Showing posts with label lake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lake. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2016

Day 160: Stehekin Valley Ranch

Wednesday, 5th October 2016
Designated campground above South Fork Agnes Creek - log cabin at Stehekin Valley Ranch
Mile 2555 - 2569 on PCT + 2 miles car ride to ranch + 18 miles bicycle ride from ranch to Stehekin Landing and back
Total 14 miles walk

It was still almost dark when I looked out of my tent into the surrounding wilderness. Under protection of tall conifer trees, the tent stayed dry and the morning was surprisingly mild. According to the map, almost all of today's 14-mile PCT section should be downhill. The motivation for the day was reaching the village of Stehekin - the last little village on the PCT south of the Canadian border.



After a section following a contour, the path soon lead me to a crossing of a wild river. The river could be crossed comfortably on a wide fallen log. Near the shore, the hiker whom I met yesterday was still in deep sleep, cowboy-camping under a rock overhang. After crossing the river the narrow path entered an old forest with some of the biggest trees along the whole PCT.




Near more stream crossings, there were countless occasions to snack on delicious wild currant berries. Other berries provided a feast of colors for the eye. Squirrels we're also enjoying a time of bounty, eating ripe pine cones and gaining extra fat to become prepared for the approaching winter season.



As elevation decreased, the abundance of vivid colors increased in the dense forest undergrowth. There was no need to hurry and I took many breaks, taking advantage of relatively mild and dry weather. Every couple of miles there was a designated campsite with a space for tents and a fire rig; near one of the campsites I greeted an old veteran hiker heading from the north asked me if I was headed to Canada. I answered that my final destination depends on the mountain weather and that I was headed to the Stehekin ranch, hoping to give my body a necessary and well-deserved rest before continuing my way north. He said that there might be one vacant log cabin at the ranch where hikers can stay for the night.



After the friendly greeting, the trail continued it's course parallel to a narrow river gorge, before descending downhill, crossing a bridge, and entered the North Cascades national park: after Sequoia, King's Canyon, Yosemite, Lassen, Crater Lake and Mount Rainier, the North Cascades is the seventh and last national park on the course of the PCT.



After a short uphill climb I could soon see another bridge: the "High Bridge", stretching across the deep chasm of the Stehekin river. On the other side of the bridge there was a ranger station and a bus stop. In the summer, a national park bus goes several times per day from here to the Stehekin village on the shore of Lake Chelan. In October at the end of the tourist season, the bus only travels twice per day - at 10AM and 3 PM. As I was looking at the bus timetable and map, a small group of tourists emerged from the forest. Karen, one of the tourists, gave me a delicious apple and I gratefully accepted. She was headed towards the Stehekin Valley ranch - the same destination where I was heading. Together we walked the remaining two miles along the wide and deep Stehekin river.



Soon we came to a meadow between tall maple trees with a vegetable garden and happy-looking hens, an apple orchard, and a big house surrounded by little cottages.




I have arrived at the Stehekin Valley ranch and asked Linda, the housekeeper in the kitchen, if there is a place where I could stay. And I was lucky: one of the little cottages was still open for guests, it just needed a little bit of tidy-up and making the bed. In the meantime, I planned to take the afternoon bus to Stehekin village to get
extra food supplies and check the post office and the hiker box. However, there was no bus going back on the same day. Then I saw a dozen of bicycles parked at one of the cottages and asked if I could borrow one. Of course, Linda replied and suggested that I get back before 6:30 PM for dinner. It was a joy to be on bicycle again, going fast on the dirt road along the Stehekin River all the way to the shore of Lake Chelan: the USA's third deepest lake.



More photos of the calm quiet shore of Lake Chelan:




Along the lake shore I reached the Stehekin landing where a boat arrives every day, connecting the village with the rest of civilization. The first place to visit was the post office. Five days ago at Stevens Pass, I ordered one last package of delicious meals from the "Outdoor Herbivore" company to help me get through the final days of my journey. However the package had not arrived yet; It might arrive by boat tomorrow or Friday. Having no extra time to wait, I asked the postmaster to donate all of the food to the hiker box to serve hungry hikers who come after me. The hiker box in Stehekin is located in a bear box right on the lake shore and except for some tortillas, there was not much edible food left. Then I visited the little store near the boat landing. The store was also almost out of food, except for a pair of trail bars and two little bags of nuts and seeds. I also bought an extra pair of socks at the store in preparation for cold and wet weather. The store was also out of gas fuel, planning to close for the season in a few days. My last stop near the lake was at a little shower and laundry house where I got all my socks washed. While the socks were washing, I went to check the hiker box again and found one fuel canister with a little bit of fuel left. With my other almost empty fuel canister, this could last for 2 more days. Then I headed on bicycle along the shore and river back to the ranch.



