PUT ON YOUR BOOTS AND GO
My
life-long love of the outdoors came at the side of my father and
grandfather. My obsession with backpacking began as a
12-year-old Boy Scout from Mississippi on the trail in the Smoky
Mountains with Troop 3. As an adult and Scoutmaster of Troop 6, I
continued to feed this obsession, not only with the Scouts, but with a
collection of old friends and other like-minded men.
Put On Your Boots and Go
is a collection of four stories ranging from the Grand Canyon to the
Benton McKaye Trail in Georgia to the Grand Tetons to Chilean
Patagonia. More than simply stories of the trail, these are stories of
challenges, setbacks, and enduring friendships.
Read an excerpt below. To purchase, please go to amazon.com.
(NEAR) DEATH MARCH ON THE NORTH RIM
Out on the Proverbial Limb
It must have
been about 9:00 o’clock that night when we realized beyond any shadow of a
doubt that we had screwed up. Royally. Not for the first time, or even the last
time in our lives, to be sure, but up until this point by far the most
seriously.
Vergil and I
were exhausted, dehydrated, hungry, cold, and still over two miles of trail and
well over 1,000 vertical feet below our goal, the North Rim of the Grand
Canyon. Our world had shrunk to the North Kaibab Trail’s apparently endless
series of switchbacks that seemed to be about 30 feet long with about a 30⁰ incline.
We were just about toast.
We had left
Phantom Ranch at the very bottom of the Grand Canyon about 7:30 AM on the 14
mile hike to the North Rim. Our original plans to overnight at Cottonwood Campground
had been shot down when, between the time we received our Backcountry Permit in
the spring and the time we arrived at the park in September, the Park Service
decided to close the Cottonwood Campground early for the season to effect some
renovations.
We were left
with only one option in our eyes: all the way in one day. Heck, it was only 14
miles. We were still young (relatively) and strong (more or less) and knew what
we were in for (not a clue). That particular 14 miles of trail constitutes an
altitude gain of over 5,000 feet. That’s right. A vertical mile. The first
seven miles of trail, running from 2,460 feet at Phantom to 4,000 feet at
Cottonwood, is followed by a seven mile stretch from 4,000 feet to 8,250 feet
on the North Rim. It was that second seven miles that was whipping our fannies.
Vergil
and I perched ourselves on a couple of trailside rocks, leaned over, and sucked
air like only exhausted, dehydrated flatlanders at 7,000 feet can. The cool,
clear air was redolent with conifer and an undercurrent of sun-parched dust. We
stared out over the landscape. Every feature of the fantastically sculpted
canyon was bathed in the ghostly, soft glow of a full moon. We asked ourselves
what two guys born and raised in Mississippi were doing here. That answer was
simple: dreams, dreams born in years of camping, hunting, and fishing together
in the anything but arid climate of the relatively flat Mississippi
countryside. We might be older and might have the wherewithal to make some of
those dreams come true, but in many ways we were still those 15-year-old kids
roaming the countryside with their like-minded friends.
We
heaved ourselves to our feet and started slogging upward again. We were taking
turns hauling one pack. We were only spending one night on the North Rim and
packing all we would need for that bivouac, we had left the rest of our gear
with the rangers at Phantom Ranch. Verg took the pack and set off, as always
the faster hiker. A flare-up of a nasty intestinal disorder and the ravages of the
attendant medication had rendered my joints a mess and me even slower than
usual.
I
could hear the tap-tap of Vergil’s hiking stick. I had located a stand of
bamboo near my home and had made each of us a walking stick before we left. For
the last 30-40 minutes that tapping was how we kept up with each other when
separated.
I rapped my
stick several times on a rock in response to Vergil and decided I needed
another blow. I plopped down on a rock bordering the outside edge of the trail
and immediately fell asleep, my back toward the abyss. I awoke with a slight
jerk. Startled, I planted my staff, and with as firm a grip as possible began
hauling myself back to my feet. At some point in the process of rising, I fell
back asleep, awakening when my fanny hit the rock I had been sitting on.
