Friday, September 11, 2015

Bucher and Bauman take on the PCT

What would make someone say, “I want to be a thru hiker”.  I am not sure since I have never had that notion.  I have and still do feel the need for immersing myself into nature.  To reconnect with something, a sense, an emotion, a linger of some kind of calling?  But to become a thru hiker, that is an entirely different undertaking.   

In the past year Hollywood has demonstrated an interest in sharing this concept to the public.  First, the film, “Wild”,  about the trail named in this title, and now in theaters is the film, “A Walk in the Woods”.  Does this mean we as a society are feeling a calling back to nature?  Or is this just still a minority and the rest of us find entertainment in this notion of hardship and challenge while someone else is engrossed in the great outdoors. 

The original idea behind the Appalachian Trail (AT) was not for someone to hike its entirety.  Its visionary, Benton MacKaye, in 1925 succeeded in convincing other visionaries that a trail winding through serene forest landscapes near the hustle and bustle of industrial America would benefit society allowing an escape to many.  Then in 1948 following his return from WWII Earl Shaffer decided to walk off the war and do what folks thought impossible.   He walked the entire length of the AT setting himself up as the first thru hiker…setting a precedent making him very far from the last! 

My intention of this article is not a history lesson.  But how I had a recent urge to become a thru hiker.  Why?  It was not because I needed to lose weight (even though I do), it was not because I needed to find myself (impossible feat anyway), I was not trying to cure myself of a drug or alcohol problem, nor did I want to escape from life in anyway.  I had the VERY BEST reason of them all, my darling daughter invited me to join her and her hiking partner on this life goal of theirs to thru hike the 2600+ miles of the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT).  Now I did not thru hike, but had a brief 136-mile taste of what it may be like?  The invite was a few months after she announced to her mother and I that after she completed graduate school she was going to hike the PCT.  This allowed her a year to plan and prepare.  I then began to wish for an invite and a few months later it came!
Cody and I a few years back

Now as excited as I was for this wonderful opportunity to spend quality time with my little girl I was also anxious about several things:  my age, my fitness as compared to their age, the idea that I will join them after they already seasoned themselves with 500 + miles, and lastly the biggest related to ALL the above…I do not want to hold them back.  I am no amateur to spending time immersed in the backcountry, I trekked, camped, and paddled quite a bit of wildlands including hiking over a 100 miles in one outing.  But most of that was solo not needing to keep up with anyone but myself.  So, I started some of my own preparation.

I had to turn in a vacation schedule a few months in advance so off of their estimated itinerary I planned to meet them at Kennedy Meadows in early June, which is the start of the Sierra section of trail.  Sounded the most pleasant with a mix of mountains and alpine lakes.  Once we got a week away from my cross-country drive to meet up with them it was going to be in Tehachapi instead, which is in arid California desert.  A new experience for me, but no matter, still quality time with this special lady of my life and in time to celebrate her birthday prior to setting out! 

Celebrity Status
I rolled into a diner on June 4th to pick up Bauman and to meet for the first time the Bucher of the B & B PCT Team.  But of course as I soon learned that there is a social connection with the thru hiking community and several others needed rides into town.  So accommodations were made and the shuttle began.  After arriving in Tehachapi I booked the three of us a room at a hotel on the outskirts of town.  This is not a time for relaxation, oh no, lots to do when arriving into town.  Mail check at post office, grocery shopping, laundry, equipment repairs or replacement, and with access to a shower this becomes a high priority.  All this civilization travel entails sometimes telling your adventure to folks you meet that want to live vicariously through you, if only for five minutes.  Eating is also a priority and town meals are always great…why, you do not have to carry it on your back! 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY WOOBY!
The following day brought the birthday celebration at a local eatery with a planned departure to hit the trail that afternoon.  I negotiated a place to park my car at the hotel and the girls using “trail angels” arranged a shuttle back to the trailhead at 3 pm.  So here it is, the planning for me was over and the months were now only hours/minutes.  Pack and re-packed my backpack.  Am I too heavy?  Girls educated me on the “pack out’ dinner.  This is what you want from town for dinner that night that would not require any cooking, ready to eat!  I “packed out” half of my lunch burrito.

I look anxious in this one, not Bucher
Departure from town quickly followed by my first view of a PCT sign.  No big deal for the two veterans of the B & B team but intimidating for me due to the anxiousness mentioned previously. We are off after they sign the register and the landscape then became "real".  Not just a drive by out the window.  The shift of a sandy loam under foot as the sweat builds, under pack, straps, back, brow, everywhere, it is a desert and I am carrying a 40 pound pack.  But when even the slightest of breeze blows you quickly become tuned in, the cool relief when it strikes your moist areas is most delightful.  Before reaching camp that evening we scampered up and down elevations seeing MANY hillsides covered with windmills offering power to nearby Los Angeles.  In no time we also covered 10 miles by that evenings camp.




I was hiking the PCT with two wonderful ladies who I came to realize over the next few days were two EXTRAORDINARY HUMAN BEINGS!  As I had mentioned I was actually the father of one of the B’s and took it upon myself to trail adopt the other B.  But, they did not need me looking out for them, tides had turned, they were looking out for me!  It was cute.  I typically took a place in the middle during the hiking day with one leading and the other bring up the rear.  Usually we all hiked within a hundred or so yards of one another.  Falling into their typical hiking day meant a 5 am wake up and hiking by 530am with a motto 10 before 10.  10 miles before 10 am.  They then call those “free miles” (they didn’t feel free to me).  This is followed by an hour break making breakfast and getting feet up and elevated.  Then it is continuing on till about 2 pm for a lunch break followed by evening camp around 7 pm or so, covering anywhere from 22 to 26 miles.  All the while with them looking out for me so I did not get into too much trouble.


