- GET 2024 day 15, Oct 15, Tuesday
- Start home
- End home
- Rest and recuperation
Weather has been good so far, but that is about to end tomorrow.
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Sagebrush personal hiking blog
Weather has been good so far, but that is about to end tomorrow.
It is time to head back home for a zero day. Now that I know Nave Spring has good water, the plan is to return after my break, for several days of clearing Shipman Trail in this section.
The views on the return are still dazzling.
Near the campground, temperatures are still warm enough to encounter a snake taking a solar nap on the trail.
Finished audiobook Greylorn, by Keith Laumer.
My long-hike journals nearly always include a photo of a hamburger at some point on the trip. I did not get one at a restaurant this hike, but Dotter made sourdough buns and we grilled burgers to eat with Cairn at home this evening.
Visitors perched on my car while I was breaking camp.
My goal today is to hike 4 miles to Nave Spring on Shipman Trail, doing some lopping and sawing on the way, and see if the Spring has water.
Shipman is hard to follow until the intersection with Milo, then becomes easier.
The route is getting to the very southern edge of the San Mateos, with flat land visible beyond.
The spring does have water, so I will camp here.
A gap between mountains gives a view of lowlands to the west, with improbable cell signal.
Finished audiobook Lone Star Planet, by H Beam Piper and John J Mcguire.