Well, well, well, section 2 has begun.
Day 7: (On the 6th it was a Nero, where we finished our refueling in Bishop and returned to the path of Onion Valley. We just walked a couple of miles at night).
We got up and my watch succeeded in waking up at five, probably because it was not cold. We arrived on the road and we started again Kearsarge Pass and then I practically ran it! We walked for a while and then we reached a pass called Glen Pass. We walk a little more. Then we have lunch.
He had bread with Ghee and Nutella. Mom had bread, tuna and truck that had a meat wrap.
We all turned to immerse ourselves in one of the RAE lakes that we ate next to the truck fell asleep, enjoying a large rock and woke up with a solar burn. The RAE lakes were really beautiful!
We walk and walk a little more. I have been telling a story all day to move on. When we arrived at the LSL camp and went to the stream to find water and when we returned, MUCK truck had made a quesadilla. Today’s difficulty: 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼 💪🏼
Day 8:
We woke up and I had a peach carver for my breakfast. We walked on Pinkot Pass in the morning and then Math passed in the afternoon. LSL says that making two 12,000 -foot passes in a heat of 90 degrees without shadow feels a lot. He was a little out of his mind on Math. I am making a general description because it would be too long to write everything.
Difficulty qualification: 💪🏼💪🏼
Day 9:
LSL didn’t want another taste of an afternoon pass, so we arrived at the road at 5 in the morning to go to Muir Pass. After walking for a long time, we started the uphill of 11 miles to Muir Pass. He felt an incredibly long, incredibly long ascent. Finally we arrived at the top of the pass and we could relax in the stone cabin at the top. The cabin was great. If you come to look for my name in the registration book for July. And, of course, the difficulty qualification is 💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼
Day 10:
After Muir Pass yesterday, we camp a few miles under the top. Today we go down for 16 miles. I feel bad for the hikers sobo. 😢 Then we climbed 3 1/2 miles in the afternoon sun and camped a few miles before Selden Pass. Difficulty: 💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼
Day 11:
We got up at 3:30 in the morning and left at 4:30 in the morning. My mother was determined to take us to VVR Ferry and we had more than 19 miles to cover. Mother Trucker told him «You are running along the path as if it were in flames!» 🔥 We arrived at the Ferry at approximately 1:30 with a couple of hours left over and Truckee made me quesadillas while we waited. You imagine that he made fun of my mother to get up so early.
We also met some hikers who go to VVR, including two chicks that are recently outside the university called Willow and Lucia. We also met a father and his two children, who are 16 and 18 who try the JMT for the second consecutive year. In a subsequent publication You will hear about an interview I did in the two children. (Brody and Adam.) Our boat captain was really pleasant. We arrive at VVR at the end of the afternoon and my next publication will describe it more. Difficulty qualification: 💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼
In general, throughout this section it has been quite difficult due to passes and heat, but it has been incredibly beautiful!
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