There's really hiking in West Wyoming?
>> Tuesday, September 15, 2009
This past weekend, we decided to go on a very local hike. Believe it or not there are little gems of trails right here literally in people's backyards.
This past weekend, we decided to go on a very local hike. Believe it or not there are little gems of trails right here literally in people's backyards.
We walk down the wooden staircase and are face-to-face with the WARNING sign. In the smaller print, the sign read "hikers have been seriously injured and killed as a result of accidental falls from the trail and gorge overlooks."
We peeked around to find a blaze, an arrow, or a cairn, but no such luck. With a shoulder shrug, we headed out for the second time to find the falls trail this time by passing under the wooden bridge. When suddenly and seemingly obvious, the pathway lie right in front of us.
We began our ascent. We hiked up the steep trail about fifty to one hundred feet. When no sooner did we come to a 'V.' There were no signs deciphering the difference between the orange and the red blazes in front of us.
To the left, a true warning of the sign of what was to come of our day: Beyond the orange blazed tree, a family of people were hiking downhill toward us. There was a man yelling "COME ON" at an emaciated black shepard. He yanked on the dog's metal leash while the dog cried out in a horrifying yelp, attempting to get over and off the difficult rocks more quickly. The rage built up inside me and I looked to my boyfriend for recognition. He nodded and after we let the rest of the nonresponsive family pass, we commented on the man's blatant animal abuse. If you asked me two years ago how I felt about Lehigh Gorge, I'd have said that I equate the Lehigh Gorge falls trail to the Ricketts Glen Trail. What's even better than Ricketts is that it's got trains, caves, a river, waterfalls, rock hopping, elevation hiking, rock climbing, and beautiful views. I'd tell you there's nothing more to desire in a good, tough trail.
As I crested the mountain, I saw to my left a bright area that appeared to be a nice cliff's edge lookout. I decided to bushwack to the light and take in the beautiful scene. With the orange trail marker to my back, I tromped along in the brush while looking out for the evil bunches of poison ivy. Occasionally, I looked back to make sure I could see the blaze (or at least the general direction of the blaze). Once I got to the forest's edge and the orange blaze was completely out of sight, it was an amazing view of the dark green mountainside. Immediately in front of me, a huge tall-grass field and on my right was a trimmed grass pathway (wide enough to drive a car on). Next to me was a 12 X 30 half-covered stack of tree trunks and chopped wood.
Thunderstorms on Sunday ruined my overnighter this weekend, but instead I got to trek around the ruins of Centralia, something I'd always wanted to see.
The disgusting smell of burning tires mixed with rotten eggs filled the air as we made our way down the road and into the town. At first I thought it was Aaron's car brakes, but later when we walked the mines, the scent was unforgettable. I imagined that it was like what so many miners smelled before their inevitable fates underground, the fate that the tiny canary predicts moments before a disaster.
But I didn't completely feel a forboding darkness about the place as we hiked the broken streets and coal packed walkways. It was more like a curiousity mixed with a childhood reminiscence of the abandoned mines behind my nanas home near the LCCC campus (which are now cleared with a fresh layer of grass trimmed and neatly prepared for homes or campus buildings).
Walking along the strip mines of Centralia, it wasn't the disgusting smell from the steamy sulphuric vapors that made me think of riding bikes, making forts, and shooting bebe guns, but seeing rows of survivor trees (such as the birch) and shrubs covering piles of chunked black rock, broken bottles and cans, and even some abandoned garbage. And while some might see this as something like the remains of some graffically horrific murder partially washed away by time, I just remember being a tomboy pre-teen and searching for lost treasure near my nana's house while collecting bottles and cans, lining them up and shooting bebes through them.
I also remember climbing birches, bending their trunks almost to the ground. And the most memorable was an enormous trunked and termite-eaten tree that my cousins and I would hang out near in deep in the center of the mined area. We took hammers, tarps, and 2X4s determined to make a fort that we could escape to in the summers when we tired of our NES or Sega Genesis games. Occasionally, I'd sneak away to that tree to read about Greek mythological figures or the fantasy world of Dragonlance characters.
