North Kaibab Trail, Grand Canyon NP |
18-wheeled behemoths roared among terrified desert rats, icy chaos on
Arizona highways whenever snow flies. I settled in behind a big one until the
turnoff to so-called Grand Canyon National Park. Heavier snow north, and more
storms foretold so no tourist traffic.
If you skip the modern
fancies, backpacking may be the cheapest vacation possible. (A week of fasting
and meditation is cheaper still, but how fun is that?) Get your gear from the
used crap store and eat stuff from your own shelves. If your cheap gear doesn’t
kill you, it will only make your trip miserable.
at North Kaibab Trail, Grand Canyon NP |
Wilderness is my
church, and this Park a favorite cathedral since it’s only a couple hours’
drive. This time a “rim-to-rim-to-rim” excursion, South Rim to the North and
back, 47 miles roughly. Some overly devoted worshipers do it in one
self-flagellating marathon.
Problem is, all overnight
“below-the-rim” hikes must be reserved and paid months in advance. December
days may be sunny and 61, or a snow-blown 16. On paper, my five day stroll was
a breeze; on the ground now a wet and howling wind.
South Rim tourist hub
almost a ghost town. An enthusiastic couple with two little kids and an
infant were my only company on the early shuttle to the South Kaibab trailhead. How
heroic their adventure--playing tourist with baby animals in deadly
weather!--compared to my self-indulgent solo slog.
A doo-dad I use: “crampons.”
Metal spikes with a rubber cord to hold them on your boots, $2 at a Flagstaff
used crap store. They bite icy trails just enough to prevent bruised bum,
bone-cracking tumble, or sphincter-clenching cliff-edge “near death
experience."
Ribbon Falls, GCNP |
Doo-dad I do not:
mp3pod or any other magic music box. My jet-engine-loud workplace makes my ears
scream for silence. Sloppy frosting makes this monster church quiet as deep
space: the Eternal Soundtrack. Eventually my grey database always supplies a
marching tune, in this case Message To Love, Jimi Hendrix, over and
over, mile upon mile.
Snow and ice turned to rain
and mud, down down down. Bored burro trains lugged tourist goods, and decorated
the trail with poop. Very few other souls. Hunkered over a tiny stove out of
the crazy wind in a shallow ravine for instant coffee, dried cow, and a little smoke.
Cracked my first big can of beer on the sandy north shore of the big river as
the sun peeked out for the first and only time. Soon it sank below the western
cliffs, not to peek again for three days.
Suspension bridges over Colorado River, Grand Canyon NP |
Had my pick of the 33
Bright Angel camp spots--was the whole hiking world afraid to get wet? Drank my
other beer and watched the few tourists straggle past to Phantom Ranch.
Splashed the dark juice from a pre-made fake Oriental concoction on my only
pants, a funky cologne. For easy after-dinner clean-up: lick your plate like a
dog, then rinse. Cold but no fires allowed ever. As soon as it was dark enough
I slept like petrified wood.
Daylight,
intermittent rain. Stopped at the “Phantom Ranch Lodge” to check the chalkboard
forecast: 100% chance of rain low and snow high. I interrupted two employees to
ask about humans on the North Rim, in case I was dying up there. The shaggy
long-hair said with a chuckle that there was a “caretaker...probably drunk.”
The other, scarred and tattooed, glared like a snow leopard eager to rip my
head off.
North Kaibab Trail, Grand Canyon NP |
Steady rain on North
Kaibab, a superhighway foot trail that wound along the wing of the church built
by Bright Angel Creek (as opposed the the Dirty Devil far north, both renamed
by John W. Powell.) Signs “Watch for rock falls,” short detours around
collapsed piles. Monster boulders loomed above, perched on pebbles and twigs,
and I stepped lively to reduce odds of being squished like a parking lot
condiment packet.
Wet snow, near Cottonwood
Campground. Three Park employees hurried south. I asked a straggling fourth
whether they were abandoning their posts or changing the guard. He grumpily
insisted the latter, but was the last green uniform for two days.
