At Campo on the Mexican border at the start of the Pacific Crest Trail
Ready for the snowbound High Sierra with 23 days supplies and snow and ice gear.
Volcanic country along the PCT in Oregon
with Mount Washington in the background
Thirty years ago this April I set off on the Pacific Crest
Trail, my first long distance walk outside the UK. It was to be a life-changing
experience. In the May issue of TGO, just out, I describe my walk (briefly!) in
my backpacking column. Just writing it up and looking at my old slides sent
shivers down my spine. How exciting it was!
A rather different backpacking trip is described by Ed
Byrne, who I took wild camping in Glen Feshie. I described this trip, without
mentioning Ed, in my blog for March 1.
On gear I review a selection of bivi bags, try the new
NeoAir XLite air mattress and answer a question on tent pegs while Judy
Armstrong tries a dozen pairs of women’s 3-season boots and Daniel Neilson
likes the Arc’teryx Gamma SL Hybrid Hoody.
I also write about gear and the outdoor industry in general
in a piece called The Green Outdoors in a special supplement, Tread Softly, about
greener hillwalking. Elsewhere in this supplement there are pieces on caring
for gear; reusing and recycling gear; key figures in the outdoors industry describing
their work – Nick Brown of Nikwax/Paramo, Rohan co-founder Sarah Howcroft on
her Recycle Outdoor Gear project and Debbie Luffman of Finisterre on Bowmont
sheep (UK wool that could rival merino); suggestions for car-free walks and
plane-free travel; leave no trace tips and Tanya Bascombe of the European
Outdoor Conservation Association describing its work.
In the actual magazine itself the theme, as daylight hours
grow, is big days out. Dan Bailey, who has a new book on the subject called
Great Mountain Days in Scotland
that looks good, describes ten big summit days in the Highlands; Tim Gent
suggests a long peak-bagging walk on Dartmoor
and Ronald Turnbull recommends the Caldew Circuit, a long walk over the
Northern Fells including Blencathra and Skiddaw.
Away from the summits Cameron McNeish describes organising
his own trek in the Himalayas; Daniel Neilson
tries scrambling and climbing in Snowdonia and Jim Perrin write passionately
about the Kinder Trespass on its eightieth anniversary and, in his Hillwalkers’
Library column, about a book I haven’t read, Jean Giono’s The Man Who Planted Trees, that sounds interesting. In the Hill
Skills section Kevin Walker describes search techniques for finding an
obstinately hidden objective; Tom Durham looks at how to deal with soft tissue
injuries; Chris Highcock looks at why you get tired and what to do about it and
Chris Fenn describes some delicious sounding and looking trail mix.
Note: the PCT pictures are scans from Kodachrome 64 slides taken with a Pentax ME Super SLR camera with 28mm and 50mm lenses.