Our 'romantic' walk also consisted of putting our hands near the vapor holes and feeling the heated rocks, while pondering the possibilities of travelling underground and seeing the vast expanse of fire, and wondered what anthropologists might conclude of our society hundreds of years after our passing.
Then to bring ourselves back into the current moment, we terrorized gypsy moth nests lopping large charred coal with burnt hues of red, unfortunately, neither of us destroyed a nest. As I looked at each rock, I remembered an archaeological dig I took part in for six weeks near the Don River in Russia back in '99 or 2000. We were bisecting a large mound in the steppe that had rocks similiarly charred. At the time, none of us could figure out how this formation that seemed like a huge chimney of some strange religious ceremony could have existed in the middle of absolutely nowhere. As I threw the last rock, narrowly missing the webbed nest, I imagined that it was possible for those Russian ancestors to be miners as well.
On the return walk, we saw crowds of birds bouncing across the air above and we discussed the possibility of the heat from the mines creating a summer-like appearance to the area even in winter. My mind played with the possibility of an oasis amongst the grime and garbage with greenery and animals living in an endless summer or spring, Much like this town, remaining timeless as the world around it changes seasons from summer to fall to winter and around again.
According to NPR, Obama might be putting credit card companies in line but in the process hikers will now have to contend with gun slinging cowboys at national parks and wildlife refuges. I know, you might think, why didn't we think of this before? There are so many endangered species and hikers to mistake as wild game. Not to mention the high threat of crazies in the woods just hiding out waiting to get you around the trunk of every tree and the green of every bush. So, thankfully, now you can relax knowing you can carry your gun to fend them off. Those lawmakers sure are geniuses.
We must abide by the second amendment, right NRA? If some god-fearing (and nature-fearing and hiker-fearing and fellow American-fearing) law abiding citizen with a gun license wants to feel safe and secure in such an unsafe environment like the inner-city of Washington, DC or maybe the more evil and inhospitable areas of our nation such as Great Smoky Mountains or Arches National Park, he can just make sure he's packin' heat in the heart of the woods to feel safe. It makes me think of the book, Beowulf, where all the citizens of the town are assailed by this disgusting creature that comes out of the wilds of the forest with only the purpose of killing them all. Unfortunately, whether or not Mr. Obama only intended to spank credit card companies with this bill Mr. Obama has inadvertently joined forces with his new NRA buddies and lobbyists who still have the fear-filled medieval mindset of nature vs. man.
According to the NPR article, "FBI statistics show that America's national parks are far safer than the rest of the country. For 2006 overall, there were 469 violent crimes per 100,000 people in the U.S. The violent crime rate in national parks was 1.65 per 100,000." Which doesn't suprise me one bit considering the rest of the country is sleeping with their guns under their pillows, trigger happy with their terrorist talk and the fear of their neighbors and alleys and schools and foreigners and sleeping in the dark.
And apparently, the original law stated that people could have guns in these places previously but they had to be disassembled (which still allowed the gun-nuts who practice the art of a speedy lock and load to be comforted), but now with the new president's 'okay', gun regulations will allow the owner to have their gun loaded and ready to go as long as it is within the gun guidelines of the state. But of course, if a gun owner brings a gun to a park, it is still illegal to discharge it there.
It's already nerve racking to be dayhiking in a state park right next to a hunting area, with warnings of the required bright orange for hikers in the winter, hearing the silence piercing bullets searching out wildlife, but now I have to be nervous that I will be shot everywhere I go. I recall being at Lackawanna State Park this winter (I have no idea which hunting season it was), but eventhough there is no hunting on Sunday "except for small game," there were people out there scaring off deer and shooting guns nearby the park. I don't own bright orange clothes (not realizing until that moment that I should) and I seriously feared for my life when I heard a shot and saw four deer no more than 100 feet from me take off in a full bolt across the trail and into the woods.
I never realized until some recent research that PA state game lands are so close to hiking trails. So, my concern is truly for the hikers. There aren't invisible walls that stop a game land bullet from hitting a hiker on a nearby trail and now gun owners can take their guns to parks loaded. There aren't that many rapid angry animals to take down, but there are families and solo trekkers enjoying trails nearby.
