The next day dawned clear and cold, and after one last cup of coffee we hit the trail again. Up we climbed, around Big Bear Lake to the northwest, following the San Bernardinos westerly. The cold air and easy climbs made for fast walking and we hiked the twenty miles to Holcomb Creek by mid afternoon, where we camped on a cushion of pine needles.
The next morning we lingered in the tent a little longer than normal on account of the chill, but by 8:30 we were back on the trail continuing our tour of the San Bernardinos. The trail continued to drop from the alpine zone into high-desert chaparral and pinyon groves as we approached the Mojave side of the range. Soon we were walking on a steep and shaley path above Deep Creek, a large stream in the eastern San Bernadinos that eventually flows into the Mojave River. We crossed a couple of beautifully built foot bridges high above the Cottonwood and Oak shaded creek, the trail being perched obnoxiously high up the steep, exposed canyon wall above the shaded stream bed. After our customary twenty miles, we found a suitable campsite in a dry tributary creek bed. The decomposed granite was soft and warm from the afternoon sun, a perfect place to put up a tent.
Early the next day we passed the hot spring at which we had opted not to camp the night before on account of it being the weekend and us having a low tolerance for hippies, especially naked ones. The trail climbed higher up the canyon wall while Deep Creek flowed contentedly and coolly below. We rounded a bend to be greeted with a view of Victorville and a huge Army Corps of Engineers dam that was built to control flooding at the confluence of Deep And Mojave Creeks.
We had lunch on a shaded sand bank below the dam before climbing again to follow an oak covered ridge. The constant sound of unseen freight trains were an appropriate soundtrack as we steadily climbed and descended, in and out of every ravine and contour, as is the usual tradition of the PCT. After ten-ish miles the trail dropped back into the valley and came to the foot of another massive earthen dam which holds back Lake Silverwood. We were beginning to run low on water, but despite the proximity of the lake, there was no water available, so we were forced to press on. Around the lake the trail twisted, tantalizingly close but so far away from the unavailable water. Finally, as a chill fog began to move in, we exhaustedly set our packs down at the Cleghorn day use area, twenty four miles later and completely out of gas.
We slept in an extra hour and a half the next morning, finally willing our tired feet and backs to resume the work ahead of us. The promise of McDonald's beckoned us along, climbing out of the chaparral and up onto the badlands above the massive interstate and rail works that fill the Cajon Pass. The sound of train horns and traffic were constant as we descended slippery sandy slopes into a small canyon, and eventually passing an old bridge footing (old Route 66!) and a sign saying "McDonald's .4 miles". We leaned our packs next to about fifteen others and hurried inside for our reward. Stuffed full of fries, a hot fudge sundae and an Oreo McFlurry, we topped off on water and determined to put down another five miles that afternoon. Under Interstate 15 and over the Union Pacific tracks we walked, past Mormon Rocks and up and over into the San Andreas fault valley.
After a tight camp in a tiny seasonal creek bed we quickly crossed the fault valley and began a long and at times steep ascent into the San Gabriel mountains. Up and up we climbed all morning and into the afternoon, finally leveling off at about 8,000 feet. Again driven by the lack of water along the route, we forced our tired legs to carry us all the way to Guffy Campground some 6,000 feet above where we started and twenty miles on. There, we spent a freezing cold and windy night; down bags and longjohns barely keeping the chill air at bay.
We resumed again a little later than normal due to the difficulty of getting out of a (finally) warm sleeping bag. The trail further wound along the crest of the San Gabriels, sometimes offering expansive views of the Mojave Desert far below, sometimes of the limitless cloud tops stretching west over Riverside and Los Angeles Counties. After a short nine or so miles we reached the first crossing of Highway 2 at Inspiration Point. Alyssa's parents were waiting there to drive us down the hill to Wrightwood for resupply, beer, and pizza.
There being no laundromat in Wrightwood, we called around until we found a trail angel who let us use his washer and dryer while David (Alyssa's father) and I made small talk with him in his living room.
The weather report called for a chance of snow the next day, so most hikers who were in town decided to stay. Not us. We bid the parents goodbye at the turnout and resumed the trail as it descended slightly for a few miles and then began switch-backing up Mount Baden-Powell. Visibility was zero in the thick, wet clouds as we climbed ever higher, hoping that at some point we would break through and be rewarded with Baden-Powell's famous views. Unfortunately, the fog showed no sign of thinning as we approached the 9,399 foot summit. With no reason to linger in the damp whiteout we pressed on, downhill this time, making a cold, damp camp at Little Jimmy campground just before the first of the Memorial Weekend campers began streaming in.