Cottonwood campground, Grand Canyon NP |
Assessed mud depth
among the 10 campsites while drinking rum and Gatorade. Four toilets, one
unlocked and warm but too stinky to serve as a survival cubicle, across from 15
barrels and 87 bags, in rows, marked “COMPOST" (yes I counted.) Snooped
around the rangers’ vacant cabin, decided I’d bust in if gods brewed the Storm
of the Century. Only sound my random nose-blast or loud fart.
Cottonwood campground, Grand Canyon NP |
Space six, under a
scrub oak, was a mistake. Icy clumps, formed in the branches and scattered by
wind, scratched at my garage-sale tent all night. A tiny leak
soaked my pants. What an idiot! Shunned by hiking elite, jeans are fine for
most desert jaunts, but not this. No choice but to put them on over my long
underwear of warmer fiber, and hope to dry with wind and body heat. Destination
North Rim and back, 14 miles, toting only a little food and water.
Roaring Springs area, GCNP |
Another battened-down
ranger station at Roaring Springs, steep uphill from there. Up up up, snow snow
snow, sweaty work in a semi-blizzard. Mine were the only foot prints.
North Kaibab Trail, Grand Canyon NP |
In a nook under a rock
overhang I stopped to catch my breath and argue with me in the swirl. Accept
failure? Or risk a life-or-death struggle, like a Jack London story, unable
even "To Build A Fire" since that would violate Park Regulations? As
“Dirty Harry" said, “A man has got to know his limitations.” To admit
defeat is less failure than freezing. A snack and a smoke and I bounded down in
my own lonely footsteps, mission unaccomplished. Close enough.
North Kaibab Trail, Grand Canyon NP |
Soon I encountered the only
other human of the day, making the same attempt all the way from Phantom Ranch.
Small, sun-wrinkled as I, scabby chapped lips and tobacco-flecked teeth, he
wore running shoes with ankle socks, which he claimed to have worn in the Alps.
I felt less insane and wished him good luck.
Cottonwood campground, GCNP |
Cottonwood Mud-Ground
felt like modern civilization with its iced-over solar panels and flopping
wind-sock (for helicopters which haul supplies, injured hikers, and, as it
turns out, the “compost” to trucks which haul it to the Flagstaff landfill.)
Rain and snow, off and on. Pants still mostly wet. I wrestled the tent to a
slightly-less-muddy site, and violated regulations by improving drainage with a
stick.
Alps-man tramped past, said he’d turned back not long after I had.
Still, he’d hiked 17 miles that day with seven to go, to my ten. Maybe his
running shoes were less dumb than my work boots. Plus he wore proper hiking
pants.
Cottonwood campground, Grand Canyon NP |
Woke to steady rain. Breaking
wet camp sucks. My borrowed jacket slowly un-waterproofed, inundated. Only
my back stayed dry, under the pack and its one-dollar garage-sale cover which
actually worked. I hurried to reach the Lodge before it closed at four, my only
hope of drying out a little.
North Kaibab Trail, GCNP |
Mother nature had
killed their electricity but they stayed open and tracked sales in a notebook,
like olden times. In a dim corner I took off as many clothes as I decently
could, draped them on chairs around me, and gratefully drank overpriced beer.
In another corner, middle-aged Americans played spades, one reluctant partner
annoying the trying-to-win others with her apathetic bad play. Six young men
with British accents, wearing little head-lamps and correct pants, argued
vigorously over a map at another table. Almost four, the rain abruptly quit so
I threw on my less-wet clothes and got out.
Roaring Springs, GCNP |
No longer deep dust
and burro dung, the short path to the campground was now pungent sloppy soup.
I’d hoped to sneak my tent under a ramada at the “group” site, but five tents,
and ten people talking and laughing, were already there. They were from
Monterrey, Mexico, and I knew enough Spanish and they enough English to talk,
about--what else?--the weather.
North Kaibab Trail, GCNP |
Pitched wet tent in
least muddy site instead. A Park Ranger visited as always, to check permit and
recite a little speech about the rules. He informed me that despite the power
failure, the Lodge would open for two hours at eight, as usual, and that a fire
would be allowed for once. I told him thanks but that was past my bedtime.
