Walk on a rainbow trail; walk on a trail of song,
and all about you will be beauty. There is a way out of
every dark mist, over a rainbow trail.
– Robert Motherwell
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| A pose before we go |
“North
Country Trail.”
And
there was the path. Mysterious. Marvelous. Deeply brown and green shadows
buffeting a leafy, narrow single track that first turned up, then to the right,
then disappeared altogether.
The Upper Peninsula
morning was crisp, damp, earthy. Autumn was hard at work turning summer’s
verdant canopy to browns, yellows and reds.
We three would be going
down that path – a retired toxicologist, a Hallmark logistics guy, a book
publisher. All gray of head and beard, certainly old enough to know
better.
To smell the pines, to brace
against October’s northwesterly winds, to witness the majesty and relentless power
of the world’s largest body of fresh water.
And to test our mettle –
to balance ourselves along cliff tops, power our 35- to 40-pound packs up hillsides,
to mend our feet and backs and shoulders when necessary.
In short, to step into a
wormhole and not know who or how we’d be when we popped out the other side.
I joked that I simply
wanted to lose a few pounds. But there was more to it. For all three of us, I
think, there was more.
Cindy, my wife and our
ride to the trail, remarked that it was like sending boys off to summer camp.
It was. I felt the same
butterflies this Oct. 4 morning that I’d felt the last time I’d backpacked – 44
years ago, at age 16.
Anxious. Curious.
Adrenalin flowing. Already missing the comfort of my bed.
“Let’s do this thing,” I
said.
And then we went for a
walk.
***
It seems the world’s gone
hiking. Earnest authors tell tales of soul searching and redemption as they
struggle along the Pacific Coast Trail, or the Appalachian, or any of the other
30 or so national scenic and historic trails that lace through America’s
mountains, hillsides and prairies.
Up here in Michigan,
author Loreen Niewenhuis wrote A 1,000-Mile
Walk on the Beach chronicling her journey around Lake Michigan. She then
walked the shores of all five great lakes for a second book … and then walked
the shores of all five lakes’ islands
for a third title.
I’m confident she’s now run
out of shoreline.
Cheryl Strayed wrote Wild detailing her transformation along
the Pacific Crest Trail, released later as a popular movie with Reese
Witherspoon.
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| Redford as Bryson |
I’m not sure what drove
the three of us to “do this thing.” As I noted in a previous post on my other
blog, Above Water, I don’t think any
of us were seeking to cast out demons, or discover eternal truths.
“Why do we hike, gents?”
I asked this on Day 9,
while we were marching the 10 miles from Culhane Lake to the Upper Tahquamenon
Falls.
I was the middle guy in
line during this particular stretch of the trail.
“Because we can,” said
Bruce Kaldahl, the Hallmark friend from Kansas City, behind me. Bruce, 57, is a
tall, strapping father of three born to a farm family in Nebraska. He wore a
Nebraska ball cap for most of the hike.
“Because of the
challenge,” responded Bill Stott, the former Dow toxicologist, ahead of me. Bill,
64, is a fellow Traverse Citian who also stretches tall, his long legs always powering
forward.
“I think,” I said, “it’s
because we get to see things that very few others get to see.” Insightful, right? Oh … I’m 60 years old; my
legs are shorter than theirs, which will prove good and bad in the days ahead.
All three answers are
right, of course. And not surprisingly, given that we’re three quiet,
Midwestern guys, that would be the extent of our introspection and heavy
sharing of why we were doing this.
I suspect, though, we each
had other reasons … personal reasons. And probably some reasons we couldn’t
articulate.
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| Culhane Lake |
I was exhausted, sure, as
you’ll learn. But these weren’t tears of relief, or pain. But of joy, like
you’d shed after witnessing the birth of your child.
Because there, stretched
before me, was a lake of pristine beauty, seemingly untouched by man, its isolated
shores guarded tightly by deep-green pines and vibrant oaks and maples, its
blue waters as clear as glass and pure as rain. Geese were flying low across
the calm, their honks muffled.