Early to bed, early to rise, we continued our trek through the San Gabriels, making several gratuitous 1,000 foot ascents up to ridgelines affording the same cloudy views as before, only to switchback down the other side back to the road less than a mile from where we left it. Part of the trail in this section is closed to protect the critically endangered Yellow Legged Mountain Frog, so we were forced onto the shoulder of Highway 2 for an exciting four mile road walk; dodging holiday drivers speeding around the inviting twists and turns of the Angeles Crest Highway. A few miles after rejoining the trail proper, we met up with some trail friends at a flat spot on a ridgeline, the only suitable camping spot for several miles. The omnipresent damp clouds cleared just long enough for us to enjoy our dinner and the sunset before blowing in again just as we zipped up our tents.
The next day dawned clear, but our tents were soaked, so we packed everything up still wet in the hopes of drying it at lunch. More switchbacks, the scenery alternating between pines and chapparal.
Soon the trees began to seem especially thin and the undergrowth especially thick, and we soon realized that we were in the middle of the worst of the 2009 Station Fire burned area. Even the Sequoias, ever resistant to wildfire, were burnt to a cinder. Leaking out of the stump of one tree I found a stream of lead -- some hunter's wayward bullet melted out of its tree by the intense heat of the fire. We missed our intended camping spot and wound up camping on a saddle next to Mt. Gleason Road with about ten other hikers who had also been unable to find Big Buck campground. The clouds had finally burned off for good, and we had our first real views of the Angeles Crest from our vantage high on the flanks of Mt. Gleason.
The trail climbed up and over the summit of Mt. Gleason; formely a Nike missile installation, then a Junior Conservation Camp, now returned to nature by the fire. Views of the Mojave to the east and the Santa Monica Mountains far to the west greeted us as we descended further down through the burn area. Down and down we stepped, stopping at a ranger station for lunch and water, then climbing a small ridge and then again down and west towards the town of Acton and our next resupply.
Just off the trail, Acton KOA offers showers, laundry, camping, a convenience store, and a swimming pool. This being Memorial Day afternoon, the departing weekend campers had donated all their leftover beer and food to the PCT hikers who had congregated under a white gazebo on the far side of the campground. Unfortunately, most of this bounty had been devoured by the time we hiked in, so we ordered pizza and beer (beer delivery!!!) and enjoyed our first warm evening in a week talking to our fellow hikers.
The next morning, after sleeping in all the way until 7:30, I hitched into town to get our resupply box, then hitched back. We were in no hurry as we only planned to hike just past Agua Dulce that day, a relatively flat fourteen miles or so. We set out at about noon to a pleasant breeze, passing the marker commemorating the dedication of the PCT in 1993, and winding our way up into the hills towards Interstate 14. After about ten miles we passed through a small tunnel under the interstate and were soon walking through the cool canyons formed by the towering tilted red sandstone of the Vasquez Rocks themselves. You've probably seen them in a movie or a commercial - they were where Kirk fought Gorn.
Alyssa's parents had decided to dip their toes in the Trail Angel game and had set up a little trail magic table at the Vasquez Rocks Day Use Area. We stopped for a few hours to visit and eat some fresh fruit before heading out again, following the trail through the middle of the small town of Agua Dulce, past a huge junk/prop yard which included the entire fuselage of a Boeing 707, and up into the Sierra Pelona range. We camped on the shoulders of broad Mint Canyon surrounded by California Buckwheat and Yerba Santa.
The next day dawned warm and only heated up further as we trudged through endless miles of steeply pitched trails lined by shadeless chapparal. Up the Sierra Pelona we climbed and sweated, then descended the north side where dense Black and Interior Live Oaks brought shade and also swarms of flies. The heat continued unabated as we crossed a small highway in the bottom of a valley and began climbing the even hotter and steeper southwest flank of the Leona Divide. Exhausted and overheated, we found a rare bit of shade under a gnarled scrub oak and rested for an hour before setting off again, ever watchful on our dwindling water supplies.
After diving in and out of innumerable canyons and ravines, the trail at last dropped us onto San Francisquito Rd. and the first water in fifteen blazing miles.
We camped by the highway under spreading pines that night, determined to get an early start on yet another fire-caused detour (2013 Powerhouse Fire) which would require a twelve mile road march through the tiny town of Lake Hughes.
The cool morning helped speed us on, and we were clear of the blasted highway and back on the trail before it got too hot. The clouds of black flies had only intensified since we first encountered them the day before, and as we climbed back into the hills to rejoin the trail they were a constant nuisance. No matter how many we ingested they simply wouldn't heed the warning. A thousand vertical feet later we set up camp at oak shaded Sawmill Campground and I (Jan) set off in search of a supposed water source that was "not too far" from the campground. After a half a mile uphill and a half-hour spent bush-whacking through waist-high grass and mustard, I found the water tank and refilled our empty bottles. The flies by now had invited their mosquito brethren to the party. Eating at a picnic table instead of sitting on the ground was a nice change in spite of the buzzing invaders, but after dinner we retreated to the protection of our tent in anticipation of another early start.
