warn LOVED ONES – the dangers of coastal hiking

(… trying to tie-in a Valentine’s Day theme. Pitiful.)

The “dangers of hiking” are almost always exaggerated in my opinion. Not so the dangers of coastal hiking.

I have a friend who was once caught in a surge channel, lucky to survive.

Uncooped has a good post on the hazards of California coastal hiking including this warning:

Never turn your back on the ocean. I have a good friend who got slammed by a freak wave while hiking on a coastal trail. When she regained consciousness, she needed over a hundred stitches in her face to repair the damage. Now she’s got hella cool scars, but still – that’s no fun. So watch your back.

more tips – Uncooped

Reminds me of the terrible Lost Coast Trail school trip where two students and a parent chaperone drowned in 2000.

Coastal hiking can be VERY dangerous. Experienced hikers need educate the general public. And boneheads like the guy in the photos below:

rogue-wave2.jpg
close-up screenshot

a photographer risking his life at the inland side of the jetty to get a close shot… rogue waves at this time of the year can completely cover the spot where he is standing.

rogue-wave.jpg
original – flickr – Mike Baird

more hiking gear innovations

They’re endless.

But here are two posted by Frank in Oz that I’m seriously considering for my Adventure Racing kit. Click through for details.

injinjisocks.JPG

Blisters? – Not this time, Sue tries Injinji hiking socks with success – Our Hiking Blog

golitedring.jpg

Ultralight D-Ring for your pack – Our Hiking Blog

Modern Hiker makes us look bad

Obviously our best hikes map of the world should be interactive in the way used by Modern Hiker in California:

modern-hiker-map.jpg
screenshot

This is a home-grown Google Map with hiking information in Los Angeles and Southern California. Every trail I’ve written up for the site is accompanied by a pin, color-coded by difficulty. Clicking on a pin will give you a thumbnail image and short description, and a link to the in-depth review.

This is a great way to get a visual idea of where these trails are in relation to you, and is a great resource for planning your next hiking trip.

click through to test it: Mapping Out Your Weekend – Modern Hiker

Man! We suck at maps on this site.

paddling and hiking Alaska mid-winter

My favourite travelogue over the past few months has been Erin McKittrick and Bretwood (Hig) Higman’s Journey on the Wild Coast:

“From the Puget Sound to the Bering Sea: Four thousand miles along the edge of the Pacific, by foot, raft, and skis.”

After 8 months, they are only half way finished. (The original plan was 9 months for the entire 4000mi.)

The text and photos are terrific. But it was this video that really brought home to me the difficulty of travelling Alaska in winter.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

It’s well worth checking out Erin’s post: Midway Reflections

hiking Earth Impact craters

Last year I hiked Syncline Loop in Canyonlands, Island in the Sky, Arizona. Awesome. (My trip report.)

Upheaval Dome, the crater there, is only one of 174 such structures as listed on the Earth Impact Database. I wonder how many others have good hikes.

250px-meteor.jpgThis year I MISSED the chance to see Meteor Crater though it was only 35mi (55km) east of my hostel in Flagstaff, Arizona. (The weather was terrible in January.)

The site was formerly known as the Canyon Diablo Crater, and scientists generally refer to it as Barringer Crater in honor of Daniel Barringer who was first to suggest that it was produced by meteorite impact.

Meteor Crater lies at an elevation of about 1740 m (5709 ft) above sea level. It is about 1,200 m (4,000 ft) in diameter, some 170 m deep (570 ft), and is surrounded by a rim that rises 45 m (150 ft) above the surrounding plains. The center of the crater is filled with 210-240 m (700-800 ft) of rubble lying above crater bedrock.

Surprisingly, the site is privately owned with an entrance fee for tourists.

official website – Barringer Crater

The most interesting anecdote for visitors:

On August 8, 1964, a pair of commercial pilots in a Cessna 150 flew into the crater for a closer look but were unable to climb out due to downdrafts. They ended up circling the interior until their fuel was exhausted and crash-landed. They survived their ordeal and continued to fly while the remaining wreckage is pointed out to visitors.

