Thanks for a great report, Tom. Good to know I wasn't the only one sans pack, water, etc. for hikes like that!
dn
Old School: Bull-of-the-Woods Backpack - Sept 1981
- Don Nelsen
- Posts: 4382
- Joined: May 28th, 2008, 10:03 pm
- Location: Vancouver, WA
Re: Old School: Bull-of-the-Woods Backpack - Sept 1981
"Everything works in the planning stage" - Kelly
"If you don't do it this year, you will be one year older when you do" - Warren Miller
"If you don't do it this year, you will be one year older when you do" - Warren Miller
- Sean Thomas
- Posts: 1647
- Joined: February 25th, 2012, 11:33 pm
Re: Old School: Bull-of-the-Woods Backpack - Sept 1981
Well considering I am invincible and know everything I suggest...
Wait Me at 22 on Elk/Kings loop no pack! I dont have the 70's to blame either!! In fairness I did have a pack for the first loop
But If you notice the PH button on my shirt it becomes clear I 'm fully prepared Not to mention it looks like im right on track to be just like you guys someday If I make it
In all seriousness I love these old reports, Tom. The view of Beachie from Battle Axe is something else.
Wait Me at 22 on Elk/Kings loop no pack! I dont have the 70's to blame either!! In fairness I did have a pack for the first loop
But If you notice the PH button on my shirt it becomes clear I 'm fully prepared Not to mention it looks like im right on track to be just like you guys someday If I make it
In all seriousness I love these old reports, Tom. The view of Beachie from Battle Axe is something else.
- Splintercat
- Posts: 8334
- Joined: May 28th, 2008, 10:03 pm
- Location: Portland
- Contact:
Re: Old School: Bull-of-the-Woods Backpack - Sept 1981
Sean, in your defense, BOTH of your boots COMBINED weigh about the same as one shoestring off those old Vasque's that I used to run around in, so it makes sense that you'd get by with less rations -- plus, with Kings there are plenty of slugs and snails to eat for energy and fluids..!
BTW, I'm still waiting for the TFF youngsters on this site to equal a trip I did as a 21-year-old: hike the Salmon River Trail to the jump-off point to Split Falls, descend to the falls, bushwhack upstream to Stein Falls, scramble back up to the trail, then return to the trailhead. Should be about 16 miles, including about a mile of off-trail, scrambling, so pretty doable compared to your 30+ mile days! (...oh, and take plenty of photos... and you'll need a 50-foot rope for one spot...)
-Tom
BTW, I'm still waiting for the TFF youngsters on this site to equal a trip I did as a 21-year-old: hike the Salmon River Trail to the jump-off point to Split Falls, descend to the falls, bushwhack upstream to Stein Falls, scramble back up to the trail, then return to the trailhead. Should be about 16 miles, including about a mile of off-trail, scrambling, so pretty doable compared to your 30+ mile days! (...oh, and take plenty of photos... and you'll need a 50-foot rope for one spot...)
-Tom
- Double Tree
- Posts: 248
- Joined: September 6th, 2012, 10:51 am
Re: Old School: Bull-of-the-Woods Backpack - Sept 1981
Welcome Lakes area completely burnt up as mentioned, but West Lake just beyond them, is untouched. We camped there on the overlook bluff one night this last fall. There is a map posted at the Pansy Lake trailhead showing the burnt areas of BOW. We ran into one backpacker who camped in a burnt area, Twin Lakes I think he said. Said it was spooky because the curled bark of burnt trees would occasionally fall, making unexpected noise at night...
Re: Old School: Bull-of-the-Woods Backpack - Sept 1981
Nothing wrong with hiking in short shorts and subpar footwear if that's what turns you on. In fact that standard 1981 uniform is somewhat coming back in style (7 or 8 years after this thread initially started and died, but just a note for posterity).
One of my first kid hikes (Hamilton Mountain summit out-and-back circa 1993) was done in a cotton T-shirt, short cutoffs much like Splintercat's and Vans SK8-Hi's which really aren't too terribly different from Chucks (padded in the ankles and a little stiffer, I guess). That actually stayed my regulation summer hiking outfit up through high school and college in the early and mid 20-ohs. Oh yeah, sans gear and anything more than a little 20-ounce water bottle (of course) because I was young, invincible and dumb. Actually I still am young and invincible but these days I've gotten sort-of borderline smart and I now carry some supplies and maps. I also now hike in boots or Chacos rather than skateboard shoes. Yet somehow I'm still here and intend to turn 40 in a couple years.
40 being the new 20, that means at present, mathematically speaking, I'm really only in the older half of 17. Hmmm.
One of my first kid hikes (Hamilton Mountain summit out-and-back circa 1993) was done in a cotton T-shirt, short cutoffs much like Splintercat's and Vans SK8-Hi's which really aren't too terribly different from Chucks (padded in the ankles and a little stiffer, I guess). That actually stayed my regulation summer hiking outfit up through high school and college in the early and mid 20-ohs. Oh yeah, sans gear and anything more than a little 20-ounce water bottle (of course) because I was young, invincible and dumb. Actually I still am young and invincible but these days I've gotten sort-of borderline smart and I now carry some supplies and maps. I also now hike in boots or Chacos rather than skateboard shoes. Yet somehow I'm still here and intend to turn 40 in a couple years.
40 being the new 20, that means at present, mathematically speaking, I'm really only in the older half of 17. Hmmm.
Life in Chacos
nwhikers.net: thewildcat
nwhikers.net: thewildcat