5th July

After the excellent party the day before, we shelter indoors with windows and doors closed and shades down to keep heat out; fans circulate the air inside. I catch up with news from the UK about the general election.

Stepping outside to feed the chickens or get a cold one from the cooler is like entering an oven. The sun is so strong. The heat dome over western USA is bringing extraordinary temperatures to over 120 million people. The advice is stay indoors.

The chickens do their bit by staying undercover today.
My watch and phone keep pinging me warning messages.

The party was under a huge oak tree. Misters hanging from the branches brought the temperature down enough it was comfortable in the shade.

Joe and Sai do not use air conditioning. Many folks do, which puts strain on power resources and distribution networks.

I have a chance to reflect on the Sierra river crossings. When the JMT and PCT share a path there are more bridges over creeks and rivers. Maybe the JMT brings in more revenue to the Parks Service to enable this? Fording water is part of the PCT experience, so while the bridges offered respite from wet feet it did feel like cheating a little.

Before the JMT you were lucky to get a boulder and log to keep your feet dry.
A nice rock hop.
An actual bridge!
How’s that for clear water?
Trouble ahead.
Dussy bridge bent out of shape. Ok for peds, not for horses.
Downstream no such luxury. Only knee deep in the morning.
Approaching THAT bridge.

This is the toughest river crossing. I approached with trepidation.

It used to look like that.
It got a bit bent in 22/23 winter.
But that didn’t stop at least one PCT hiker in June 2023.
When I saw it after diverting via the Over the Top detour.
An intact bridge at the next crossing.
More benign water. Top is creek water gravity fed through the blue filter into 1L bottle for drinking.
This has been my biggest wet crossing.
Thigh deep. That is a smile of relief and accomplishment.
Nice wooden bridge.
Crossing this earlier in the season guarantees a waterfall soaking. I stayed dry.
THAT river has another compromised crossing. Luckily the detour is an easy flat trail along gravel roads.
Last bridges on the JMT/PCT trail.
Then back to scrapping across on a jumble of logs.


2 responses to “5th July”

  1. What were the actual temperatures?

    Liked by 1 person

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About Me

An English walker who sleeps better outdoors.

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