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My GPS(r) with a geocache I prefer this Garmen GPSmap 60CSX over the newer models |
A sudden change of fortune this month has prompted me to stay closer to home. Also the weather has been awful. Never ending rain. The sun breaks only serve to trick me into going outside just to be rained on. Such dreadful weather is doing my head in.
I decided to revisit a geocaching area about halfway between Kamilche and McCleary. I was last there just over a year ago and I had started working on a puzzle cache. I've looked for all the other caches in the area, but I'm just not a fan of puzzle caches.
Started my hike in the rain with Sage. I always try to get out of the car and onto the trail without anyone seeing me get started. I try not to advertise that I am a woman hiking solo. But there was so much traffic on the road, I'm not sure if I succeeded. My efforts to stay safe can also rouse suspicion. Why is that person hiding? They must be up to no good!
So I wandered around in the rain in a terrible mood looking for geocaches. Because I was in a down mood, I fell a lot and because I was in a down mood each fall hurt much more than usual. I hiked 2.6 miles in five hours! I was moving slow and taking lots of pictures during the brief sun breaks.
When I had found the last cache and it was time to turn back I honestly had no real idea what way was back. I was dazed and confused. I mean, I knew that downhill would take me back, but I did not remember the lay of the land at all and without my GPS(r) I would have gone down the wrong drainage. Okay it turned out it was not the wrong drainage, just not the one I came up.
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An oldgrowth cedar stump is all that is left of the ancient tree that once grew here. I am going to really start documenting these stumps. One day even the stumps will be gone and then no one will have a clue how much has been lost and how big trees are supposed to be. |
At lunch time I found a perfect log with perfect trees aligned perfectly so I could pitch my tarp. It was a nearly perfect tarp pitch on the first try, I only had to tweak it one time! But the log was not so perfect, it was bumpy and uncomfortable. To add to my discomfort Sage began to shiver, so I knew it had to be a short lunch break. I shared hot soup with Sage to help warm her up.
Sage was wearing her raincoat that keeps her back dry, but it was not enough. I think Sage gets cold easier than Patches did too.
While under the tarp I got out my camera, mini-tripod, two wireless controllers and an off camera flash. I used this to take pictures of some fungi that I had carried with me. There under my dry tarp I was able to photo the fungi, while Sage shivered and I felt guilty.
I use my old half broken flash units for hiking, but I think I will start using my newer flashes for dry hikes. I need to memorize how to use my flash system.
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Poor person's gumdrops (Guepiniopsis alpinus) |
This area is fascinating and probably about to be logged, so I intend to go back soon. The forest is getting nice and that can only mean one thing in a tree farm. As soon as a tree farm starts to resemble a forest it gets logged. The moment you catch yourself thinking to yourself "those doug-fir look big enough to support chanterelles" the forest will be logged.
The two gates closest to the gate where I went in said that there was active logging in the area and I could hear some logging noises in the distance.
I found all of the caches, but could not solve the puzzle to get the final cache. I might never solve the puzzle. Perhaps I should do like most cachers do and get the answer from someone else who has already solved it.
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Red track is today I actually could have gone right down that drainage and been fine instead I steered back towards the ridge |
I know have 995 geocache finds. I'd like to do something special for my 1,000th find. I have not decided what that will be yet other than a hike somewhere new.
2.6 miles with almost 500 feet elevation gain