Sunday, May 22 Wandering in the Woods & Prairies
May 22nd, 2016
SUMMARY: We spent about 2/3 of today wandering in the woods on the CDT, meeting hikers out for the day with their dogs, plus horseback riders, and even some WILD horses that were busy eating all the green grass from recent rains. Wildflowers are out–including iris and lots of dandelions! We got wonderful water from the Ojo Piedra Spring. By afternoon we were back to walking across the prairie and had great views of Mt. Taylor (with a bit of snow on the north side) as well as other distant hills and valleys. The wind was blowing fiercely–we had to hunker behind bushes when we wanted to stop. We’re back in the woods tonight, cowboy camping!
DETAILS: There was a beautiful sunset last night and a beautiful sky this morning. We were very grateful to have plenty of water, and began our pre-breakfast hike in the chilly forest. It looks like the “go AROUND Mt. Taylor” route is actually longer and harder than going OVER the top. It’s often very steep and so rocky that we could not figure out where the trail was sometimes, and spent a fair amount of time being “lost.” To add to the fun, the trail seems to wander all over the place. On the bright side, I really enjoyed looking at the aspen trees. Because of the variety in elevation and exposure, some of them were just budding, while in other places, the first brilliantly green leaves were out. And I do mean “brilliant”–it’s so intense that you almost need sunglasses to look at them!
Because of recent rains, the grass was really green, too, and when we stopped for breakfast in a sunpatch, we were at the edge of a very green meadow, complete with some flowers. It kind of made up for it being Sunday and we couldn’t be in church. 🙂
A couple of hours later, we met some folks out for a Sunday hike with their dogs. These were real trail dogs, very polite and very experienced. One was a large, dark colored, very serious German Shepherd, and the other was a very small black and white mongrel wearing a “SuperHero” doggie T-shirt. The two dogs were buddies–it was so cute!
We finally reached our next water source–Ojo Piedra Spring, and cheered! The water was wonderful–cold and tasty. We filled up all our water containers to capacity. No need to treat this water–we love piped springs! The only thing about these woods we’re in is that we’ve spent hours of walking with no views. We can’t even see Mt. Taylor. But besides the dog people, we also met some horse people, and the horses seemed to be enjoying themselves just as much as the riders. It was good to see so many people out using the trails.
Just before lunch, we missed a turn and soon found ourselves in trailless forest. We fired up Guthook and were able to locate the CDT again, but it was frustrating because the cell phone battery will only let us do this a few times, and we didn’t know what might lie ahead when we’d need Guthook again…and again. Oh well. We were sitting by the trail eating a late lunch, when some horse people came by. They said they were headed out to a viewpoint. Really? That sounded wonderful. We’d had no views for some time! But as it turned out, the CDT does NOT go to the viewpoint, but continues in the forest. Sigh.
Nuff grumping–there were some wonderful things in the forest. Wildflowers for one–the iris are in full bloom, and are gorgeous. So are the dandelions! There were whole swathes of their bright yellow blossoms. Green grass was everywhere. And, there were wild horses! They were very curious about us and were sort of following us along, but carefully keeping a certain distance. When I tried to get just a bit closer to them to get a picture, they would quickly move away. Another thing that impressed Fixit and I was that this part of the forest was obviously well cared for. It had been thinned, for starters. So instead of spindly trees crowding on each other, there were well spaced, strong, healthy trees. Hooray for whoever manages the forest here!
In the afternoon, we reached the edge of the woods and stepped off of trail tread back into prairie and back onto a dirt road. And we were back into the wind, too–it was blowing so hard that sometimes hiking was a challenge. When we stopped for a snack, we had to hunker down behind some bushes. Looking back, we could see Mt. Taylor’s north side–and it had SNOW on it. We speculated as to whether the way we went (with all its difficulties) was easier (or not) compared to dealing with that snow.
Cows were everywhere on the prairie lands, and once again we found ourselves unintentionally starting a “cattle drive”. One cow saw us and snorted and started running away down the road–the others joined her, and soon there was a whole herd trotting along just ahead of us. Finally they veered off and we were able to pass them. Routefinding was a challenge–there were various dirt roads and no real landmarks to give us some idea which dirt road was CDT and which was not. It’s pretty country–little low hills and scattered trees–but a couple of times we were very puzzled as to which way to go. Fortunately, in each case it turned out we made the right choice. Wish they had more CDT signposts to help us hikers!
Tonight we are cowboy camped back in forest again, sheltered from the wind. We’re awfully low on water, though. Tomorrow it will be a top priority to find more!




DETAILS: We decided to do the “run for your life dash” across the RR/freeway overpass first thing, early this morning, so by 6:00 am we were tucking our last bits of gear into the packs and getting ready to start. We felt much better than when we first got here–now we are well rested, clean and relaxed.