But after drinking the last
of my booze (no sense in carrying it out), my last smoke, and pacing in
rain-squalling darkness a while, a fire sounded pretty good. Surely the
delicate few tourists were cold--an emergency, why were they waiting? I would
muck back, find the guy in charge, and offer to help start a bit early. It made
perfect sense. I could even dry my pants!
North Kaibab Trail, GCNP |
My flashlight was a
hand-crank “re-chargeable” that wouldn’t re-charge, it flickered weakly only if
you continuously cranked. I straddled the worst of the ooze path like a kid
with poopy pants, and cranked like a sport-fisherman. Someone inside the Lodge
was lighting gas lamps but ignored my knocking, fed up with dumb-ass tourists
no doubt. Undaunted I went out back hoping to corral a grunt worker, they
usually know what’s up.
There, under tarpaulins, by
lamp light, supper bubbled in big pots over gas burners. Soon a burly woman
came out and began babbling happily about the whole set-up as she stirred. When
I asked about the fire she frowned and gave me a grim once-over: five day ratty
grey beard, reeking of body odor and liquor and dripping like a drowned hobo.
“There are no fires
allowed--”
“Aw, come on, the Ranger told
me--”
“Well, yeah, but only in the
bunk-house, for paying guests.” Her tone: working girl who takes no crap.
“So that’s that?”
“Sorry,” clearly insincerely.
North Kaibab Trail, Grand Canyon NP |
Defeated, deflated,
befuddled, and bone tired, I cursed like a petulant child and staggered back
into the dark and stormy night, prancing bowlegged and cranking furiously.
Nature, the gods, and people, are sometimes jerks for no good reason. I lurched
past the British camp where they still yapped earnestly at their map by torch-light.
Fortunately I do some stuff
right: had fixed the leak by tightening rain-fly knots, and managed to keep my
bed and one set of inner clothing dry, against all odds. Ahhhhh! Drifted off to
the sound of Mexicans singing and laughing and hollering, like some of my old neighborhoods, and rain.
Burro compound at Phantom Ranch, AZ |
Overcast morning but
no sky-spit, 9.6 miles on Bright Angel Trail to go, uphill. Spurred on when one
of the British punks, passing while I rested, wisecracked about my age. Passed
them when they rested and they never caught me again. Geezer my arse, I showed
them blokes.
Wet snow had wrought havoc
with the trees at Indian Gardens (site of a former--can you guess?) Broken
branches willy-nilly on and around the trail. A Ranger tried to lasso a
dangling stray, the area roped off with red “DANGER” tape. While I heated soup
under a delightfully dry ramada, a sudden brief thunderous rattle up-canyon. A
stadium-high section had fallen, I could see the now-exposed dry rock. The
roping Ranger ran that direction, then a staggering pot-bellied veteran,
barking strenuously into his two-way radio. Whatever they were hoping to do
about this subversive act of wind, water, and gravity--fill out a report, stand
and say wow, or what--they were very excited.
Bright Angel Trail, Grand Canyon NP, looking south |
The last tired miles often
make me wonder why I do it, even though I know. Wilderness recreates religious
awe, reminds me to respect nature, its creatures, and all their gods. I am
nothing in the cosmic scheme, same as every human that has ever lived, which
makes holy this meat we live in and this rock we walk on. Better have a little
fun while we can! And I remember that to love and be loved are the best.
Bright Angel Trail, GCNP |
The latter propelled
the final trudge to my old truck, alone in the lot and buried in snow.
Starter’d been sketchy but it caught. Skipped my traditional post-hike fast
food and 40 ounce barley-pop. Had to get back to my home church, shed wet
pants, shower in warmed water, and worship in the sanctuary of my hot working
goddess!
Bright Angel Trail, Grand Canyon NP |
“Well I travel at the speed
of a reborn man...
If you wanna be free come
along with me...
Find yourself first, and then
your talent,
Work hard in your mind so you
can come alive...
Everybody come alive!
Everybody live alive!
Everybody love alive!”
--James Marshall Hendrix
(1942-1970)
Bright Angel Trail, while under the influence of James Hendrix |
All photos by me as usual. The black and white mutations here are my first and last "photo-shop" efforts. Too cheap to buy a photo mutation program, too honest to steal one, and too lazy to use one.
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