“…sooner or later, you
were forced to concede that there was really no difference at all between slow
and fast; that the Hundred Days Trip and a speed run were simply different
facets of the same quest. The essence of both actually had nothing to do with
velocity and everything to do with depth – and thus what appeared to be a
paradox was, in fact, not a paradox at all. At the heart of both approaches lay
the dream of forcing open a doorway to a dimension that would enable you to
fully explore what it meant to transcend your limits – to arrive at a
destination in time and mind where the dichotomy that separated you from the
natural world collapsed, where you and the thing became one.”
Kevin Fedarko, The Emerald Mile
This is the account of my failure to complete the
UltraPedestrian Wilderness Challenge Route #1: Graves Creek/Enchanted Valley
Loop through the Quinault, Skykomish, and Duckabush watersheds of Olympic National
Park. The 55-mile loop featured several miles of wilderness navigation along Six Ridge,
connecting to better maintained trails along the North Fork of the Skykomish
River, the Duckabush River, through O’Neil Pass, and the Enchanted Valley:
This trip was somewhat ill-fated in the sense that the
universe hurled signs of impending doom at me all week. Not being
superstitious, I simply ignored them. But these signs kept coming, in the form
of logical and illogical imperatives, the most ominous of which was this albino
banana slug that crossed my path around Mile 2:
More than an Idle Metaphor |
Just to be fair to the slug community, I acknowledge and
take full responsibility for my exceptionally late start time of 9:30 AM on
Friday, September 4, 2015.
In the end, it wasn’t the worst weather I ever endured, as
much as the lightest gear preparation I ever endured. Having said that, I did
overpack for the official NOAA forecast, which called for sunny weather with highs
in the 70s on Saturday.
I disregarded NOAA’s qualification about a chance of a shower on Friday. But on Friday morning, I did notice cold condensation dripping off the vegetation at the trailhead. It was chilly, damp, and 45 degrees. At the last minute, I lashed extra gear to my pack - gear that I normally pack but seemed excessive for sunny and 70, and that I was too disorganized to leave behind in the garage that morning.
I disregarded NOAA’s qualification about a chance of a shower on Friday. But on Friday morning, I did notice cold condensation dripping off the vegetation at the trailhead. It was chilly, damp, and 45 degrees. At the last minute, I lashed extra gear to my pack - gear that I normally pack but seemed excessive for sunny and 70, and that I was too disorganized to leave behind in the garage that morning.
Instead of the victorious loop, I navigated this out-and-back of traverse of the primitive and intermittent
trails of upper Six Ridge: Graves Enchanted Twilight Disappearing Trail.
GRAVES CREEK FORD TO SUNDOWN LAKE
I ran into a WTA crew carving up downed logs right below the
first ford at Success Creek. They asked where I was headed (Marmot, hopefully, by headlamp), and they incredulously replied
that Belview was a more realistic goal (Belview?!?
Nooooooo, not Belview!). Or Camp Pleasant (Ummm, thanks for the recommendation). And they duly warned me about
Six Ridge: the relentless climbs and descents, up-and-down, up-and-down, and
the meadows, oh, the meadows.
I thanked the crew for their excellent trail intelligence,
and their fine workmanship, and without further ado I forded the creek and
continued on with delusional aspirations.
The weather drizzled, cleared, drizzled, and rained. The brush kept my
raingear soaked. My cellphone was hopelessly fogged over by noon and
despite my best attempts, stayed fogged over most of the day. I admired the water
flowing through the trail, and the fungus, and disregarded further portents of decay
and impending doom:
Sunbreak! |
Mushroom season |
Orange is a color of warning |
the Horcrux |
SIX RIDGE
At 2:20PM Friday I crossed over Six Ridge Pass from the shady
north side of the ridge to the sunny south side. At the time, what I took away
from this view was: Sunbreaks!!!
Viewing south from Six Ridge Pass |
The camera lens on my cellphone remained fogged over, so for
a while I experimented with flare effects.
I really enjoyed tracing the intermittent route along Six
Ridge. I felt like I had plenty of time to sort out the route simply relying on
trial and error, sweeping the meadows, distinguishing boot-prints from
elk-prints, retracing my steps a couple of times, and was thrilled to encounter
signs, occasionally, that I was on the right track.
B is for Belview |
The meadows were the most rewarding puzzles. I passed the Belview
campsite at 4:40 PM and conceded that Marmot was out of the question. Even Home
Sweet Home sounded aggressive, given my late start time. Still, I had a solid
3.5 hours of daylight – and a headlamp – to reach Big Log campsite, or Camp
Pleasant, on the North Fork of the Skykomish.
