Family First
7:58 AM
I woke up at 3:00 AM from the cold š¤. It was only 3 degrees! I searched for a buff and gloves and hid under my quilt. Suddenly I didnāt wake up again until 7:30 š¤£. Iām lying way too comfortably warm here, but I really do have to get up.

8:20 AM
The clouds are gathering and itās a bit chilly. I feel good. What a wonderful dayāsuch an energy boost. In no time I walk 15 km, but then the sky gets very dark.

9:09 AM
Itās raining, drizzling, and thereās wet snow falling, followed by more drizzle. Because itās only 8 degrees, itās actually perfect weather to finally walk for a long stretch without stopping.



10:18 AM

11:05 AM
š Thereās a rainbow š„°, but itās hard to capture in a photo š¤£. As long as I saw it!



1:56 PM
Water is scarce again, so I have to detour a bit. I come across a field full of these plants š¤. They almost look like carnivorous plantsāhopefully I wonāt get eaten! In the middle thereās a tiny little spring with water.



4:27 PM
Autumn is arriving here as well. Because of the rain and wind, the trail is covered with large pine needles.

6:07 PM
Itās clearing up, and as I warm myself in the sun, it sets me thinking.
Iāve been worrying for a long time about a family member who isnāt doing well. Thatās putting it mildly, but I wonāt go into details.
On top of that, snow is expected in the High Sierra in October, and thatās still 500 km from here. In other words, Iād have to arrive there in the first or second week of October. I should already have been in that area by now, so Iām behind schedule. Hiking in snow is a sport in itselfāand I absolutely f*ing hate it. It slows you down enormously, the trail disappears, itās cold, and you slip everywhere.
On top of that, Iāve been walking almost a month now completely alone, without seeing other people. That makes you gloomy, and you want to share your storyābut you canāt.
Thatās why I choose to put family first and leave the High Sierra for what it is, at least for now.
Be continued š

7:41 PM
Itās another two days of hiking to Interstate 5, the highway where I can leave the PCT to figure out how Iām going to get back to the Netherlands.
Thatās enough walking for today.
Tent setup
1. Find a sheltered spot.
2. Lay down the Tyvek groundsheet.
3. Place the Zpacks Solo tarp tent on top.
4. Stake out the five corners.
5. Set the trekking pole to 130 cm and put it in place.
6. Secure and tension the front guyline.
7. Then tighten all corners.
8. Optionally add four extra storm guylines.
9. Unpack.
In two minutes my little home is set up. No tent can be faster or lighter than this tarp tent, which weighs only 290 grams.
Total: 42.51 km in 11:28 hours
1,095 m up Ā· 1,019 m down








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