The day was a beautiful 75 degrees and sunny, the perfect day for hiking. Mike and I arrived at the trailhead around 11:45 am and headed out. The trail followed a creek for about a mile and then left it to traverse the hillside with numerous switch backs.
The rangers had told us over the phone that no one ever used the trail or campsite because of the unkept trail, which was likely overgrown and broken down in areas. This challenge all the more invigorated me to find this camp site.
As we traversed the creek, we eventually came to a point where it went underground, and what was left was a gully nearly entirely lined with oak leaves, rocks, and giant pine cones!
We kept going up and eventually ran into switch backs that took us over the hill and into the next ravine, cut deep by a roaring snow melt creek. I kept getting ahead of mike, and would often turn around and snap a photo of him.
As we descended we got into the section of unkept trail and saw that it was mostly rock slides and erosion that had disrupted the trail. We spent a minute stopping to get the gravel out of our five finger shoes.
As we continued I saw an amazing freak of nature! A rock had become overgrown by a tree trunk, and over time the rock had eroded away from the hill side, to be completely separate from the hill and embedded in the tree!
We kept moving and eventually came to an amazing section of creek where the water cascaded over solid rock into pools that looked like hot tubs, swirling and streaming down the mountainside. It so far was the prettiest section of the San G wilderness that I have seen.
Mike in his Bikila FiveFingers at the Creek Crossing
We continued up the hill and finally found the campsite! Oh woe is me! There were people camped there, by the firepit, taking up the entire site! I thought it might be a hunting party that had come up from another route (I hadn't seen any fresh tracks on the trail), but wasn't sure. The only thing I was sure of was that our day was ruined and we would have to go back to the trailhead without any cooked beef sausage in our stomaches!
However, we were determined to cook our lunch and eat it too, so we went a ways away into a rock field and built a fire ring of our own. The fire took off quickly since the wood was so dry, and we kept it small, using only the coals from the first burn and a few little sticks to do the dirty work. In a half an hour or so we had nice roasted sausage!
Our Site
Our Lunch Cooking!
We then took some photos around the site, showcasing our wilderness prowess!
Packing up we were most definitely sure that we would return to this camp site again, possibly this summer and definitely the next winter, to enjoy a camp fire and the joys it brings when camping in the outdoors.
Until Next Time!
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