When I arrived the dinner was ready with a rich choice of salads, rice, and potatoes, many of the vegetables being directly from the ranch garden. A big group of old friend was staying at the ranch for one week, enjoying the late autumn colors. One of the guests, Irena, was born in my home country; it was a pleasure to speak Czech with her. Then we went outside and the sky was suddenly clear and full of stars. The international space station could be seen, moving fast between the stars above us from west to east. It was late night when I went to sleep, having a whole comfortable wooden cabin for myself. My plan for the next morning was to continue walking north. How far north? I let the mountains make the decision.


Saturday, November 5, 2016

Day 158: Nunatak

Monday, 3rd October 2016
Forest above Chuck River - campground under trees on ridge above Vista Creek valley on NE slope of Glacier Peak
Mile 2505 - 2529
Total 24 miles

Under protection of tree cover, the night was mild and dry except a few water droplets falling down from the branches. At the first light I was already back on the narrow path, first heading through old growth forest on the flat bottom of the Chuck river valley and passing a pair of hikers who were just getting out of their tent, then starting a steep ascent to the west facing slopes of Glacier Peak. One of the streams flowing out of the glaciers is Kennedy Creek with a halfway-broken, but well functioning wooden bridge.



From there the path followed a contour with alternating uphills and downhills, crossings of silty streams, and views of clouds covering the surrounding valleys.




On the path I met an unexpected person going from the north: the hiker "one eleven", whom I last had seen in the desert of southern California. He had decided to skip to the Canadian border and from there travel across Washington state from north to south and now he gave me good suggestions about the upcoming trail section around Glacier Peak and further north. After several more uphills and downhills, the trail reached a high elevation saddle with more views of the North Cascades and patches of snow on the slopes of Glacier Peak's massive cloud- covered summit.



up in the Fire Creek Pass saddle at 6500 ft elevation the soil was frozen, the air was chilly. From there the path descended steeply to a deep glacial lake. On the lake shore I cooked couscous for lunch, surprised how far my feet already carried me today (13 miles).




More views of the ridges of the North Cascades: somewhere far away in between the almost endless parade of deep forested valleys and rocky ridges, but less than 100 miles to the north as the crow flies, goes the USA - Canada boundary. However, the mountainous wilderness continues from here much further north, across the western part of Canada into Alaska, towards North America's highest peak of Denali (also called Mount Mc Kinley), until it is interrupted by the fast and ice-cold currents of the Bering Strait that separate the Americas from Asia...



Aided by numerous switchbacks, the narrow path descended deep down into the valley of Milk Creek. The stream got its name because off its color. The change of elevation is clearly visible on the vegetation; at 3000 feet, colorful maples dominate in the forest.



After crossing Milk Creek, the path started climbing again from 3000 to almost 6000 feet of elevation. Thanks to the intelligence of smart people who surveyed the PCT route and thanks to the hard work of many volunteers, the path overcomes the large difference by more than forty switchbacks. More than forty, because I only started counting them half mile after the bridge over Milk Creek :-) During the climb I watched vegetation changing from maples to various conifer trees again and clouds filling the valley below. The most impressive sight was looking at the large glacier at the rear end of the valley with various landforms that I had only known from geology books. In the middle of the
in the next photo we can see a perfect example of a nunatak: a sharp needle-shaped rock, sticking out of the mass of the deep and perpetually moving ice.


From top of the climb, the path took a gentler course through a mysteriously enchanting landscape of isolated rocks, meadows, springs, boulders and groups of mountain hemlock trees. The delicate veil of mist and low clouds covering the surrounding valleys was becoming thicker and thicker as evening darkness quickly approached.


It was about time to start looking for a sheltered and protected spot for spending the night. Shortly after the trail started descending towards the deep valley of the Suiattle river, I found a perfect camping spot under thick cover of for and hemlock trees. Pitching my tent under one of the trees and putting the folded tarp and sleeping pad and plastic bags inside for extra warmth, I hoped that any rain falling during the night would only be light and soon closed my eyes in deep sleep after a long but beautiful 27-mile hiking day.