In fact, as NPR quotes Bill Wade (former superintendent of Shenandoah National Park in Virginia) in reminding us that these cowboys aren't only going to have guns in wilderness areas, but in camping areas. I can see it now, a bunch of redneck Americans getting drunk on budwiser and offing each other over a hotdog falling into the red hot cinders. Now that's a thought, maybe they should legally allow alcohol in national parks too. Maybe they should just give hunting permissions in national parks while they are at it. Or maybe, the lawmakers should just kiss the NRA's ass on Memorial Day and just pass a law that lets gun owners shoot people. What ever happened to getting rid of earmarks and lobbyists, Mr. President?
Mr. Obama, I understand that putting credit card companies in their place is extremely important. Most Americans can agree that those companies are theiving bastards. And after reading an article in Backpacker Magazine this month about a kid that tested our weak northern border, sure maybe I'll give you the excuse that maybe you think we need secure borders, but allowing obsessive gun nazis to carry them armed, cocked, and ready to go isn't fair to the people who come to the woods to enjoy its comforts.
Okay, to be fair I must admit I have to see things ON THE FLIPSIDE:
I am not against guns. I believe that everyone has the right (constitutionally given) to have them in case we need to rise up against our corrupted government, to defend our families, or to hunt for our meals. And it is definitely better to have people become knowledgeable and know how to properly use them responsibly (like hunters) to be able to carry them instead of some nut job with a squirrly brain being able to purchase and tote one around while bent on pumping rounds into co-workers.
Furthermore, I believe there is a proper time and place for them. Guns make me squeamish in a situation where I am out to enjoy the sounds of nature and instead hear those sounds interrupted by death shots coming from a nearby state gameland. I myself have gone to ranges and shot guns on friend's backwoods land, but overall, I'm not comfortable around guns. I'd just prefer flying bullets to be separate from my hiking experience.
But as far as this rider bill is concerned, who can say for sure that gun owners haven't been carrying them fully loaded in parks this the entire time anyway, and now they are just legally allowed to have them in parks. This might even benefit parks because they may give park rangers more work by allowing them more reasons to watch their lands better.
What is your opinion on the matter? Drop me a comment below.
The DCNR has deemed this year's hiking week to be Saturday, May 23 through Sunday, May 31 . So let this be your invitation into the woods!
Here's a list of their events from the DCNR website:
Saturday, May 23, 2009
Frances Slocum State Park : Family Hike
Luzerne
: Easy/Moderate
Celebrate Pennsylvania hiking week with us as we take a walk along part of campground trail. Meet: 565 Mount Olivet Rd.
Time: 1:00 PM to 2:30PM
Note: Meet at the group tent parking area in the top of the campground
Contact: Kathy Kelchner, 570-696-9105, francesslocumsp@state.pa.us
Worlds End State Park: Trail Sampler Hike
Sullivan
2.50 mile(s): Moderate
Follow three favorite trails- Link, Loyalsock, and Worlds End- along a freshwater stream, past spring wildflowers, to an end-of-the-world view. The trails are steep, rocky, and uneven in places, so don sturdy footwear.
Meet: The hike begins and ends at the Visitor Center.
Time: 9:30 - 11:30 AM
Contact: Janie Swift, EES, 570-924-3287, worldsendsp@state.pa.us
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Hickory Run State Park: Shades of Death & Sand Spring loop
Carbon
3.00 mile(s): Moderate/Strenuous
Trail: Shades of Death & Sand Spring Loop Length: 3-miles Difficulty: more difficult Meet: Park Office, Route 534
Meet: Meet at the Hickory Run Park Office on Route 534.
Time: 9:00 am
Contact: Park Office, 570-443-0400, hickoryrunsp@state.pa.us
Friday, May 29, 2009
Promised Land State Park: Dusk Wetland Walk
Pike
3.00 mile(s): Moderate
Wetlands come alive as night approaches. Join us on a walk in the area of some historically noisy habitats and learn what creatures are emerging to "sing" this time of year. Waterproof shoes are encouraged, but please leave the flashlights behind for maximum program enjoyment.
Meet: Egypt Meadow Trail (parking area closest to I-84)
Time: 7:00 PM
Note: We don't intend to use flashlights, though one will be available for emergency purposes.
