Day 125-127 – The Trek


Day 125

I ended up camping last night after about 23 miles. It is a difficult day for some reason. I am not sure if it was the heat, or does not sleep enough the night before, but I was dragging almost all day. Last night I packed a ton of garbage calories, then got up early and hit 11 miles to some of the most surprising paths. I have been on their way. Pancakes, coffee, fresh fruit and even a hand washing station. It is absolutely incredible, but the only problem is that I ended up staying there for more than two hours.

Now I am back on the road, hoping to make another 15 today, which I think should not be a big problem given in slightly colder temperatures today and a moderate elevation gain. As long as you can prevent breaks from the rest of the day they stay too long and, more importantly, provided you can find reasonable camps, it should be totally feasible.

Day 126

Yesterday was a much better day. I was dragging the day before, but we managed to make 30 miles of trails and leave us a 15 mile walk to the trout lake to replenish. There are rumors of some paths of paths at some point today, but the hikers that we just passed said they didn’t see any, but perhaps like my own food.

I am currently out of the water. It was a strange 13 mile transport in the Washington section, between dried camping, heat and miles, I just had my last Zip. Fortunately, we are just a couple of miles from the water source, so there is no danger at all, I would like to be a little more hydrated right now if I could be. In addition, and perhaps the most important thing, today I have not had any coffee.

I continued to melt the road, and it still seems fantastic that knows exactly that we are all my refueling points between here and the border. After the Trout Lake, I have food boxes that reach everyone, but I will complement everything the best I can of the groceries where they exist. It is also strange to think that there is «only» 450 or 7 miles to travel, winning that it is such a relatively large number by itself, but the smallest number compared to the distance from the distance I have already arrived. I said this 100 times before the publication. Day by day, step by step.

Day 127

Washington Miles continues to melt. After several hours in Trout Lake yesterday, I finally arrived at the road around 6 pm, and I could get a total of 21 miles of paths with a long stop in the city, so I feel pretty good. Today, I hope to do 24 to 25, and stop early enough to eat in light, and then sleep a long night. I’ve been walking up to the night in the last week, and I’m ready to start stopping a little earlier.

I will arrive at White Pass the day after tomorrow, but even with only 2 1/2 days of food, I packed he feels heavy. I think 2 1/2 days of food now weigh what I thought were five days of food when I started. The hunger for hikers is strong and I am eating a lot.

The path is what it is. The majority is surprising, with some additional blows and sections just to make me complain a little. Now it is curious how the handful of hikers to the north know each other, and we all know that at this point, we are all reaching the border. It has been an incredible year for the PCT. I have a continuous standing path from the Mexican border, and except any fire closure, or at least fire closures that cannot be walking, during the next 400 miles, I can continue that path to the term. It is exciting to think about what is a few weeks away, and it can happen a lot.

Unfortunately, for those who read, and thanks if you are, I will end this trace before having the opportunity to publish about it. At this point, I am not planning any zero, and the Nero that I am planning in Snoqualmie will be short and busy. I can’t wait to publish all this and available, and probably even reread myself.

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