(Take Note: for those of you who have signed up to be notified
by email of new postings to this blog, you have been receiving not just a
notification, but an actual copy of the new blog posting as the email. As this does not show the images of the
paintings in the best possible light, you should click on the title of the
latest blog posting at the top of the post, and not the title of the painting
itself; this will open up the actual blog itself, and you may then enjoy the
paintings at their best.)
[Sorry
about the delay in posting this, but I’ve had my annual accounts to do … you
understand.]
After
filling my tank and spare containers with petrol at Klamath Falls the night
before, the next morning, Monday, found a dusting of snow, about quarter of an
inch, at my chosen campsite, and the air was crisp and the semi frozen ground
crunched beneath my boots as I prepared to brake camp and enjoy my first full
day in the High Desert landscape. I had
not gone far from where I had camped and keeping an eye out, as always, for
future and better camping possibilities, when the beginnings of a lovely duff
covered forest road beckoned off the larger forest road I was already on; so I
took it. About 200 yards in the
Ponderosa Pines gave way to an open area known as a flat, in these parts. I
thought about turning around at this point, but the ground off road appeared a
bit soft, and since I was more or less committed I proceeded in the shallow
ruts the duff covered road had turned into out on the flat, intending to turn around in the far trees half a mile
distant, when the road no doubt would resume its duff covered existence.
Two
thirds of the way across some large boulders were evident a short way ahead,
and I didn’t think I could safely negotiate them without my petrol laden
trailer-hitch platform catching up on them; without that I might have
judiciously picked my way over them. I
halted, intent on turning around and retracing my path; transmission into reverse;
the wheels began to spin; immediately stepped off the gas pedal. I got out to inspect the situation, and
remembering four years earlier getting stuck in fine volcanic ash up near
Crater Lake, I thought … Great! An hour
and a half gathering branches and digging out. Oh were that true!
Two
hours later and after digging out around each tire, and with numerous branches
and dead sagebrush in place, the moment of truth had come; the tires still only
spun; I refrained from spinning and digging in deeper, since that is a fool’s
errand, but immediately ceased, and thought through my next moves very
carefully. I was 60 miles from Nowhere in one direction and 80 miles
from Almost There in the other; I was
on a forest road off of a forest road and not likely to see any vehicle,
possibly until next Summer, and if I did they would be on their way to being
captured by the mud as well, and if not, getting pulled out could be costly; I
got into this myself and I would damned well get out of it myself. Forty years ago in the Scottish Highlands, I
found myself on the backside of Bienn Eighe and Liathach trekking 20 miles to
Craig Youth Hostel, on the coast and opposite the north wing of the Isle of
Skye, humping a 70 pound pack since I had just resupplied in Kinlochewe the
previous evening. There were no trails evident
on the map and I found the landscape was boulder moraine; it was up a boulder, step to the next, and
the next, down in between, and up onto another, or over, and so on, and so on;
it took me 8¾ hours to go the 12 miles it turned out to be, and once out of the
boulder field and over a low pass only 2½ hours for the final 8 miles, although
t’was into a driving rain by the time the youth hostel appeared. I had decided, once I got stuck into the
moraine, that if I broke a leg, I would crawl out to the road on Upper Loch
Torridon through a pass to the south; that test I did not have to take, as the exam
I did pass was sufficient enough. There
have been similar testings before and since then, and this would be yet
another.
So
after getting my mind right, I replaced some of the vegetation I had emplaced
with thin flat rocks I had gathered, shoving them before and aft of each tire,
building up a 2-foot trackway in front of each tire, and placing larger rocks
at the end of each trackway to avoid driving off the end; 4 hours after my
initial miring, I put the SUV into 4-wheel drive and into low gear, and pulled
forwards out of the muck onto my rock trackway 9 full inches; I was out of the sucking mud on narrow rock
platforms of my construction. The worst
part of it had been digging out the sucking mud deep enough to place the
initial sage and branches … it felt like I was on the Eastern Front, advancing
on Stalingrad! By day’s end I had filled
in the ruts from my front tires to my rear tires and a little bit of roadway
behind those. By this time it was 18:30
and had been dark for an hour and a half, although there was an intermittent
waxing gibbous moon poking out from the clouds, and I had worn my headlamp,
while searching out and prying up the right rocks from the sucking clay out on
the surrounding flat. Eight hours had been put in and I called it a
day.
This shows my position at 16:00 on the
second day; I took no photos on the first day.
The two larger puddles are where the front tires were on the first day;
they also mask the two foot trackway in front of them that I first constructed
to pull forward onto to get me out
of the mud itself and onto something solid, after my initial effort with the
branches had failed. Although it was
lower there in those front puddles, once I was forward out of the mud, and on
the newly built trackway, I was relatively safe, but since I did worry about it
that first night, once I had built enough behind me I reversed those few feet
to the position seen in these photos, and felt better about it during the
construction that followed. All the smaller puddles are my footprints.
Close up of the driver’s side front tire. The little puddle behind it is nothing … just
a lower spot in my road construction, and is masking flat rocks only a half
inch or less beneath the surface.
I managed to heat breakfast water for my thermos, but
was too tired to cook supper, so I had raw carrots and broccoli, herbal
crackers and peanut butter, almonds, peanuts and some mandarin orange slices
from a jar, with herbal tea to wash it all down … not exciting, but enough to
sate my appetite.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank You for your comments. If you have read "the Journey" Tab you will know that my time online is usually limited; I trust you will understand that I may not be able to reply to comments or specific questions, but that perhaps they might be addressed in future posts.