Showing posts with label Mt Hood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mt Hood. Show all posts

Friday, August 27, 2010

Pictures!

Here are pictures I took on my Mt. Hood hike.  First one is Bruno the snow doggie (in August!) Next is a gorgeous field of mountain wildflowers.

Next we have a very contented Bruno, lying in the flowers...

This is Zigzag canyon (I think? There were a lot of canyons on the trail)

A beautiful flower that I have no clue what it's called.  Only found it in one place along the trail.
It's hard to convey the scale here- this is a MASSIVE mountain, and that waterfall ain't just a trickle.  It was truly an awe-inspiring vista. 
And last, yours truly looking sunburned and sweaty, with Zero Zero sneaking up behind me (didn't know he was there as I was taking this.)

It was a great trip, even though I bit off more than I could chew, exercise-wise, (am very sore in the legs today) I had a good time, the weather was decent, and I'm sure Bruno enjoyed it.  



Thursday, August 26, 2010

Inspiration

Hey again!
I'm just back from Mt. Hood.  I chickened out, and didn't try for the full circle around the mountain, since a section of it is actually closed, and well, I'm not in as good of shape as I thought I was. (sigh.)

But how's this for inspiration:
Hike the Pacfic Crest Trail. Start at the Mexican border. Go all the way to Canada. Do it alone.  And one more thing: You're completely blind.

I met Trevor Thomas, aka Zero Zero, who is doing exactly that.  It's not immediately obvious that he is disabled- in fact, I wouldn't say he is "disabled" at all.  He's doing something most sighted people will never do, and just as well as any other hiker.

I was sitting down at a creekside on the Mt. Hood section of the PCT, and he came walking up behind me, went around me, and sat down as well.  I asked him if he was a thru-hiker, and he said he was (I'd met several before that as well- this is the time of year when most of them are passing through this area.)
We were chatting merrily, and I happened to ask him if he had a map I could look at, because I accidentally left mine in my car.  He said (and I'll never forget this) "Yeah sure, but I can't read it. I'm blind."
"You mean legally blind, like it's just really blurry?"
"No, like I can't see you in from of me."

Wow. I was floored!  There was NO indication that he was blind- he looked at me while he was talking, and skillfully navigated around obstacles. And lots of hikers carry ski poles for balance, that wasn't unusually at all.
"How do you know which way to go at forks in the trail?"
"Well, my friends walking ahead of me will leave three sticks in a pattern, and when I find that I know that's the right way."
"I bet you can tell a LOT about people from how they sound."
"Yep, and I echolocate too. That's how I knew you were sitting on the ground there."

This guy's hearing is SERIOUSLY acute.  He said that he knew I had a dog even though Bruno was just lying quietly on the ground, because he could hear him breathing- over the clatter of a rushing stream!

This guy is so inspiring to me- even more so now that I've looked him up, and found out he's only been blind for about 5 years- I supposed one had to be born that way to get around so well sightless.  He said in the interview I read "that it was like being in the prime of your life and having to go back to kindergarten. You have to learn everything all over again."  Bravo to you, Zero!  I would never have known, if you hadn't told me.

Oh, and he's a SUPER nice guy.  He'd be worth meeting even without the dose of wow.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Going up to the mountain tomorrow!

I really should be packing and sorting my gear and food for tomorrow instead of writing this!  I'm planning to leave early in the morning to buy food, gas up the car, and then head out.

The trail I plan to do is the timberline loop trail around Mt. Hood, Oregon's favorite mountain.  Wish me luck!