Project Eveningland

A Descent into Madness & Thru-Hiking


A Breezy Afternoon (Day 123)

6/17/2023 Saturday

This tiny rental has a Lee Harvey Oswald aftertaste. It’s neat and clean and there’s some fun decor but also glumness. I got a late start today.

After two, count ‘em two, back-to-bed sleeps, I ordered a rideshare around 9:30. It took forever to get a driver. I hit the trail just before 11. The rocks. The climbs. The rocky climbs.

The tread was brutal for most of the day. But the forest was so very pleasant. Lots of breezes and clouds to offer shade. More fern-scapes. The path crisscrosses with and joins very old roads amid the new growth forest. Some patches of road become pillowy green carpets. White roses bloom nearby.

Day hikers were everywhere. I don’t know where they were coming from. Parking lots accessible by side trails I guess. They didn’t look equipped to go far on rugged terrain like this. People milled around on Pulpit Rock. I saw maybe a few other backpackers and some people who had big packs but not quite big enough for overnight gear.

There were some dry miles. Several springs were flowing too slowly or not at all, making collection difficult. Near the end of the day I collected water from an ancient piped spring accessible via a side trail marked by a gnarled old tree. The tree has no fewer than four aged signs to mark the spring. One is cracked slate propped on a rock. Another is a white sign that has become too faded to read. And so on. It was only a trickle.

The light had an afternoon quality to it. I kept thinking it felt like an idle day on summer break.

I camped at a small hillside site with fine sunset views. The breeze grew stronger as the light faded.

Wild roses.
Mysterious old earthen mounds.
Little surprises around every corner.
My campsite.


3 responses to “A Breezy Afternoon (Day 123)”

  1. Beautiful campsite. We’re in the Destin Airport getting ready to fly back now.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Where I grew up, we had several old mounds in the woods of our land. I never gave them a thought until an occasional summer neighbor and avid bottle collector took an interest. Next thing I knew, he and I were doing a dig in the mounds for he had rightly hypothesized they were trash dumps. Most of the glass was shattered but he did find a few intact pieces, including a baby-faced milk bottle.

    The C&O has elongated mounds along the towpath in western MD which were spoil piles from later railroad construction. The intervening century and a half has covered the spoil with soil and various flora – much like your picture.

    Nature’s appetite camouflages and eventually conceals the human footprint leaving only, as you note, the mystery of what lies beneath.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I was sort of joking about mystery, but I was wrong to joke!

      Like

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About The Blog

I’m Doug Cloud, an inveterate thru-hiker, believer in The One Trail, writer, rhetorician, researcher. This blog catalogs my journeys, particularly my 2023 1500-mile hike on the Appalachian and Colorado Trails. Other journeys may be added. Or not. I go by several mottoes as a thru-hiker:

1. Work the problem.
2. Throw money at the problem.
3. Go for an FKT (funnest known time).
4. ABC (always be thru-hiking).

Subscribe so you don’t miss future journeys! I’m gonna be writing on this thing for, like, 50 years.

Some quick navigation links:
Day 1 of my 2023 AT journey
Last day on the AT
Explanation of switch to Colorado Trail
Day 1 of 2023 Colorado Trail journey