Wikipedia

Leave a comment if you have an impact crater hike to recommend.

fewer hikers – more room for ME

Most of the more interesting blogs than this have already commented on the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study by Oliver Pergams from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Since the late 1980s, the percentage of Americans taking part in such activities has declined at slightly more than 1 percent a year. The total effect, Pergams says, is that participation is down 18 percent to 25 percent from peak levels. …

NPR

.flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }
.flickr-yourcomment { }
.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }
.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; }



Cone trail, originally uploaded by chaybert.

Lassen National Park in Northern California.

it’s not clear that the number of hikers has been reduced. But if they have, there’s more room in the wild for me. And you.

What’s the problem?

remember your car keys when out hiking

We are usually VERY careful with the keys to the vehicle. (It’s best to have two or more sets with you and hide one set close to the get-away vehicle.)

In some cases, it’s the difference between life and death.

Sandra Ordner, 47, of Daphne, whose body was found last week outside her locked SUV at a North Carolina mountain parking lot, died of hypothermia hours after she told her husband she was going hiking, the local sheriff said Thursday.

Macon County, N.C., Sheriff Robert Holland said that it had been extremely cold and raining in the hours before Ordner’s body was discovered in the parking lot of the Whiteside Mountain Trail.

Ordner’s keys and cellular telephone were locked inside her 2002 Land Rover sport utility vehicle, Holland said. …

Daphne woman dies out in cold

all day long I dream about Tasmania

Must be the crappy, global freezing winter we are suffering in North America. A year ago I was in Taz. (Wish I was there right now.)

Nadine from Calgary, Canada has a wonderful blog on TravelPod.

She’s trekked in Patagonia, the Andes and is now Down Under.

They had a fantastic time on the South Coast Track, one of the best coastal hikes in the world.

… The next morning we were up before sunrise again, and onto the boats at first light in calm water. We had to paddle an aluminum boat across with our gear, drop the gear off, tie up a second boat to our boat with oars, row back to the side we started on, leave a boat and oars, and row back. The three crossings of the boats were really fun, and good practice for something we would do a few days later 🙂 We then crossed over a dune onto Prion Beach, took off our boots, and walked barefoot for nearly 4km on the hard packed sand at the surf line!!!! It was slightly windy, but just gorgeous walking. …

prion.jpg
larger original

Later on the adventure:

… Crossing this mountain range often stops people for a full day or more, going either way, since it should not be crossed in bad weather. 100km per hour windows and blowing snow are common. Luckily for us, today was turning out to be a scorcher. …

Nearing the top, the rain forest gives way to cloud forest, with all sorts of things just growing on anything. Really beautiful. Then it tops out without any trees, and we could see our entire route forwards and backwards! 40km ahead of us and 40km behind us!

ironbound-vista.jpg
larger original

See the rest of the trip report and photos.

My own mini-trek there in 2007 did not go nearly as well as Nadine’s. I covered only about half the distance I had hoped after nearly losing a shoe in a mud pit.

South Coast Track – besthike information page

do you like hiking boardwalks?

I must say I do. Though not “natural”, there’s something classic about walking a rotting wooden sidewalk in the wilderness.

Frank in Oz edits the wonderful Our Hiking Blog.

A recent post included some of my photos from a 2007 Overland Track hike in Tasmania. It’s a series of photos showing the wooden boardwalks.

overland_track_tasmania_6.jpeg

see more – The Overland Track – Track images

Frank’s post got me thinking about other boardwalk hikes.

The West Coast Trail, for example:

wct-boardwalk.jpg
original – flickr – Christine Rondeau

On flickr, I found more. Atop Whistler Mountain in Canada:

whistler-boardwalk.jpg
original – flickr – sbat

And the famed Milford Track in New Zealand:

milford-boardwalk.jpg
original – flickr – amy&kimball

Leave a comment if you have a favourite boardwalk walk.