Welcome to my blog. I hike and camp in the mountains of British Columbia, Canada, and I am a professional musician.
Feel free to say hi and have a look around. There's lots of posts about my hikes and various movies from these adventures.
Thanks for coming by, Pete

Saturday, September 29, 2018

After the rain, before the snow


Mountain meadow time again.
 
Morning, day two and it was pouring rain. After a soggy day climbing over 1,000 meters I was huddled under my small tarp beneath a giant hemlock tree. This was when I noticed, for the first time on a hike, I had a cold. It wasn't bad enough to go down so I decided to use my rest day there.
I had a week alone and It had to dry by day three or I wouldn't have time for the high lake and peak. Waterfalls were raging with water,  pouring through the forest and creeks. The trail is much slower going when it is so slippery. With sloping wet roots, huge moss-covered rocks and giant muddy pools of water hemmed in by prickly wet bushes, you have to carefully watch every step. So great to have my little stove and hot drinks. I don't like having camp fires for several reasons and just move around to warm up my feet. 
On day three the rain let up for a short while so I   headed up beyond the end of the trail, climbing over the big rocks, pushing and wiggling through the vine maples up to the mid-elevation valley.
 Grizzly country.


Drying time!
The meadows were flowing with green heather, low-growing bright red blueberries and stunted black spruce.  On day four, late in the afternoon, the glorious sun finally peaked over Mt. Ossa for a couple of hours. Camping is so much more easier when things are dry but I have learned to be comfortable with the rain. 





The headwall up to Sigurd lake was too wet and slippery so I reluctantly had to stay in the mid-elevation valley with the bears.
The decision to turn around when conditions are bad is the one that saves your life in the back country. This valley drops below freezing at night so I really had to pile on the layers to keep warm.  It helped reading about what some scientists had to wear working on mt. Erebus in Antarctica before I left. I can handle a bit of frost up here. The hot, dry trips earlier in the summer are a vague memory as I crunch open the tent late at night to gaze up at a beautiful full moon over the glacier.
 While packing to leave on day six I noticed that during the night or previous afternoon- when I was hiking- a bear came through my camp, leaving  a pile of pooh. I'll take that as a 'welcome to the neighbourhood'.  Time to head back down where sea level feels like summer again. What a difference.
Happy trails!

RWP