Author: mmbowden60

  • Haven’t reached this PCT section yet

    I haven’t started my PCT hike yet. Come back after March 27th.

    In the meantime, here is a photo of the Springer Mountain AT trail register. I saw Grand Pa wearing a long grey beard just as he was finishing the Amicalola Approach Trail. This was the end of his 4th AT thru hike.

  • The King – Kings Meadow Trail

    The King – Kings Meadow Trail

    It wasn’t the best start. I had just left my van and crossed the footbridge over Snowbird creek. I saw where the trail turned uphill. It also continued up the creek, but I thought that direction was false; a trail made by trout fishermen. It was a wrong turn. The trail followed a smaller creek, rising steeply. Eventually the trail nearly disappeared but I could see the ridge top just ahead. I popped out onto a leafy road. Following this road and my GPS, I was able to rejoin the KMT.

    Bucket grown into tree. I am on false trail.

    Leafy road that led me back toward KMT

    I reached a field, then turned left off the road onto a trail that immediately crossed this creek. Following this trail, I was soon back in the KMT.

    Trail passed through this tree. Just kidding!

    Kings Meadow

    Lot of gunfire coming from this house.

    Hooper Bald

    Difficult navigating from KMT to Snowbird trail. Finally reach the sign for Snowbird trail. Can you read it?

    Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

  • Off road vehicle damage to Forest Land

    Off road vehicle damage to Forest Land

    You wouldn’t think someone could drive to these isolated high ridges. Here is a photo on a ridge in North Carolina that is over 4600 feet elevation. These 4-wheelers leave behind more than rutted washes. The drivers also haul up all manner of camp material, chairs, tarps, ropes, tables, and grills. This is mostly left permanently onsite. It builds and adds to the accumulation of garbage and left-behinds. For the few that drive into these remote areas, these left behind stashes allow the convenience of a lazy and comfortable existence during the next visit.

    – Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

  • Passing Time while Hiking – Sounds we Miss

    Passing Time while Hiking – Sounds we Miss

    So often we just plod along the trail with our eyes on the trail ahead, staring at rocks and roots as we pick our way step by repetitive step. We might be listening to a recorded book or music or perhaps having a conversation with another hiker or even with ourselves.

    Take some time to turn off the music and look up into the trees (without tripping over a rock). Looking around will force you to slow down for a while. Take that opportunity to tune into the sounds around you. You are probably already tuned into a sound or two, but try concentrating to see how many sounds you can listen to at once. Once the louder sounds are identified, try listening for the quieter sounds, our feet pressing the earth, a leaf rustling nearby, other leaves that are fainter and farther away.  Expand your horizon. Maybe you were concentrating so hard on trail sounds that you didn’t consider the sky. Hear that distant plane passing so far away. See how long you can continue to hear that plane. For once, the hidden sounds will be revealed and you will see that all sounds on trail aren’t the attention grabbing squeak of a chipmunk or the rustling squirrel, so loud that you could swear it is a bear.

  • Solitary Experience – Snowbird Wilderness

    Middle Falls (Snowbird Creek)

    How many days have you hiked without seeing another person? If not days, how many hours? On this January weekend, I hiked for 2 days through the Snowbird Wilderness Study Area without seeing another person. In fact, I didn’t see people or vehicles at the trailhead parking area. I didn’t even see people or vehicles along the 4 – 5 mile length of the one lane  unpaved Forest Service Road 75 that leads to “Junction” the start of Snowbird Creek (Trail 64).

    Post a comment and let us know the longest period of time you have gone without seeing another human. Where were you and how was the weather? Bad weather is a major factor that explains why you might be the only fool out in the woods.

    I was off with clear skies and cold temps (26 degrees F). From the Big Snowbird Creek parking area the trail follows the creek upstream on an easily walked wide path (former railroad bed).  Beyond Big Falls a nice footbridge crosses the rushing creek. When I was there, the flow of the creek was such that it could be crossed, but only with care and even then with difficulty. There is no rock hopping this creek. I avoided all crossings by taking the 64A trail.

    The several trails that make up the small network of trails around Big Snowbird Creek and Sassafras Creek are practically, out and back trails. The trailhead at Junction has a large National Geographic map posted on a sign which shows several possibilities for loops leading back to Junction via the Kings MeadowTrail; however, I suspect that those loop routes are difficult if not impossible to find. I plan to return in order to explore loop possibilities. My first order of business will be to hike Kings Meadow trail the 7.9 miles up to 5400 foot Hooper Bald just off the Cherehola Parkway.