Contact: Jen Naugle, 570-676-0567, promisedlandenvedsp@state.pa.us
Varden Conservation Area: Wetlands Walk
Wayne
2.00 mile(s): Easy/Moderate
We will traverse dry to muddy terrain in search of wetlands in the Varden Conservation Area. Along the way we will discover the secret life of wetlands and the elusive plants and animals that call this unique habitat home.
Meet: Tannery Road Access @ pavilionTime: 3:00-5:00 PMNote: Bring waterproof walking shoes.
Contact: Jen Naugle, 570-676-0567, promisedlandenvedsp@state.pa.us
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Beltzville State Park: DiscoverE Day Camps (formerly Youth Environmental Learning Series (YELS) Da
Carbon
DiscoverE Day Camps (formerly Youth Environmental Learning Series-YELS) Registration day! This series is designed to help children, ages 4 through 13, learn about their natural world. These fun & exciting programs are designed to allow young people to explore their environment with other children of the same age & abilities. Youth who progress from one program to the next will continually grow in their understanding & stewardship of the environment. Programs include hands-on activities, stories, special presentations, crafts, demonstrations, games & much more! Children MUST ATTEND ALL FOUR DAYS of their YELS Day Camp! REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED. Registration for 2009 YELS begins on Saturday, May 30 from 9am-4pm. Come to the Beltzville State Park office or call the Office at 610.377.9150 or 610.377.0045 between 9:00 am & 4:00 pm No Fax or Email registration permitted. Please be patient, demand is very high for this program. Most camps will fill before 12 pm.
Meet: PARK MAIN OFFICE 2950 Pohopoco Dr.
Time: 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM
Note: DiscoverE Day Camps (formerly Youth Environmental Learning Series-YELS) Registration day! This series is designed to help children, ages 4 through 13, learn about their natural world. These fun & exciting programs are designed to allow young people to explore their environment with other children of the same age & abilities. Youth who progress from one program to the next will continually grow in their understanding & stewardship of the environment. Programs include hands-on activities.
Contact: Carissa Reilly-Longo, 610.377.9150, ra-nrspbeltenved@state.pa.us
So far on my treks at Ricketts Glen State Park, I've seen more of this flower than any other. So much that I couldn't help but have to pull out my "Guide to Common Pennsylvania Wildflowers" by Carol A. Sanderson. Not all of the photos are are clear and crisp as this pic of the purple trillium on the left, but it gives excellent basic information on identifying plantlife.
Trillium aparently has another name as well. It is also called Stinking Benjamin (not to be confused with Breaking Benjamin, who also grew up in the Wilkes-Barre area). The alternative name for the plant is appropriate because of its odiforousness. Sanderson writes, "its beauty compensates for the smell." Right she is on both accounts. Like the deep dark purples in the trillium, those guys from Breaking Benjamin are pretty dark and handsome, but I have to say that my taste in music steers away from the stink of hard rock. Needless to say I won't be bringing any trilliums or hard rock dudes home to my mother for Mother's Day.
According to Wikipedia: Hiking is an outdoor activity which consists of walking in natural environments, often on hiking trails.
In the United Kingdom its called hillwalking or walking.
Australians use the term bushwalking for both on- and off-trail hiking.
New Zealanders use tramping.
Multi-day hiking in the mountainous regions of India, Nepal, North America, South America, and in the highlands of East Africa is also called trekking.
In America, I hear that hiking has something to do with stretching the legs from the car to the ground, peering over a lookout, snapping a photo, and then returning to the car to go home and workout on the treadmill.
Okay, I'm just kidding. I won't be discussing my hiking vice like a nature tourist by hanging out in forest parking lots with beautiful vistas snapping photos and using as little leg muscle as possible.
Instead, I want to trek my great homestate of PA. We've got great trails in our state parks. I've been hiking them for most of my adult life but now that I'm hiking them with a full pack, getting dirty and gritty, and seeing PA from ground to mountaintop, I wanna tell you all about it. I'll give you some info on the local nature, hiking and backpacking, and give you the low down on my experiences here on PA trails. Look for my hiking zine (called "Take a Hike," which will be out soon) as a supplement to this blog.
The goal: One dayhike on a PA trail, every week.
See you on the trails,
Erin
(Chickadee- A.T. trailname- PA --> ME '06)
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