SEVEN STREAM TRAIL
At 5:15 PM I reached the signpost directing me to the Seven
Stream Trail that descends off Six Ridge.
The Green Trails map uses a solid green line to represent this section of Six Ridge, so I felt excited and confident to reach this trail junction at Elev. 4500 ft.
Seven Stream > |
The Green Trails map uses a solid green line to represent this section of Six Ridge, so I felt excited and confident to reach this trail junction at Elev. 4500 ft.
At the same time, I noticed pockets of hail on the ground -
hailstones that weren’t melting. It was time to lose some elevation before
dark.
Look! The sun is shining on the fluffy white cloud! |
At 5:30 PM I took my last photograph of the day, of an incoming weather front, just above eye level.
Shortly after that, I lost the route at a switchback overlooking the
burned side of the ridge. I tried descending further and hit a dead end that
became steeper and muddier the further I went. I retraced my steps to a cairn,
and hurled myself back down the slope in the hope that I would intercept a switchback.
This is when the storm caught me. In an instant I was completely
drenched with freezing rain and hail, clambering across an over-steepened muddy
slope with all four limbs, and I knew right away that there was no way I could
keep warm while route-finding, and there was no way I could find the route in the dark.
Chasing after those sunbreaks! |
BACK TO BELVIEW
It was also clear that there was no way I could warm up by
retracing my steps back to Belview. I arrived there before dark, and struggled to pull out my gear and set up a rainfly. I had a
lightweight sleeping bag that wasn’t quite rated for the conditions, but I had
packed a fluffy jacket and a lightweight wool shirt, both dry.
SUNRISE AT BELVIEW
I was able to doze on and off, and woke occasionally to the hoots of an owl hunting in the forest below me. There was no sense in getting up before sunrise. I didn’t
pack a stove, so there was no water to boil, no oatmeal to decorate. And I needed
daylight to navigate my way back to Six Ridge Pass. Gradually, my rainfly began
to glow. At 7:11 AM, the sun peeked through the trees at the edge of the
campsite:
Good morning, sun! I am so happy to see you! |
The minute the sun appeared, it became possible to warm my
soaking raingear enough to plaster it back on. Still, it took me over an hour
to break camp, jam everything back into to my pack, and finally, a dry pair of
socks followed by soggy, wet shoes.
THE FLIP SIDE
I wondered if the route-finding would be easier in reverse. The morning sun angle seemed ideal for highlighting the route through the meadows, and the places where I followed the route seamlessly on Friday seemed more difficult on Saturday, perhaps because I hadn’t studied the route as acutely in every direction. What I really enjoyed was discovering new route-finding cues that became visible in one direction vs. another, and rediscovering those cues as they repeated themselves, sometimes haphazardly, along the way.
Are you trying to tell me I'm on route? Or off route? |
Everything looks different in the morning sun |
I spooked five elk, and over two dozen grouse, but this was the only wildlife I was quick enough to photograph:
One gangly Great Blue Heron at McGravey |
One last ford opportunity |
After fording Success Creek a second time, I met up again
with the WTA crew. They were scattered along the trail, focusing on the big problem
logs, so I shared my Seven Stream story four times on my way out. The crew was
not prepared for Friday’s hailstorm either, or the mis-forecast waves of wet
weather on Saturday, and had run into their own unsolvable log puzzles.
The crew was preparing to hike out early, too.
I logged 32.4 miles and 9,357 feet of elevation gain in 30
hours and 26 minutes. Of that time, I spent just over 13 hours
sheltering, and averaged approximately 32 minutes per mile while on the move.
TRANSPORT AND GEAR
- One station wagon, plus eleven gallons of gasoline
- One 36L Osprey pack, with a 2L Camelbak bladder (not a good fit, but passable)
- One 800 mL water container, for treating water with iodine tablets
- A nuisance-level First Aid kit (not used!)
- Two Green Trails Maps: Mt. Christie, WA No. 166 and Mt. Steel, WA No. 167
- Brunton compass
- Suunto Ambit3 GPS watch
- An iPod 5 cell phone instead of a camera
- One MyCharge 3000 mAh portable charger
- One lightweight sleeping bag
- One deluxe Therm-A-Rest
- One rainfly without the one-person tent
FOOD AND WATER
- In keeping with my general state of disorganization, lack of preparedness, and inability to leave the office on schedule, I relied heavily on processed foods including prepackaged granola bars, PayDay candy bars, and ungarnished ham and cheese sandwiches. On the other hand, I did cook up two scrambled-egg-and-ham wraps in advance, which tasted pretty damn good on Saturday morning.
- Only 2 liters of tap water…I hardly drank and never felt thirsty, not even after I got home.
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