     

    This map appears on the sign at the turnabout on the end of FS 75 at the trailheads for Snowbird Creek (64) and King Meadows (63) trail heads are located. Trail 154 could be used to make a loop, but I wasn’t able to find my way up 64 much past Meadow Creek.
    Beautiful Bridge at first crossing of Snowbird Creek. Just beyond bridge you have to choose continuing on trail 64 with 11 creek crossings in a little over a mile, or trail 64A with no creek crossings. Don’t stop here, because Middle Falls is next and it is the best!
    Hipster Mobile

     

    After setting up my tent and when I was losing light, I noticed a shape moving in my direction through the rhodo undergrowth and up the hill. I got up thinking, this can’t be a bear. Earlier in the day I had seen a half dozen or more hunting dogs. A dog poked his nose from the bushes. This dog couldn’t be convinced to join me. The dog spent the night under rhododendron about 25 feet down the hill from my tent. He only reluctantly came out the next morning. It was then that I discovered a big slash across the shoulder. Later on that day the dog was chasing his nose through the woods. I guess the injury didn’t bother him too much.

    Getting There:

    Link to Google Map Directions: Robbinsville, NC to Snowbird Trail Head

    Turn by Turn Directions

    From Robbinsville, NC just as you are entering town on Hwy 129 (coming from Topton, Andrews direction) turn right on East Main Street

    Head north on US-129 N toward 5 Point Rd
    568 ft
    Turn left onto E Main St
    0.264 mi
    Turn left onto S Main St
    604 ft
    Turn right onto Junaluska Rd
    0.343 mi
    Turn left onto Snowbird Rd
    4.73 mi
    Turn left to stay on Snowbird Rd
    2.10 mi
    Sharp left to stay on Snowbird Rd
    (Look out for a 180 degree turn on Snowbird Road that descends immediately following the turn. There is no sign and it is easy to miss. )
    1.02 mi
    Immediately after a crossing bridge, turn right on a small road (Big Snowbird Road) with one-lane bridge. Cross the one-lane bridge. You will also see a sign at this junction that shows “Little Snowbird” straight ahead and Big Snowbird to the right. The key is to look for the one lane bridge on right.
    Continue straight onto Big Snowbird Rd
    This road eventually turns into one lane unpaved Forest Service Road 75 with occasional campsites alongside Snowbird Creek. The road dead ends at a turnabout where there is a campsite and trailhead sign.
    4.09 mi (plus another 4 – 5 miles after Big Snowbird Rd turns into FS 75.)

     

     

     

  • Water – Planning your carry

    Water – Planning your carry

    With the exception of an occasional day hike, water is the one item that you begin the day with the need to plan for resupply. For its volume, water is the heaviest item in your pack. Carrying more than a little excess water isn’t a good way to keep your pack weight low. On the other hand, it is important to always keep enough water on hand to keep from becoming dehydrated.

    For those reasons, water requires more planning and attention than probably any other item you will carry.

    Containers

    First, you need to ensure you have containers for your water. Seems obvious, but I’m serious. My brother and I usually tied empty gallon milk jugs to the back of our packs. These gallon jugs served as supplement storage for dry sections of the trail. This worked well until on a hot July trek, I discovered that the milk jug had dropped off my pack. The next trail section was to be a long hard dry stretch. I hiked several miles out of my way down a side trail until I reached a dirt road. There in the roadside ditch, I found old plastic coke and sprite bottles. Gathering about 8 of these bottles I hiked back to the trail. At the last creek before the long dry stretch of the Duncan Ridge, I cleaned and filled the bottles.

    My lesson was learned.  I now carry a 2-liter platypus (my personal favorite) inside my pack. The 2-liter platypus provides plenty of capacity to retrieve water for camp. I also carry 3 – 4 small plastic bottles (my personal favorite) that water comes in at the grocery store. These small bottles will fit in the pockets of my shorts. Besides accessibility, having water bottles in your pockets means that the water won’t freeze when it is cold. (Years later I switched to Smartwater bottles kept in the water bottle pouches of my backpack.)