Steadying myself
I looked over my shoulder at the long plunge into the indigo depths of the
canyon, the trail a ghostly, gray, moonlit serpent twisting downward and
disappearing into the canyon’s depths.
“OK, Bonehead,” I said to myself, “No more sit
downs for you. I don’t care if you have to stop at every switchback, you’re not
sitting down again. Too dangerous.” I lumbered to my feet and started uphill,
stopping at nearly every switchback and leaning over with hands on knees,
sucking air, but I never sat down again.
I hadn’t heard
the clatter of Vergil’s stick on the rocks in quite a while despite my repeated
rapping. I was getting concerned and tried to call his name. I couldn’t get
more than a croak out of my parched throat. Couldn’t whistle either. “Well,
keep putting one foot in front of the other,” I told myself. “You’ll get
there.”
Suddenly Vergil
loomed out of the dark, the grin in his sun-tanned face visible in the
moonlight. He didn’t have the pack or his walking stick. His voice was gone
too. “You’re almost there,” he whispered. “I dropped the gear at the top. Just
a couple of hundred yards.”
It was 11:30 PM
and 32° F when we topped out. Flat ground felt wonderful. The rim was dominated
by towering evergreens, trunks looming sepulchral in the dark, their height and
foliage blocking out the moonlight except along the road by which we were
standing We pulled out our maps to try
to determine how to get to our campground. We both agreed we needed to go left,
in this case south towards the rim.
We grabbed our
pack and started down the road. We still had some walking to do. Minutes later
we heard the rumble of a motor behind us and turned to see a pair of headlights
strobing through the trees. Standing as close as we dared to the road and ready
to leap aside if necessary, we began waving our arms. Shouting was out of the
question. We were bathed in headlights and ready to jump when the revs dropped
and hood pitched down as the truck, we could see it was a pickup now, pulled to
a stop.
Vergil and I
walked up to the driver’s side as someone lowered the volume on the radio which
was blaring country music.
“Evening,” I croaked,
looking into the cab to see two young guys both in plaid shirts and Stetsons.
“Howdy,” the
driver replied.
“We wondered if
you could help us. We’re looking for the campground.”
The cowboys
looked at each other.
“Not right
sure,” the driver replied. “It’s around here somewhere, I reckon.”
“Where are y’all
headed?” we asked.
“Up to the
lodge. For a couple of beers,” the driver grinned.
Vergil and I
looked at each other.
“Think they got
any rooms available?” we asked.
“Lots of ‘em,
this time of year.”
“Can you give us
a ride?”
“Shore. Hop in
the back and hold on. We’re in a hurry. Gotta get there ‘fore they close”
We did and he
was. Soon we were at a cluster of buildings perched on the North Rim. Shelter
was the first order of business. At the reservation desk we found that the
Pioneer Cabins were the best rate and took one for the night.
Soon Verg and I
were sitting in a corner of the appropriately decored Rough Rider Saloon with
our hands wrapped around a cold Molsen Golden. Food services were closed, but
we had already consumed three Dr. Peppers and two Orange Crushes and were
stuffing pretzels in our mouths between swallows. We quickly learned why in all
the Western movies when our hero finds a parched soul dying of thirst in the
desert, they dribble water into the poor unfortunate’s throat. It hurts. I mean
it feels like someone is dragging a wood rasp up and down your throat. It
tasted good but it was agony going down.
The bartender
sounded “Last call”, but we were so stiff, sore, and wasted, neither of us was
able to hobble to the bar in time to place another order. We should have sat
closer. On our way out we again thanked the two cowboys for the ride. They
nodded and returned to their beers. They had ordered enough to keep themselves
busy for a while. We had not been that smart.
Our Pioneer
Cabin was surprisingly enough appropriately named, a little log cabin with two
beds and a bathroom. We had been three days and two nights in the open desert.
Our bodies were dust and salt caked. We took turns in the shower and hopped
between clean sheets bare-assed and buck naked. Those beds felt exquisite.
I pulled out my
tobacco pouch and packed a bowl, and we lay there chatting amiably. I looked
over at my friend. At that time Vergil and I had known each other for 23 years.
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