A Break From the Juans

Waking this morning, my body now feels acclimatized to high altitude. Happy, happy. Morning cloud cover hints at rain later in the day.
A large icy snow field in early morning needs shoe traction gadget.

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As the trail leaves the San Juans, large stretches of icy snow disappear, replaced by frequent short stripes of deep wet snow athwart the trail, protected by tree cover at these lower altitudes.

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The afternoon threatens rain several times, and I do see showers ahead, but nothing lands on me this day.
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Snow Good

My shoes and socks are dry after hanging up all night in the cool dry breeze. That is a big morale boost, the chance to walk at least half a day with dry feet is a fine prospect.

After breaking camp I cross over the valley and start climbing the facing slope. There is not nearly as much snow on this side. Looking over to the other side where I hiked yesterday, one can see how often snow crossings were encountered.

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So the direction the slope faces predicts how hard my hike will be, and I can use that to predict progress. At the top of the ridge a few steep snow fields are icy in the morning, so my traction devices {Yak Trax} are used for the first time, these will not help in soft snow, so will be used in early mornings or highest altitudes, when the snow has a hard icy surface.

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The trail crosses over the ridge to a slope facing the direction for frequent snow fields. It helps to step in the tracks of the hiker ahead of me, probably Brandon. At one point the tracks disappear from the trail. The earlier hiker must have realized it was impractical to do so many snow crossings, and went cross country down to lower elevation where there is less snow. I do the same, and trade snow for frequent swampy areas and thick brush. Continue reading “Snow Good”

Intro to Colorado

Water bottles froze overnight. A headache and nausea in middle of night were gone by morning. Does this have anything to do with the high altitude?
Climbed down to Dipping Lakes

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Then switch-backs on scree and follow cairns to Trail Lake and a pass.

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The trail has a few patches of snow, from ten to fifty feet across, with hard crust in the morning that supports my weight. Also, snow melt has convert a few stretches of pathway to creeks, often with swampy areas on both sides of the trail, tricky to step around.
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