2lumpy
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You still got it eel.Mosey, if you decide to just road hunt this year we understand.
You still got it eel.Mosey, if you decide to just road hunt this year we understand.
No roads in ANWR...Mosey, if you decide to just road hunt this year we understand.
No. If I do complete the Triple Crown, I'll probably go New Zealand's Te Araroa as my final long distance trail.All the best on your hunts this fall moz.
Iām curiousā¦ā¦ are you considering an east/west hike after you complete the triple crown, north to south hikes.
American Discovery Trail - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
New Zealand looks amazingā¦.. from my place in Utah. Hope you do it and share the images.No. If I do complete the Triple Crown, I'll probably go New Zealand's Te Araroa as my final long distance trail.
Moze I lost my phone packing a Deer out last year. A guy showed up, he had service and I kept moving towards the kill site, finally heard it ring and found it.Burney to I-5: This 90-mile section of trail took me through the Shasta-Trinity National Forest. When I left Burney it was socked in with smoke from the Park fire. Consequently, some well-intentioned folks on Facebook were recommending that PCT hikers skip up to Dunsmuir, and it appears that the majority of the PCT hikers around me did exactly that. I tend to be much more stubborn about maintaining my continuous footpath though (and admittedly this sometimes gets me into trouble), and because the PCT runs about seven miles north of Burney, I hitched a ride up to the trail to see conditions for myself. What I found when I got there was the smoke was mostly lifted.
So I decided to go for it. The trail through this section was a little overgrown in spots, which did some damage to my shins (should have zipped the legs back on my convertible pants), but otherwise conditions were beautiful. I saw only two other hikers (one NOBO and one SOBO) over this four days.
After hiking the last 100 miles through burn scars, it was really nice to be hiking in green again. I also saw a lot more wildlife than I have any previous sections of this trail (not including fish).
I did have one near disaster. On the second night I was hiking the last couple miles in the dark, and was just about finished when I reached for my phone and it wasn't in the pack pocket where it was supposed to be. I use my phone for navigation, info on water sources, camping spots, etc, so that was an alarming development. The brush was very overgrown through much of that area, and I could see how it could have knocked my phone out of my pocket that is attached to one of my pack straps. I knew the last time I looked at it, it said 1.7 miles to the next water source. So I backtracked what I thought was two miles with my headlamp, hoping I would see it on the trail. No luck.
My next idea was to wait until 4:45 in the morning when the alarm would be going off, and hopefully I would hear it as I walked the two-mile section of trail. No luck with that idea either.
For my third try, I very slowly walked back over that two miles, and carefully checked under every bush that looked like it was tall enough to knock the phone out of my pocket. No luck with that either.
After that failed, I essentially gave up, and started thinking of ways I could navigate the last 40 miles back to civilization. At this point I had not seen any other hikers for the previous two days, so it felt like I was there by myself. I had pretty much gone back through that entire two-mile section for the fourth time, and I had no intention of going through it again.
Then something black in the middle of a bush caught my eye. There it was! Talk about going from the lowest of lows to highest of highs instantly! I was back in the game.
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2.....is that one phone story or 2 ?
Did you read where I found it last year . Then where I bought one tonight ? Reading comprehension not your thing Homer .......is that one phone story or 2 ?
Glad the first one worked out for you. Bummer about the second. I actually found a phone when I was hiking the CDT. After charging it, there was a text message on it that said something like: "This phone belongs to my grandpa. If anyone finds please contact me at..."Moze I lost my phone packing a Deer out last year. A guy showed up, he had service and I kept moving towards the kill site, finally heard it ring and found it.
Sunday we were headed to camp. On an extremely rough road I stopped for the wife to make a pit stop- I thing the phone had fallen on the floor mat and then to the ground. I had to buy a new one tonight.
It wasn't that long ago that we didn't even have those things. Now it's hard to imagine how we'd survive without them...Glad the first one worked out for you. Bummer about the second. I actually found a phone when I was hiking the CDT. After charging it, there was a text message on it that said something like: "This phone belongs to my grandpa. If anyone finds please contact me at..."
Those were some happy people to get that phone back. They were planning to take grandpa out that very night to get him a new phone. He had no idea where he had lost it, but based on where I found it, it was a location where he pulled off the road to relieve himself...
It wasn't that long ago that we didn't even have those things. Now it's hard to imagine how we'd survive without them...
Iglad to see you are positive about your experience as well enjoyed yourself I hope you donāt give up on your dream to get your slam. I was really rooting for you this year that you would kill your dall.
Thank you. It's not lost on me that any sheep hunt opportunity these days is an absolute privilege. Don't know that I'll be able to afford another one, but the fact that I've been able to go at all is more than most will ever get, so can't be ungrateful for that. We'll see what the future brings. Good luck to you too.glad to see you are positive about your experience as well enjoyed yourself I hope you donāt give up on your dream to get your slam. I was really rooting for you this year that you would kill your dall.
Thank you sir, I will take all the good luck I can get. I love the positivity but bummed to hear your goal of going for your grand slam wonāt happen.I
Thank you. It's not lost on me that any sheep hunt opportunity these days is an absolute privilege. Don't know that I'll be able to afford another one, but the fact that I've been able to go at all is more than most will ever get, so can't be ungrateful for that. We'll see what the future brings. Good luck to you too.
I have left it open about possibly trying for a billy again, because it's much more affordable than a sheep hunt. Still have a NM elk hunt, KS whitetail, and now a possible KY whitetail to go this year, and still trying to figure out how and when to complete the PCT. Trying to get all my adventures in while I'm still physically able. In my 60s now so that window is closing fast. At some point after I get them all in I may have to unretire, but that's a risk I'm willing to take now...Great looking scenery!!!
Very nice wolf.
Was hoping to see a nice Billy. Hopefully next try.
You planning on going back to try again in the next few years to get a Billy?
Donāt think I have ever read about anyone going on so many great adventures in one year!!!
Whatās next?
More true than you as the lovely and gracious wifey has grown accustomed to not having to listen to my snoring...Another great adventure!
Mozey, you're so accustomed to living out of a tent you'll probably have to put up a tent in your back yard so you can get some sleep. J/K