"I wonder where this old road goes," Karen said. Today she and I hiked 7.8 miles with over 2,500 feet of elevation gain and loss.
On weekends, mountain bikers swarm Squilchuck State Park. We effectively sidestepped mountain bikers by climbing up an extremely steep, washed out gravel road to a high ridge. No other people were up there. Perfect.
Descending, tiny rocks like ball bearings made it very slippery. Our feet would shoot out from under us. Plus, it was extremely steep.
So Karen and I sidestepped down through the woods beside the road whenever possible. Dry plants crunched underfoot. Glad I had two hiking poles. We made it down safely.
"This would be great for snowshoeing," I said. Karen agreed. Steep trails are easier on snowshoes.
A helicopter zoomed overhead pulling a big bucket. Where was it going? High fire danger today with winds and tinder-dry conditions.
Photos:
Bear Rocks.
A dried Pine Drop plant.
We made it to the high saddle on the left. Usually we hike below the rocky cliffs.
Wild Rose hips, a sign of Fall.
Girl I LOVE your adventure stories...I live vicariously through you...keep em coming
Autumn is my fav....and rose hips are high in vitamin C
They make a really great Jam also
@phoenixone1 They do! I also have a spiced rose hip cake recipe I haven't made for a while. Hmmmm
love the pictures ,long hike,great elevation you climbed also ,step trail,one has to be so care full especially coming down so gravity does not take over
Thank you. It was much safer to descend through the woods.
Fingers are a little torn up from pushing branches aside. Should have worn the gloves in my pack.
Oh, a technical term. I see. In that case, my work week was a cast-iron bitch. I really needed the extra day off.
That was a joke.
@LiterateHiker I got it, I was running with it.