Lost Coast Backpack Trip Continued

There are 2 stretches of coast, each 3-4 miles long that are “inaccessible at high tide.” You are warned that you can die if get caught there. Well, uh, OK.

To begin with, it was harder going than I thought. My pack was really heavy. There was a rock slide upon entering the first part of the northern no-fly high tide zone that had to be clambered over. I hadn’t brought rain gear, either for me or the backpack, because the weather report had said no rain…well, 20% chance of rain the first day…and it started raining. Shit, if it poured I’d be screwed.

I found an opening in the rocks and prepared to duck under when the raindrops stopped. Yo!

Onward, or…upward. I had a moment climbing over the rock slide; I slipped, almost fell backward,and got a shot of adrenaline. I occurred to me if I fell and got hurt, I’d be screwed. No way to get word to the outside world. What had I got myself into? And yeah, grudgingly, being 80+ has taken its toll in strength and agility. In my mind I’m still 18, but that just ain’t the reality with an aging body. The kids that passed me that day seemed so strong and bouncy. God, I used to be like that.

I was a bit spooked, got to the end of the tidal zone and felt too tired to make it around the final point.

I found a ledge above the water, pitched my tent on the rocky ground, hoping I’d be above the high tide that night (I was), spent a restless night. Had to wait a few hours in the morning for the tide to drop so I could get around the point. 5½ hours hiking the 1st day.

After about 3 hours the 2nd day, I basically flat-lined. I was depressed, wiped out, thinking of all the things that could go wrong.

The wind was blowing, sun glaring, I felt almost dizzy, so stopped at Big Creek, a wide canyon with 15′-wide creek, pitched my tent, which took 45 minutes in howling wind, climbed inside and slept for an hour.

When I woke up, two women from Auburn, maybe in their 40s, had pitched their tents 100′ away and we visited. Renee told me she’d had 10 herniated discs, a back operation, and several pieces of titanium implanted and that it had taken her 10 years to recover, and one leg was shorter than the other. And here she was, on this incredibly tough hike. Shit, what kind of wimp was I? This was inspiration.

That night we sat around their campfire and her pal Pica pulled out a plastic lightweight ukulele and sang songs in a quiet sweet voice. Did I play the ukulele. Well, uh yeah-uh, songs from the ’20s, and  I played “Five Foot Two,” “Ain’t She Sweet,” and “Jada.” Fun.

I got several hours of good sleep that night, woke up. I’m gonna make it! I lightened my load by burying a pair of running shoes, some extra food, and a spiral notebook in the sand and set off feeling lighter and inspired the next morning.

It’s Saturday morning, I’m at Trinks in Gualala, with a double latte and piece of berry pie with whipped cream for pre-breakfast, now going to get bacon and eggs. I can’t get enpough food after the trip; listeninng to the Georgia Satellites sing “Keep Your Hands To Yourself: 

Rock and roll!

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The Lost Coast Beach Walk

Just back, now in Gualala. Exhausted. 25 miles of hiking in soft sand and boulder-hopping and high-tide dodging. It was the adventure of my life. On the second day, wasn’t sure I’d make it, but got a rest and pushed through for 8½ hours yesterday. Utterly wild, raw, tough terrain. If something goes wrong out there, there’s now way to get help. I’m so proud.

Had steak, 2 pints IPA at the just-opened brewery in Shelter Cove last night to celebrate, the Big Boy breakfast this morning in Trink’s, my body restocking on depleted reserves. Boy, is it great to be ravenous and burning up whatever food is consumed.

Shot pics of lots of beach shacks.

Sea lions were unexpected: maybe 75 of them snoozing on the sand near the abandoned Punta Gorda lighthouse, hardly mindful of humanoid in their midst.

Will write more soon…

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On the Road Again – The Lost Coast

Sign near Willits

Barn near Honeydew in back country

I took off at 8 AM Sunday, driving through Petaluma to get on Hwy 101.The Nicasio lake is full to the brim, the hills a verdant green — both from late rains.The fog of the beach gradually gave way to the sun of inland. Orange splashes of poppies amidst the green … Roadkill — during the day: 2 skunks (neither smelling), a fox, a racoon, 2 deer,  today 2 squirrels; must be spring fever … giant piles of redwood logs in Cloverdale lumberyard … Hwy 101 narrows down to 2 lanes north of Willits, it’s relaxed, v. little traffic, you can make a U-turn in middle of road … it clears the head to get out of the Bay Area where everything by comparison seems congested, every inch spoken for and/or ridiculously high priced … south fork of the Eel River is turquoise … getting into crackpot roadside territory with rock shops, bears-carved-out-of-chainsaws shops, kind of like the reptile farms that used to be along Hwy 66…

