… spotted in the restroom at Maui’s Haleakala National Park visitors center.

Water is a problem for hikers in Maui. But I’ve not yet been driven to treat toilet water.
… spotted in the restroom at Maui’s Haleakala National Park visitors center.

Water is a problem for hikers in Maui. But I’ve not yet been driven to treat toilet water.
Before I traveled in Europe, I vaguely thought of their gear as … nice. Way overpriced. Gaudy. And sometimes completely goofy. (Especially the tents.)
Then I toured the huge Sportler store in Bolzano, Italy.
Later I was overwhelmed with the even bigger Schuster store in Munich.
Brands like Salewa, Kaikkaalla, Meru, La Sportiva, Mammut, Vaude, Deuter, Hilleberg, Vango, And more appealed. Quality is generally very high.

Also more familiar brands: The North Face, Salomon, Mountain Hardware, MSR, Primus, Therm-a-rest, Marmot, Arc’teryx.
Arc’teryx? How has that Canadian company become so HUGE worldwide? What a success story. They fit right in with the expensive European brands.
Actually, Arc’teryx was bought by Adidas in 2001. Then sold to Amer Sports of Finland in 2005. It’s a multi-national now.
My advice to every European hiker coming to North America: Buy your gear in Canada from Mountain Equipment Co-op. Or check prices on Amazon.com and comparison shop in the USA.
Europeans will get sometimes twices the value for their Euro currency in North America as compared with European prices. Especially on American brands.
My CAD Mountain Hardware Scrambler daypack is always CAD$50 back home. In Europe it’s normally €55. That’s CAD$86.40.
An MSR Hubba tent on Amazon.com is US$250 . At Schuster in Munich it’s €329.95 (US$468.14)
Yet there’s some gear available in Europe that I can’t get at home.
Want to take a Cheeseburger in a can hiking? They are available widely in Germany.

Taste Test: Cheeseburger In A Can
Bears aren’t so smart.
We’re going to need some backup here: Car thief turns out to be… a hungry bear

Or a Banana Guard ™
official website – Banana Guard
Check the Froot Guard and Froot Case while you are there.
It actually works perfectly, if you want to carry the extra weight.
Thanks Rockin’ Ronnie for embarrassing me with this piece of goofy gear.
via Dilbert.com

In Asia we called illegal The North Face knock-off clothing … The North Farce.
They should go after the Asian companies producing those goods, not a teen in the mid-West.
A Missouri teenager frustrated with his classmates’ sheep-like following of a popular clothing line came up with his own parody apparel and now faces a lawsuit for trademark infringement.
Jimmy Winkelmann, 18, said he’s not intimidated by threats of a lawsuit from The North Face Apparel Company over his 2-year-old company The South Butt, LLC.
Jimmy Winkelmann said he has no intention of complying with the cease and desist request sent last month by lawyers for The North Face Apparel Corp., saying his 2-year-old business — The South Butt LLC — poses no threat to it.
“I was like, ‘How did they even find me?'” …
read the article – ABC News – The North Face vs. The South Butt: Entrepreneurial Teen Undaunted by Lawsuit Threat
The South Butt – Apparel for Kids and Adults
(via The Goat)
This is funny.
Click PLAY or learn how to start a campfire on YouTube.
This is The Naturist, Gavin McInnes, a Canadian-born funnyman here sponsored by Teva.
… the Naturist … is an expert on being in the woods that has no clue what he’s talking about, like Mr. Bean meets Survivorman. …
There are a few more The Naturist videos on the Teva YouTube channel.
Trip Report by site editor Rick McCharles
Driven from Scotland by midges, I flew to sunny Spain.
But where to hike in the Pyrenees?
My first thought was … Pyranean Haute Route, using the guidebook by Kev Reynolds.
Unfortunately Kev calls that adventure one of the 3 toughest treks in Europe. It would be too dangerous for me to do solo.
Instead I decided on The Pyrean Traverse, an easier, lower, parallel trail on the Spanish side of the border. I used Lonely Planet Walking in Spain as guidebook, starting at the beginning of the 23day, 305km track.
The official start is at Canillo in Andorra. Forget that. Much better is to bus to the day 2 trailhead, the ski resort at Arinsal. That’s where the trail climbs up and away from the road.
I sat down by the creek for lunch. And a start-me-up pot of coffee.

Doh.
The gas cartridge stove fuel canister I had purchased that morning in Andorra la Vella was the European “puncture” system, not the screw on type we use in North America. (Both systems are widely available in Europe.)
I had to pack up. Catch the bus back to town. And try (unsuccessfully) to swap canisters. Instead I had to purchase a new threaded one.
The Pyrenees look much friendlier than the Alps. I saw no glaciers. Looked to me my days would be much more leisurely than I had had in Switzerland.
The trail was very busy as far as Refugi Josep Montfort.
I decided to push on and cross the first high pass. (It’s great to be able to start with a descent in the morning.)
Trails in the Pyrenees are not particularly well signed nor blazed. It was a wild route finding scramble to get over the Port de Baiau, at 2756m just as high as the passes in the Alps. The treacherous scramble down was the toughest I had all summer.
Turns out that hiking in the Pyrenees is no easier than in the Alps. It merely looks easier in the photos.
I had to set up the tent in the dark.
Next morning dawned pretty.
The next section I saw almost no hikers … except for the masses headed up Pica d’Estats, Catalunya’s highest peak 3143m.
It was a long descending walk into increasingly rural scenes.
I camped at Planell de Boavi, the only tent in the huge riverside meadows. The highlight was a fox that came sniffing around my tent at dusk. He dragged off my cook pot at some point during the night.
Next morning I wandered down into the village of Tavascan 1116m, assured by my guidebook that I could resupply with food.
… Unfortunately the woman who runs the “shop” out of her house was gone for the day. The only food available in town was at a restaurant. Instantly I sat down for lunch, Menú del Día (Menu of the Day).
As always, it came with wine.
Once I had splashed down 3 large glasses, my hike was over. I was drunk. Checked into the hotel and passed out had a siesta.
The owner of the hotel put down my name for the Menú del Día dinner (more wine). By the end of that I asked him to book me a car out of the mountains, next morning at 5AM.
That driver overcharged me (30€ instead of the agreed 20€) and promptly hit a deer on the way out of town.
All in all, not my finest hike.
But I loved the Pyrenees. Certainly I will return one day, but for the High Route.
see the rest of my photos from 3 days in the Pyrenees
Indian Summer is fading rapidly.
But we’ll try to squeeze in one more hike (at least) before the snow flies.

If you are one of the few people left who do not know the story of this photo, click through to one of the links.
The Banff Lake Louise Tourism Board has set up accounts for the squirrel on Facebook and Twitter.