Tamping dirt on rock water bar |
Nonetheless, I am having a great time doing the much needed work on the trail. I get to work with seven twenty-somethings, who are all keeping me on my toes, but I am keeping up with them. I get to live in my tent at Headwaters Camp in McArthur-Burney Falls State Park. I get to work and sweat every day. I get to do a lot of reading - something I don't do enough of back in San Francisco! Finally, I get to experience the whole trail crew culture, which has intrigued me ever since I ran into trail crews back on the Appalachian Trail.
Northwest Service Academy PCT II and Freefall |
I did brushwork on the last four days of the hitch. I ran a Stihl four stroke brush cutter, which has this awesome three-pronged blade on it, for two days, and on the other two days, I lopped and swamped. Swamping means that I picked up brush that was cut by the cutter, gathered it into stacks, and dumped it as far off the trail as I could. If I wasn't swamping or lopping branches, then I was removing staubs, which are the those small stumps from bushes that are left over after clearing with a brush cutter. Many of the staubs are from vine maples, which seem to grow crazily on the PCT in Northern California. The work is tedious, time consuming, and when done during the heat of the day, kind of gnarly.
Morning view of Mount Shasta from the Hat Creek Rim |
I have two more hitches out here, each of which will be four days long. After the next hitch, I plan to hike all of Section O to Dunsmuir, and then hitch (another use of the word!) a ride back for the final hitch (original use for the word). After that, I will come back here to the Heitman's on the 27th, and from here I will hike to Belden to complete my hike of Section N. What a way to spend a July! I only hope I don't melt by the time I finish my work and hiking. Let's hope for cooler weather.