Barren with no shade in sight
Trail Angels Rule!
This task of watching me became very important one particular day.  It was a scorcher, we were moving through a region of over 30 miles with no access to water.  Luckily, a trail angel stashed over a hundred gallons in jugs at a remote dirt road junction.  Now it was shortly after a lunch stop when we came across the cache and surrounding it was a number of hikers crunched under tarps and sagebrush for what little shade was available.  Not the B & B team…we pushed on through and out into a 20 miles stretch of barren, stark, and hot landscape.  Well, after about an hour, I realized this may not have been the best idea for me.  I was moving slower and was slightly lightheaded.  Both B’s checked in with me and at one point I got behind a small bush and kneeled down for 10 minutes and sipped some more water.  I was even beginning to feel nauseas.  Eventually we reached a spot of another remote road end with a picnic table and a sign that indicated we should be on watch for desert tortoises.  Cody B indicated that there should be a good campsite about another two miles.  I said this looked good to me and I was not going on at this time.   I then found some shade, drank some water, nibbled something and lay down with my feet up.  After about an hour I could have gone on but the girls confirmed staying there would be best… for me.  I then requested a very early departure before sun up the next day to put some miles behind us prior to heat, they wonderfully agreed knowing it was best for their tag-a-long thru hiking wanna-be. 


Trekking before dawn

Water.  Well, there wasn’t any in this wild country so you had to carry what you needed for drinking and cooking.  I could carry up to three liters, which proved to not be enough in these sections (I only had three bottles).  Back to who was caring for whom…Cody B carried four liters, not that she needed 4; one was for the old man.  She would keep mentioning, “Dad, you can drink yours I have another bottle I don’t think I will need”.  So that is how the trip went, the two B’s taking care of me for 130 plus miles of California desert on the famous PCT.



Kennedy Meadows General Store
My hike finished coming into Kennedy Meadows instead of beginning from this location.  This is one of those milestones on the PCT.  It means as a thru hiker you have made it over 700 miles of arid terrain.  It is like finishing a race, as hikers round the corner in sight of the general store their fellow PCT family cheers them in.   It is time to CELEBRATE!  There is energy at this place.   Friends reuniting, some meeting for the first time,  souls combined in a common life challenge.  It was then I realized that this was the perfect piece of trail to join them, to have my small piece of a PCT journey end here.  I finished at this PCT hiker sanctuary with two of my very own authentic PCT thru-hiking heroes.   

Combined Souls of the PCT




Chef and shuttle driver
One lane of Tent Town
We found some spots in back of the store in a transient “tent town” and paid for an outdoor shower while eating burgers and having cold beverages.  I was leaving the next day while they were re-supplying for 10 days plus the added weight of a bear can each for the Sierras.  All the while 30 plus hikers are gathered on the deck exchanging tales of the past 700 miles.  Most are taking turns for the chef/shuttle driver to wisk them away for an all you can eat pancake breakfast or after 5 dinner.  That’s right, you read that right, the guy driving the small pickup you climbed in the back of upon arrival to the establishment switched it up and got behind the grill and cooked your food order.  Great way to operate, go pick up your business and bring them to you! 



THANK YOU VENUS AND ERIC!
So you may be wondering, the B & B team continue on from here on the PCT North but what about me?  My car is parked in a town numerous hours away to the South and I am at the end of a VERY remote road that seems to show signs of only the chef/shuttle driver.  Bring in my own personal saviors, Venus and Eric Gardner.  Eric is another member of the elite 1984 Kutztown High graduates and helped me on this adventure in MANY ways!  I owe a great deal of gratitude to these two in helping me spend this important quality time with my little girl and my trail- adopted daughter.    

That Saturday morning it was very hard to say goodbye to these two remarkable PCT thru hikers.  One I had loved and admired for the past 29 years and the other over the past 9 days.  The extent of emotion welling up inside at our farewell hugs, well, lets just say it was a good thing the Gardners were there so I wasn’t a complete pathetic weeping slob (yes, this can actually happen).   The night before we arrived in Kennedy Meadows while I was sewing tears in the girls gators, it hit me, I realized it was going to be over after tomorrow and that there would not be another day with my B & B team.  The sharing of hardship but even more the sharing of the magic!  I got to say, “goodnight” to them for 9 nights straight!  A thought actually passed through me of what if I stay and continue?  Become a thru hiker.  This thought only passed through and I realized this was not my quest.  But how fortunate I was to share a very small piece of it.  I was going to deeply miss them, and for that I was sad.

For them, I was elated that their journey continues.  I knew they had what it takes to push on to the North and complete this venture with their own unique style.  Making friends and forever memories along the way that will carry them through into their respective successful futures, whatever they may hold.  They are two one-of-a-kind ladies both with a tremendous amount of determination and courage.  They have inspired me now and this experience will for my remaining short paradise existence on this earth.  Thank you Cody and Elise for allowing me to Journey with my Heart along the PCT! CONGRATULATIONS on this awe-inspiring life goal!!!!

With Much Love and Admiration,
Papa B

P.S. B&B:  I now have two glorious memories that will occupy my mind when I hear the Billy Joel song, “Captain Jack”.

What have I learned about thru hiking?
1)   When hitching rides always have your trekking poles collapsed and attached to your pack.
2)   Carry enough water or have someone with you that will carry enough water for you.
3)   Never conduct a deep squat near a water seep when wearing hiking shorts while going commando 
4)   Never hike with someone more experienced then you since it means they will only continue schooling you on your behaviors playing the, “Who’s shit is this game?”
5)   Always hike with folks more experienced then you since they will keep you out of trouble.
6)   Laugh often, even if it means crying!