Yes, this is why we hike,
I thought then. There’s some truth here in Nature that I just can’t grasp, I
told myself. But it’s real, and it’s beautiful.
I rubbed my eyes dry and
headed back up the hill.
***
What follows are 11
installments chronicling our adventures. This isn’t life-and-death reading. For
example, you can guess already that we were not attacked by toothy, snarling beasts.
(We did cross paths with a toad.)
Nor did any of us tumble
over some rocky crag to our doom. (I did fall on my butt four times; given that
Bruce and Bill fell not once, I’ll
devote some speculation and science in Day 10 as to why I think this happened.)
But what I do promise is
an honest assessment of what it’s like for three guys with about six decades
under their belts to think it smart to go hiking 140 miles in 10 days … over
sometimes treacherous trails … while carrying packs weighing the equivalent of
four or five bowling balls each.
And to do so with cheery
smiles and not one – truly, not one! – profane utterance.
Of many small miracles
this trip, the latter now seems most notable.
***
We kept our first day’s
hike intentionally short … just over 7 miles. Bill had pulled a back muscle just
a week prior to the hike – cleaning up trees near his house that were toppled
by an incredible Aug. 2 storm – so we thought it best to go slow at first.
The prior night, after our
drive northward, was spent at the Seacoast Resort west of Munising, on Lake
Superior. The proprietor met me at the office door.
“I thought you’d stood me
up,” she announced bluntly.
She had us down for the
night of Oct. 2, not Oct. 3. My fault, maybe. But I looked around the parking
lot, empty save for our car, and I couldn’t grasp the problem.
We checked into our two
rooms, each equipped with kitchenette, small table, a microwave and small fridge,
and a bathroom/shower as tight as a head on a ship.
Dinner would be Mexican in
nearby Marquette, to the west, and breakfast the next day would be microwaved Jimmy
Dean sausage biscuits that we grabbed at a grocery store.
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| Settling into our packs |
My intention each day was
to use my phone’s Map My Hike app to keep track of mileage and time. We
wouldn’t have phone service for most of the hike, but we would have GPS.
So after kissing Cindy
good-bye and all of us giving her a wave, I pushed the app button.
“Start workout!” responded
the bubbly female app voice, which I’ll dub for convenience here “Sweetie Pie,”
or “Sweet P” for short.
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| Bill, Bruce get acquainted |
Although we planned to
camp that night in a clearing somewhere off-trail, we happily discovered a
Michigan state-forest wilderness campsite at Two Ponds that included a fire
ring.
So at last, we could test
our equipment in real time – tents, mattresses, sleeping bags, food prep and
the food itself. As to the latter, we’d purchased freeze-dried dinners from
Mountain House, an Oregon company. Lunch would always be a mix of beef jerky,
dried fruit and energy bars; breakfast a mix of oatmeal, cream of wheat and
dried fruit. Coffee and tea as desired.
But dinner would vary each
night. First up? Beef stew.
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| Pretty darn good! |
Tomorrow would be another
short day as our shakedown portion of the hike continued – 7.6 more miles –
with a waterfall along the way and a nighttime motel stop in Munising, one of
only two motels on the 10-day trip. After tomorrow would come the more challenging
days of 14 to 18 miles each.
Before lights-out, Bill and
Bruce hefted the bear bag containing our food over a tall limb and tied it off
– a ritual they would follow each night on the trail.
We fell asleep quickly.
“Pretty easy day,” I’d
written in my log.
I would write that just once.
Next: Day 2 - The Road Less Traveled
To see more photos from Day 1, click here.
For some pre-hike blog posts, see Doug's Above Water.
###
Sweet P's Log - Day 1
Next: Day 2 - The Road Less Traveled
To see more photos from Day 1, click here.
For some pre-hike blog posts, see Doug's Above Water.







Really enjoyed the post from Day One, Doug. More responses via email and phone. Thanks for letting me in on this!
ReplyDeleteGood mix of humor and insight. Good stuff, Doug.
ReplyDelete