    With the Platypus, a single filling of the containers I carry is more than enough to cook supper and breakfast the next day, with plenty left for early hiking the next morning. Disposable water bottles are free, lightweight, and easily replaceable. Bringing along a small water bottle makes it easy to fit underneath the tightest spots to catch drips.  Where you have a small trickle of water that runs down a slope having no spillway, sometimes you can use a leaf held by a small stone to make a spillway. You may also be able to dig out a small pool and wait for the water to clear.

    The Platypus is lightweight, compact, and very reliable. I used one for many years before it developed a leak on a seam. The manufacturer replaced the Platypus for no charge.

    Water Treatment

    There are many ways to ensure you have safe water. My personal favorite is to use homemade drops from Clorox. Use Clorox Regular Bleach without scents. You don’t want to drink lavender-scented water. I dilute Clorox to 50%. This means that I double the number of drops from the Clorox water treatment recommendation. This allows me to treat smaller containers more precisely. My formula would require 4 drops per liter. I use 8 – 10 drops in my 2-liter platypus. My 12 oz water bottles each require 2 drops. I sometimes carry an 8 oz water bottle (my smallest bottle useful for collecting water in tight places) that requires only 1 drop of the 50% mixture.

    Using the measuring cup, I fill a dropper. An old Visine Eye Dropper works well. (Just be sure to mark the container so nobody tries to put this in their eye.)

    Other options include water filters, iodine tablets, and Steripens. I have used water filters and iodine tablets. I have seen Steripens used. All of these options work. You should take care that you test out all of your water treatment options ahead of time so you are completely familiar with how to use them. Steripens require working batteries. Water filters can get clogged or contaminated with improper use. (My brother and I hiked in heavy rain along the Chattooga River trail. We pumped water from the swollen muddy river with our new filter and were surprised to find it wouldn’t pump after a couple of strokes.) Things go wrong so if you are unsure, then a lightweight and effective backup might be homemade chlorine drops.

    Planning for water

    Whether you realize it or not, water requires more planning than anything else you carry. Unlike food, you wouldn’t weigh yourself down with enough water to make it the 5 days to the next trail town. Every day and every encounter with water requires a water decision. Do I refill here or go a little further? Do I already know where I can find water or do I need to get more information?

    Carrying easily-reached water bottles and chlorine dropper provides the most convenient way to top off or refill supplies while minimizing time spent refiling. On the other hand, using a  pump takes more time and may encourage you to carry more water (weight) to avoid having to stop to pump again.  When I spy water on the trail,  I pull a 12 oz bottle from my pocket and begin chugging the remaining water. By the time I reach the spring or creek I have an empty bottle at the ready for refilling in a matter of seconds.  I continue to hike as I am capping the water. I drop the untreated water in my left pocket, remembering that this bottle needs chlorine drops. In the meantime, I drink water from the bottle in my right pocket.

    Plan to take advantage of the easy trail-side water. Water that crosses the trail makes for the quickest refill stop. Hiking down side trails for water adds the most time for stops. The most effort involves side trails that descend steeply to a spring or stream.

    Depending on the heat and the scarcity of water, you may need to carry liters upon liters of water or perhaps just enough water (as little as two 12 oz bottles) to avoid the inconvenience of stopping for refills. Before you begin hiking each day, use your trail guides and apps to plan the amount of water you need to carry. If you are hiking in desert or drought conditions more planning is called for. An otherwise good plan can go bad because the weather is hot or humid and you drink more than you expect or because you are in an area that normally has adequate water, but water supplies are unexpectedly dried up due to drought. Along your hike, you shouldn’t forget to ask others hiking in the opposite direction about water sources they passed. This may alert you to water issues in time to do something about it.  In many instances water supplies are seasonal. Even normally reliable sources can disappear. On the AT, trail shelters should have water, but springs at some shelters often dry up. If this happens to you, check the register at the shelter for notes on the water. Other hikers may have made notes in the register regarding where water can be found. They provide information that a little further downhill from a dry spring that water is dripping.  If you reach a dry source, try walking downhill from the source. Stop and listen quietly for the sound of dripping water. Using this method, more than once I found water from otherwise dried-up sources. One time I wrote detailed descriptions in the shelter register of where running water could be found beyond the dry spring. Three days later, I met a man that had passed up that shelter the day after I had made my shelter register entry. He told me that he had wanted to stay at that shelter, but had been in dire need of water. I asked if he had checked the shelter register. He said, no.