


Sunday Morning
It was pitch black outside. If there was a moon out I could not see it through the trees though I saw a few stars. With my headlamp, I resumed the trail feeling OK and ready to hike. It was 4 a.m. according to my watch, Chicago time. I followed the trail blazes stopping at each tree to locate the next with very little difficulty through the forest down then up a gently graded hill until I reached a stream where I stopped to filter water as I was out and to try to eat some breakfast. I managed a piece of string cheese and a small handful of dried berries. After nearly losing pieces of my water filter into the stream, I packed up and headed to the trail again which promptly crossed the stream. Here I lost all traces of blazing. But to my left, was obviously a trail. This had to be it as sometimes the trail curved around without warning and you had to be eagle eyed to spot it.
The trail widened out, and was obviously well used so I continued down it. It was kind of rocky, steep and the footing tricky in the dark but I figured I was making pretty good time, much better then I had been yesterday. I passed some gated dripping mine, where I could hear the echos of water trickling in the darkness, startled a couple of birds from a conifer, and a pretty big rabbit got out of my way in a hurry. After a while I thought I saw lights ahead, you know the gentle glow of a lamp inside tents. I was excited. Perhaps this was camp! I was rather proud of myself for finding it in the dark. But as I neared, I saw that it was only my light reflected back at me from reflective rectangles on a gate that crossed the trail. There was a sign that had a little hiker on it, so perhaps this was still the trail? I KNEW I should of gotten my map out, but I didn't. Lesson learned. I walked a little further and the hill bottomed out in a graveled and very wet parking area nestled at the base of cliffs and between forest. It was very cold down here where the chill had settled. There were 2 pick up trucks, a blue one and a red one. The red one obviously belonged to someone with off road vehicles so crossed that one off the list of possibly being one of our group's cars. The other might of been Mataharihiker's, but it was only a guess. I had no idea what her vehicle had looked like. I set out to wait a while, my knee was hurting anyway, so I laid out my blue pad, propped myself against my pack and tried to take a nap.
Being too cold to nap, and the cold ground making my injury ache, I stood and walked about a lot. I watched the sun rise, as the sunlight colored the rocks and yellow leafed trees but it never reached down where I was. I longed for the touch of the warm sun rays. I questioned myself whether I should keep walking to the road the parking area was attached to, several times. Once I heard a car pass somewhere down the hill. I took off my cold wet boots and changed socks, tried to warm up and debated on getting into my sleeping bag or getting up and going to the road. But that question was answered for me when a white van drove up.
There were two men in the front seats who pulled onto the grass and got out. I struggled stiffly to my feet.
"Are you just coming or going?" The driver asked. I hadn't asked them their names, I wished I had as soon as they had left me.
"Actually, I have no idea." I told them. "I'm kind of missing my group. I got hurt yesterday and had tried to catch up this morning and took a wrong turn"
They looked at one another making a silent, psychic decision. They offered to help me, and I showed them my map, where a logical place for someone to find me from the group would be. "We have cars parked here" I said. "I can wait for them there, someone from my group will be sure to go there." It was the historic town site. Settled, they grabbed my gear and threw it into the van shoving hunting gear aside to make room. I climbed in beside my gear behind them, amid a cooler full of drinks and food, and guns all over the place. They turned the heat full blast, I guess my chattering teeth was loud enough to wake the dead. If you have a few hours to wait for your friends, we could go to lake of the clouds for some drinks and food" they offered. I laughed, "no thanks, they would hate me if they were searching for me and I was out having a good old time in town"
"Do you have enough food and water?"
"yes. Plenty" I said as the driver took us onto Victoria road and drove like a maniac. Every bump we'd hit we'd nearly hit the ceiling with our heads.
I asked them where they were from, they were locals and they plied me with questions about seeing any game, them asked if I had a gun, and if not, why not.
"She's probably one of those vegetarian types who's against hunting" the passenger said, a thinner, dark haired man with a hawk nose and sharp eyes.
"I've no problem with hunting" I told them. "I've wanted to learn to hunt for a while."
"Its us hunters who keep this place funded you know" he said. "Its us who care about this place. Still, you should carry a gun. There are bears"
"The bears are shy, they are hunted here" I told them, not worried about bears.
"That doesn't make a difference if you get between mom and her cub. In fact just last week sometime a hunter was in a tree stand, up went cub, mom climbed up after him and killed that guy."
In no time at all, the driver navigated us into territory I recognized, past a familiar clear cut. and to the town site where they grabbed my gear and propped it against the closed visitor center. The driver reached up into an apple tree and plucked an apple for himself, took a bite, proclaimed it pretty good and plucked a couple of them for me which I would of loved had I had a decent appetite. I offered gas money, which they declined, saying that they would hope others would do the same for them, and they took off. They had bird and rabbit to hunt and they had been eyeballing the clear cuts when we drove past.
I stretched out my wet gear on the wooden porch, where there were hundred of dead lady bugs scattered, and the sun beamed perfectly down on me and my stuff. It felt so good! I took a couple bites of apple and tried to eat some more food. I managed half a tortilla with some mustard spread on it. I was enjoying my warm spot and meager lunch when Prosecutor drove up with Dhutch as a passenger. Prosecutor had a grin on his face. I guess they were glad to have located me. We talked a few minutes, and he explained the change of plans for the night's camp. He talked me into being dropped off with him a mile from the nights camp. It's only a mile. An easy mile. Much better then staying at the shelter here. OK, I was convinced. I let him zip me away from my sunny spot. We met Mataharihiker at another road exit, picked her up and dropped her off at her car, perfect timing!
For the most part, the mile WAS easy, would of been a quick jaunt up a nicely graded hill for one with two nicely working legs. It started out flat, then wound its way up and around an oak covered hill. For the most part it was well blazed, though I did have some downed trees to climb over and hidden rocks to watch out for. By the time I made it to the top, Prosecutor had already set up his bivy and tarp in the best spot on the hill. I came into camp and he was ready to go back down for a beer run.
Alone, I set up my tent which took far too long, and threw my stuff in. I tried to rest, but the ground made my leg ache, so I stood and walked around instead. Mataharihiker soon joined me up on the hill and took her time "farting around" as she called it, putting up her hammock shelter. I watched her out of curiosity. Two hikers not related to our group came through camp and talked for a few minutes. They'd been out for 6 days, retirees that didn't have to worry about going to work the next day. Lucky bastards. Soon enough members of our own group began to show up. Mugsy was first. "Cockapooooooooo!" I called and he stampeded into camp ahead of his trail partner Chinmusic who was glad to see me and greeted me with a pretty good hug. I don't quite remember the order in which people showed up, but everyone was together perhaps for the first time this entire trip, in camp. Prosecutor started a fire, and it started to rain and get cold and windy. Though I wanted to hang out and socialize, to hear Randall's crazy story telling, the wind and damp and sitting on the ground was just too much for me. I went to my tent and listened from there for a while. I ate a snickers bar to warm up, and snuggled in for the night occasionally waking to loud laughter and roaring from something Randall was saying.
I spent way too much time in the horizontal, and got up early Monday morning. I packed up and skipped breakfast and got an early start after watching the sunrise from the hill and as soon as it was light enough to NOT get lost. I knew I would be slow and I cursed several times when I kept stepping into holes hidden by fallen leaves. Still, I must not of done so poorly as I was still the first to the car shortly followed by Chinmusic and Mugsy and everyone else except for Mataharihiker who likes to take her time in camp.
We said our good byes, packed up and squeezed into vehicles. It would be a long ride home, but it gave me plenty of time to reflect on this crazy trip.