was a regular visitor to the mountains herself, and had hiked and ridden up there many times before. She even wanted a picture of the trailhead sign before she left.

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CDT MT Section 7 Off-trail

Days 64-65: Up All Night

Day 64 and half of Day 65: Burbank

I woke up at 6 from a crazy dream of being lost in a dense, crowded, multilevel megalopolis, like if Manhattan were crossed with downtown Singapore. I was starving and immediately ate breakfast, then dozed off again and had some more big city dreams, waking up again just after 7. I skipped any extra morning repair work and hit the road around a quarter after 8.

I took a pause in the middle of a hill climb less than a mile later. Around a half an hour break to get myself in a better hiking state.

A few miles ahead, near the summit of Burnt Mountain, the trail briefly left the forest for a meadow with something like a view, and I paused to hop on the cell network to send a text to Weatherman (the same trail angel that gave me a ride last year) with my progress. I put my ETA at 5pm.

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CDT MT Section 7

Day 63: Burnt Mountain

I woke up at 6 and immediately ate breakfast. Then, I dozed off from 6:30 to 7, and woke again to do some more stitching on the Frankengloves. I suited up, packed up, and was on the road by 8:20.

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CDT MT Section 7

Day 62: Haggin WMA

As per usual, I woke at 6, went back to sleep until 7 because it was too cold. But I didn’t do any repair work first thing because instead I was researching whether I would take the official CDT route through the Haggin WMA, which I had no map for, or follow the pre-2015 roadwalk route. I had pretty well decided to go with the roadwalk just because the official route sounded slower and more difficult and the roadwalk was 7 miles shorter. But I did give myself some room to be convinced otherwise, since I didn’t really like the idea of walking down the side of the highway.

Anyway, that diaper rash feeling didn’t really clear up over night, and I was feeling a little bit sore down there even as I woke up. I started walking a little before 8:30, and felt great going up to the ridge where the long descent started, but just a few switchbacks down, I could already tell it was going to be a problem.