After almost a week in sunny Seattle I had a cheerful 5am wake up to join my Trek America tour. This 14 day camping safari winds inland, via a bunch of national parks, before heading back out to the coast at San Francisco.
3 Aussies, 6 Poms and a couple of Germans on a small bus sounds like the start of a bad joke but so far everyone has gotten on really well. Our fearless leader Jen, has done a great job of organising everything, and although the camping lifestye is starting to wear a little thin, I'm coping better than I predicted.The trip started poorly for me health wise with a projectile vomitting incident putting me out of commission for the first couple of days. By day 3 we'd reached Glacier national park, up near the Canadian border and i'd recovered enough to get out for a short but beautiful hike.
Next stop was Yellowstone NP, the first ever created, which is most famous for it's geothermal features. Geothermal features are rubbish. They smell bad and for the most part aren't very exciting. It's a very beautiful area in spite of them.
We spent the first day driving past some of the tourist sites, camped just outside the park border and then headed back in the morning for an awesome full day hike.
Six of us headed off on the 12 mile hike. It snowed steadily for the whole 7 hours and as we approached the 3200m summit the snow was a couple of feet deep. At this point the temperature was probably down around -12C. Given the trail was well covered by snow we were relying on orange trail markers attached to trees every 100 meters or so. It got a bit hairy a few times when we lost the trail and ended up crawling along in thick snow a couple of feet away from a very significant cliff. At one point a dribble of snot actually froze solid under my nose. I don't think hiking gets any better than that. Note that i did the whole hike in shorts and running shoes. What a man.
The pre-summer weather up in the mountains isn't exactly an improvement on an Australian winter. So far it's been unseasonally cold, rarely reaching 10 degrees. At night it's often 5 below. Not ideal camping weather but I was wise enough to pick up a bunch of camping equipment and warm clothes from the world's biggest outdoor store ("REI" in Seattle has 4 huge floors of awesomeness). Once i'm all rugged up things aren't so bad.
The weather was much better yesterday at Grand Teton NP although everyone was too tired to do much hiking. Everyone except me that is! By myself I managed to fast hike another 12 miles or so around a lake and then into a valley with some amazing views. Squirrels are my new favourite animal. I also like moose.
I'll finish with one of my favourite photos from the trip so far. It's taken from a truckstop somewhere in the middle of Montana looking out into an approaching storm.
5 comments:
I really like that last picture too, 12 MILES.. miles wes, MILES? Does anyone even know how far that is?
It is an amazing park, I agree with you about the smelly, swampy things. Same like that in NZ, worse smell ever!
Did you really do a -20 degree, snowing trek in sneakers and shorts? That's just bonkers.
Looks like you are having a great time. Keep those amazing photos coming!
Hey Wes,
Love the pics, especially the one with the hairy knee and hiking boots.
So professional.
Have a great time,
Ffaery
wuauh!! your pics are fantastic. This trek is much difficult that the one in Pai ;-) keep on writing!!
Cheers for the comments guys :)
Although i might've only been wearing shorts, I was wearing a long sleeve thermal top, a tshirt, a hoody and a pretty chunky windstopper. You don't really feel the cold on your legs at all.
At one point drops of water condensed on all the hairs on my legs and then froze into little ice-cubes. That was cool.
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