The last hike of the Angeles Crest section dawned cool as we set off down the Leona Divide towards the Liebre Mountains. After a short but steep ascent we were finally rewarded with a view worthy of the climb. To the south and east the San Gabriels and all the peaks and ranges we had scaled the previous week and a half were visible. The roller coasters of Magic Mountain lay below the 14 Freeway pass and beyond that lay the Valley and Los Angeles. To the southwest, the spine of Santa Monicas stood tall before abruptly ending in a brilliant white haze marking the Pacific Ocean at Pt. Mugu.
This was the highlight of the day's hike. What followed was a hot, waterless, humorless switchback descent into the very maw of hell. We now discovered where all the biting flies were coming from -- Beelzebub's seat of power, Lancaster, CA.
Due to disputes between Tejon Ranch and the feds, the PCT has been "temporarily" routed (since the 1980's) down off of the scenic pacific crest and into the Antelope Valley for a 30+ mile crossing of the hot, airless valley floor, where temperatures regularly reach into the 100's. The beginning of this detour is a too-steep descent along a poor jeep trail which then turns into a poorly maintained foot trail that alternates maddeningly between gratuitous steep climbs and useless switchbacks. Many a hiker who has come this way on a hot afternoon has cursed Tejon Ranch and the Forest Service out loud and in tongues.
After the longest four mile walk of my entire life, the trail turned onto a straight dirt road and directly (finally) towards our destination: Hiker Town.
Despite what it sounds like, there is no Thunderdome in Hikertown, and also no Tina Turner in bondage gear.
It is basically a two acre plot of land on Highway 138 that has a spigot, a house, a dog, and about eight roosters. The owner lets PCT hikers shower and hide from the heat of the day in his converted garage, and he also accepts resupply packages. It is a funky but welcome resupply point on an otherwise barren and altogether frustrating section of trail.
From Hikertown the trail follows California Aqueduct access roads across twenty miles of shadeless valley. It is neither a crest, nor is is scenic. It is reviled by most PCT hikers. On hot days it can become virtually impassable. Thus, the smart hiker waits out the heat at Hikertown and begins this boring and potentially dangerous section in the late afternoon.
We set out six PM, and as the sun set behind the mountains with the waxing gibbous moon climbing overhead, the valley almost looked pretty. The route was plenty boring, but without heat to contend with it went by quickly. A coffee break at nine PM was followed by a refreshing beer at about 10:30 as we came upon a group of hikers towing a wagon with a full cooler. This was the best trail magic so far.
After twenty miles we had had enough, and fell into our tent for a few hours of sleep. We awoke in the middle of a windfarm at five in the morning. The air was absolutely still and hot even before the sun had peeked above the nearby ridgeline. We determined to hike the remaining five miles to Tylerhorse Canyon where we would re-water and set up in the shade to wait out what promised to be another hot day.
We passed about six hours under a makeshift sunshelter composed of the tarp, a couple of trekking poles, and some para cord. A breeze picked up at about two, and at three, out of sheer boredom, we shouldered our packs again.
Low on energy after the sleepless night and sweltering morning, we trudged up some nameless mountains, wondering why in the hell we were doing this. After dinner and whiskey we felt a little better, but exhaustion finally forced us off the trail and into a deep sleep before we had gone even a couple more miles.
The alarm sounded early the next morning and I immediately turned it off. We needed sleep more than we needed to hurry onto the trail. Besides, at this altitude the heat wasn't so bad and a nice breeze was blowing from the west. We slept in until it was too light to ignore the day anymore, then sipped hot chocolate and enjoyed the view of the sunrise and the Antelope valley from our ridge top campsite before hefting our packs again for the nine-ish miles to Willow Springs Road, where we planned to hitchhike into Tehachapi for a couple days of rest and relaxation.
It was either the cooler temperatures, the extra sleep, or the promise of a shower and cold beverages, but Alyssa averaged about four miles an hour while I trudged far behind, trying to keep up. Passing just beneath row upon row of whooshing wind machines we came upon the road and were picked up by the third car that passed.
For now we are enjoying coffee and not walking, but also contemplating wearily (and warily) the next 160 miles of trail, which are the most waterless of the entire PCT. The weather is forecast to be cooler, but there are two waterless stretches over thirty-five miles long coming up. This means either more night walks on narrow trails, or carrying ten extra pounds of water, neither which option is paticularly palatable.
That's all that lies between us and the Sierra Nevadas. It's a formidable challenge, but we'll take it on and beat it just like we did the Lagunas, San Jacintos, San Gorgonios, San Bernardinos, San Gabriels, the Angeles Crest, and the Antelope Valley: one step at a time.