April 13
Wednesday, April 15th, 2020A glorious day today of hiking through the cow pastures. Wow, the calves are getting big–and the bulls are out with the cows now, so we had to be a little bit careful!! Then it was on through the forest till we reached the “view of the blue”–the Pacific Ocean far below us. We could just barely see the breakers along the shore, because it was a very hazy day. But it was the first day this year that we could hike without jackets on! The sun felt so good.
We continue to carry our heavy training packs, and we look for hills to climb, on the theory that the AT has lots of hills and we’d better be ready.
We are still poised to head for our AT thru-hike if all the restrictions are removed.
Meanwhile, our last bit of resupply stuff we are still waiting for is our Emer-Gen-C packets, which we always take along for the good taste and the vitamins. It has been very hard to find any, though, even online. Everywhere you look, it’s “out of stock.” But we finally located a supply and hopefully it will be on its way to us tomorrow.
This whole coronavirus thing is totally stupid and crazy. The bottom line is, “Yes, it’s a very contagious and quick-spreading virus. But No, it is no more deadly than any nasty strain of flu.” To shut down the whole country and scare people to death is just plain awful. What is interesting is that Fixit and I are pretty sure we DID get coronavirus–way back in January or so. The experts are now saying that it arrived in California (that’s us!) way far before the rest of the country. Back in January, Fixit and I both got hit very suddenly with what we ended up referring to as “the cough thing.” I got it first. We were hiking out at Point Reyes–I felt fine in the morning, but around 3:00 pm, I suddenly started having a cough every time I went uphill, and even when I tried to talk to Fixit. Cough, cough, cough. I jokingly said, “Oh bother, it must be the Colorado Cough from the CDT doing a rerun.” (The Colorado Cough is well-known among CDT thru-hikers–you spend so much time at 11,000-12,000 feet (and higher) that the extremely dry air causes many hikers to develop a cough).
But the next day I felt awful–nauseous and very weak. I just lay on the couch all day. And coughed, and coughed. The next day I was better, and after that rapidly got back my strength and energy. But the cough didn’t finally disappear for a whole month. Many of my friends reported having similar symptoms.
We are very much hoping that all the sheltering and other restrictions will lift before May 15. That’s the latest we would be able to start an AT thru hike. We are determined to be ready.