Ended up camping at the Mattole rivermouth, then drove through back roads today to Shelter Cove … tomorrow 8 AM I’m getting a ride back to Mattole, will then backpack along beach 30 miles back to Black Sands beach near Shelter Cove, hoping to find driftwood beach shacks to photograph … have decided to expand and reprint the driftwood shack book … just had great fish and chips down at Shelter Cove boat ramp…

First driftwood photo of trip, near Mattole river yesterday

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My First Building Project in Years

It was a hassle gluing up these 6 laminated curved rafters (out of 16′ long redwood bender board — 4″ wide by 5/16″ thick). I brushed glue on both sides of each piece, then bent in a floor jig and clamped every 20″ or so. Tedious, could only do one every day or two. Enter Billy, who planed therm down and strategized with me, and figured out how to get them into position, pinned down at the plates and evenly lined up in height. It surprised both of us how good it looked when we got them in place.

This is a 10′ by 10′ shed, and I wanted the curved roof for the feeling of spaciousness it affords in small spaces, witness vardos (gypsy wagons) or Basque shepherd’s wagons. Steep gable roofs for tiny homes are, to me, claustrophobic. And, while I’m at it, the typical tiny home loft at one end, reachable by a vertical ladder, is just plain bad design. In vardos, the bed is at one end, floor lever, with drawers beneath it.

This place is going to have a deck for sleeping under stars, facing east. Like most of what I do, I don’t have a definite plan, just designing it in the process of building it. Boy is it fun to be building (even something small) again.

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Thursday Morning Fish Fry

I came in to SFO along the coast at 6:30 this morning, listening to Otis and Carla in their King and Queen masterpiece album, incl. “Tramp” … ”you straight from the Georgia woods … ” Across the foggy Golden Gate Bridge into the city, my city. Since Cafe Roma closed, I’ve been going to Blue Bottle coffee on Fillmore, just the absolute best coffee (and pastries) anywhere … The clientele here upscale, a lot of techies, a lot of tall, slim customers, three 15-year old girls in school uniforms (v. short dresses), obviously going to Miss Burke’s or other $20K per year private school, looking smug and prosperous … I’m in the three-dot Herb Caen journalism mode this morning … next week I’m going for a 3-4 day backpack trip on The “Lost Coast,” a Northern California coastal area sans roads … I recently published a small book, Driftwood Shacks , but it was with a digital printing (inkjet) process), and I’m not really happy with the way it looks … so I’m thinking of expanding it from 82 to maybe 128 pages, and printing on a real Heidelberg press in Hong Kong. I’m taking this trip in search of more beach shack photos…

But the BIG NEWS with me in my unplanned, unscripted progress through life is the book I’ve been working on: Homemade/Handmade: The Half-Acre Homestead. (any comments on shortening title?) … I started out looking over 18 years of digital photos around our place here, and got progressively excited … the idea is to show people what we’ve learned in 40+ years of building and gardening and avoiding a mortgage or paying rent … I started putting the photos in folders such as: The Home, The Kitchen, Kitchen Utensils, The Garden, Greenhouses, Solar Electricity, Butterflies, Food, Foraging, Fishing, The Shop, Shop Tools, Maintenance … When I finished and had hundreds of photos I got a jolt of excitement … when I go out and interview and shoot photos of builders, I’m around for a few hours or a few days, but here I’ve been running out in the garden to photograph birds, rainbows, the buildings, the garden for decades … I’ve got some — ahem — beautiful photos. I’m stoked! It’s going to be 8½″ by 8½″, a completely different size and design from our 7 building books … right now I’m wrestling with how to do URLs for the tools and utensils … maybe first the actual manufacturer, then the Amazon link … let people make a choice … what’s really got me excited are some rough pages I’ve mocked up; I’ll post them when I get back home…. Now I’m going swimming in the bay, taking a sauna, getting an Irish Coffee, and then proceeding with my day in the city … you can take the boy out of the city … which happened to me at age 17, but…

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Turkey Buzzard With Outstretched Wings

I took a backpack trip to the beach day before my birthday so I could watch the sunrise on birthday dawn. On the way I saw 3 turkey buzzards, this one drying its wings. They are magnificent flyers. (iPhone photo. Too bad I didn’t have my real camera with 300 mm lens.)

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