SUMMARY: We had a great zero day today, and when we went for lunch to the Chinese buffet we joined a tableful of other thruhikers. Of course they asked, “When did you start?” and when we told them “April 30”, they rolled their eyes and said, “What did you do–RUN here??” Well, we didn’t run, but we did keep walking a lot. So what did our zero look like? Sleep in, eat big breakfast, do laundry, pick up resupply box, lunch at the buffet, do the mending, load food bags, take a nap, finish the journal, eat dinner, go to bed.
SUMMARY: We woke up to a thick ground fog that made everything (including us and our gear) soaking wet and fringed with ice. But oh, it was beautiful! We packed up and walked out into what looked like a misty watercolor painting. Gradually the fog cleared, and we went through “The Narrows” where menacing black lava reaches the foot of dramatic sandstone cliffs, including the famous “Ventana Arch.” Many hikers do a trail that goes across the lava, but we skipped that (lava – very sore feet) and roadwalked into Grants, continually amazed at the rock formations. We had some trail magic, too, from a tourist family and from a ranger, and reached the Grants Motel 6, ate dinner and collapsed. Zero tomorrow!





SUMMARY: We sure are grateful for our nice pine-needly campsite last night. It rained and rained, so all the ground around us became a sea of mud…except where we were. We spent all morning slipping and sliding along a very muddy road, with rain so cold that it actually snowed on us for awhile. But by lunch time, the sun began peeking through, and we reached “El Malpais” lava fields, which meant walking a paved road. Goodbye, mud! But yikes! Ahead of us lay some of the blackest clouds I have ever seen, with thunder rumbling. But as we walked along, the blackness gradually disappeared and tonight our little blue tent is perched by Hwy 117 on a nice gravel area out of the mud (which is everywhere!)
SUMMARY: The weather was brewing for nasty right from early morning–dark clouds were moving in. But we had a wonderful breakfast at the Pie-O-Neer Cafe and when we returned to the Toaster House, the wood stove was crackling and purring, hikers and bikers were organizing their stuff, and all was cozy and cheerful. Once we were ready, we headed back to the Pie-O-Neer for lunch, and there were so blessed to meet a wonderful Christian family and have a great time with them. Manuel, the dad, prayed for us, and as it turned out, we sure needed that–we ended up walking in steady rain most of the afternoon, with thunder and lightning nearby. Then we found ourselves in SNOW, on top of MUD. Tonight our tent is tucked under a tree, while the rain continues.





DETAILS: We were up ‘n at’em early on a cold morning, thinking, “Get to Hwy 60, go to Pie Town!” We still had no idea where we actually were, but took every dirt road that went north or nor’east. Hours went by–no sign of the highway. Our water was running low. Then a gift from God–“Talus”, a bikerider, came pedalling along and told us, “Only 9 1/2 miles, and you’ll be in Pie Town, and by the way, there’s a water cache in 3 miles.” Wow! Tired, sore feet, too bad–we turned on the afterburners and made it in by 2 pm, dumped our packs at the “Toaster House” hostel, and got a good meal, showers, laundry and lots of hang-out time with other hikers, and locals, too, sharing trail tales.





SUMMARY: One thing about the CDT–to get from Point A to Point B, you often have several choices of which way to go, and those choices can overlap. Today we began on the “Ley Red Route” from Hwy 12 to Pie Town, but finished the day on a different route–the “Bear Survey”. This change was accidental–the two routes came together for awhile, and we went with “Bear” even though we didn’t mean to. This happened way up high on Mangas Mountain, with fantastic views for miles around, and lots of trees (aspens, too!) and wildflowers. Tonight we are cowboy camping down at the base of Chavez Canyon. Pie Town tomorrow!!

SUMMARY: We had a glorious time this morning, hiking high up on the Divide, with awesome views in all directions. For a time it was a forest fire zone, which meant a lot of climbing over fallen trees; that’s normal. But around 11:00, with no warning, the really nice trail (well-marked with CDT signs) simply vanished. We were low on water and not sure exactly where we were, because the battery ran out on the cell phone. So we spent the whole rest of the day bushwhacking. It was very tough and we were severely rationing our water. Long story short, we finally popped out of the woods, spotted a big house, got water from their garden hose (nobody was home) and found our way back to the CDT by 6:30 pm. Now it’s raining, but we got into our tent in time to stay dry.


SUMMARY: Our little blue tent stood bravely last night in the midst of miles of beautiful golden prairie with distant dark hills. Coyotes howled around us, but we slept well and warm. This morning while we were packing up our little “tent on the prairie”, an elk came and stood on a nearby ridge to watch us. Amazing! Elk are usually very shy. We spent the rest of the day doing miles of roadwalks through prairie and forest. Great views! Dramatic clouds today. Tonight we are back on trail, camped on a rocky ridge. So now I guess we’re the “Little Tent on Rocky Ridge.”



