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[pct-l] section times



Last year (on a wet year) I hiked section E end of March and  found snow in the Tehachpis - but very passable.  I would imagine that section A would be passable even earlier.   Section B would have the San Jacintos that were treacherous even till the end of May.  Wild flowers are very nice in the deserts (Mojave & Anza Borrego) and I try to coincide my travels during the peak of the flower season.
  The Cascades might be passable in June and July I have heard horror stories about Mosquitoes picking you up if you looked like you were the weakest in your group.  I hiked both of these in August and had little bug problems and only rain problems in Washington in 2004.
   
  SB

Kimberly Sorbello <ksorbello@hotmail.com> wrote:
  We are retiring and newly back into backpacking and are interested in 
section-hiking the pct. The books we've been able to find deal generally 
with thru-hiking timelines, but we would like to hike sections at their 
optimum seasons. What is the lowest section's best time; I'm assuming it is 
spring, but could someone tell me something more specific re: the earliest 
times to hike it in relative pleasure/comfort? Thanks. Also,1if someone 
could tell us the optimum time to hike the Tahoe Rim and the John Muir... 
Thank you!
Pilgrim


From: Chance Money 
To: JD Schaefer 
CC: pct-l@mailman.backcountry.net
Subject: Re: [pct-l] PCT Open trail Directory
Date: Wed, 11 Jan 2006 08:08:43 -0800 (PST)

Hi JD

To my knowledge, there is no accurate mileage system available. The most 
commonly used system for mileage is from the Shaffer PCT guide books and the 
related data books which are copyrighted. Experienced PCT hikers always seem 
to have issues with the mileage claims from these sources but as a practical 
matter, they are all we have and are, more or less, good enough.

The only way I know of to get accurate mileage would be to push a 
surveyors mileage wheel, or if pedometers are accurate enough, you could 
wear one of them to get a point to point distance fix.

Chance


JD Schaefer wrote: Chance
An excellent resource, thanks. I may be the only one, but when planning
long hikes, the itinerary is based on mileage (0.00-miles) starting at
the trailhead (Campo). If you get a chance, I mean opportunity, is
there an easy way to put in mileage at your waypoints? Or is it obvious
enough from the descriptions that I could input the data myself?
Thanks,
JD


Chance Money wrote:

> Among new hikers, every year there is much fear and uncertainty 
concerning the availability of drinking water on the trail. On my 2003 thru 
hike I found so little reason for it, that on my 2004 thru-hike I decided to 
waypoint the water sources and provide some sort of commentary for them.
>
> The first thing learned from this project was that existing water source 
information from the more popular guide books were developed with the year 
around hiker in mind. Thru hikers are distinctively different in that we 
pass through a given section of the PCT in a very narrow time frame. During 
that time frame, generally speaking, there is plenty of water. The only real 
problem is Oregon because we pass through there at the end of the summer and 
many sources have dried up by then.
>
> The second thing learned from this project was that only the major water 
sources are listed by these popular guide books. There are a vast number of 
tiny trickles totally sufficient for the needs of thru hikers. So many in 
fact that it becomes difficult to list them. And most of them are cleaner 
than the big listed water sources.
>
> The third thing learned from this project is that the water trail angels 
have no ready means of coordinating their efforts or of keeping the hikers 
up dated to new developments. This is particularly true of one time only 
trail angels who have limited time and means to do something for the hikers.
>
> I decided to enter my collected data from the 2004 hike in the form of a 
Wiki so that the PCT hiking / riding community could update the listings on 
their own. Have a look to see if this is something that is useful to you or 
something you would be interested in contributing to. The content is 
currently focused on water but the format allows many other data sets to be 
included. On my 2006 hike I will be posting the locations of trail confusion 
points where the trail fades out or signage is damaged or missing. Chai Guy 
has kindly allowed his hot springs list to be posted.
>
> http://www.seedwiki.com/wiki/pct_open_trail_directory
>
>Chance
>
>
>
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