[pct-l] Why California?s Trails Are Disappearing From Our Maps

Scott Williams baidarker at gmail.com
Tue Jan 28 08:58:43 CST 2014


Hurricane Deck has gotten that hard to follow?  Wow, it was difficult in
1965 when we spent two completely dry days up there and finally used one of
the creek drainages down to the Sisquoc River just to get off it.  Heard my
first mountain lion screams in the night as it circled our camp and saw the
fresh prints the next day.  Scary, as they sound so human.  Like a woman in
terrible distress.  But we did see condors in the wild.  That is an
amazingly wild wilderness area and beautiful!

Shroomer


On Mon, Jan 27, 2014 at 7:10 PM, Diane Soini <dianesoini at gmail.com> wrote:

> I hiked in that section in 2008 and 2009. Some parts were difficult
> to follow because of cattle, but most of it seemed like a super
> highway to me. But like Terry said, the place where we normally hike
> (the Los Padres Forest) the trails are so bad that the PCT is like
> walking down the freeway in comparison. I was surprised when people
> thought the PCT was hard to follow at times.
>
> I like to tell people that 10 miles on our local trails is like 20
> miles on the PCT and 5 miles on Hurricane Deck is like 20 miles on
> the PCT.
>
> Anyway, it's very true that the trails are disappearing from the map.
> It's too bad, too, because we have so many people who need work and
> so much work to do. You'd think we could put the two together like we
> did back in the last Depression.
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