"Viajar a pie" is Spanish for "Travelling on foot"

Series: Continental Divide Trail live

Continental Divide Trail posts from the trail

CDT first month

This entry is part 1 of 6 in the series Continental Divide Trail live

As I write this at the public library in Darby, MT it’s exactly one month since I started hiking from Waterton, AB but it feels like a year. Hiking is a slow thing for today’s standards but there’s a lot going on with every step. Here are a few things that stand out.

Glacier

Glacier National Park was a tough start for a long trip. The trails are excellent, the campsites are set, the environment feels under control and the mileage was set to be easy but the mountains are high, the passes are snowbound, the pack feels heavy and the stormy weather of mid June didn’t help. The end result: after 7 days I was exhausted, mosquito-bitten, happy and ready to take my first break day. In the Pacific Crest Trail, it took me one month to have my first break.

Glacier National Park

Bob Marshall Wilderness

Then it came The Bob, a huge chunk of wild land with no roads across it and my longer stage so far with 8 days worth of food in my pack. It felt even heavier than before and fact is it was. The weather was cold and stormy, it didn’t feel like summer and it was a wonderful struggle through rough trails, blow-downs and endless woods, either green or burnt. Bear prints on top of moose prints on top of human prints and the iconic Chinese Wall escarpment making for a perfect reminder that we’re hiking along the Continental Divide. We just need some summer weather for a perfect time.

Bob Marshall Wilderness

Helena & Butte

As the peaks lower in height, the trail jumps up to the divide with the treeline getting higher, way beyond 8 K feet or 2400 m. Woods, woods and more woods, very welcome for sun protection and storm shelter. Water goes from being a problem for being too much to being a problem for being scarce. It’s warmer but still stormy. I love long stages (7 days in this case) for the opportunity to be in the wilderness for an extended period so the following time I’ll have a coffee it’ll taste as good as it can get but once again my shoulders would hardly approve, tough initial days until my food weight comes down. Very stormy in the divide, still waiting for summer.

Typical camp in the woods

The Pintlers

The Continental Divide does funny loops and the trail follows. After the Butte orbital, we’re back to big mountains and patchy snow on the passes. This is another 7 day section for me and the good news is that midway through it the storms calm down eventually and we can have some relax in the hiking.

Tamarack larch in the Anaconda-Pintler Wilderness

I say “we” all the time. There’s a whole bunch of us aspiring thru-hikers going southbound, many of them fleeing from the Colorado snow after having hiked New Mexico in the early spring. Now that summer has finally arrived we’ll need to earn each step with sweat. It’s gonna be great.

CDT three months in

This entry is part 2 of 6 in the series Continental Divide Trail live

Three months and nearly two thousand miles after I started hiking on the Continental Divide Trail northern terminus in Waterton Park, I’m in Salida, Colorado. This trail is real hard work and it’s been only a few weeks since I feel like I’m finding my comfort zone within the hard work. Days are getting shorter and the Dawn-to-Dusk scheme is more necessary than ever before while all camp chores are by headlamp light and mornings get real chilly.

Winter is Coming

This entry is part 3 of 6 in the series Continental Divide Trail live

Southern Colorado is probably the main key to a successful southbound CDT hike. The mountains are high, the trail goes through exposed terrain and hikers are forced to be in the area late in the season. Indeed, as the saying goes, Winter Is Coming and it comes early when you are consistently between 11 and 13 K feet high.

Light, dark and alpine profiles in the San Juan Range

New Mexico, New Trip

This entry is part 4 of 6 in the series Continental Divide Trail live

Shortly after I crossed the Colorado-New Mexico border, I climbed somewhere over 11 K feet for the last time on the trip. One would say it was all downhill from there and, in a way, it was.

All downhill now

Dare to do

This entry is part 5 of 6 in the series Continental Divide Trail live

The CDT is certainly hard work and some technical know-how about being out there for extended periods of time. At the same time, it’s all become quite predictable after the wealth of information we have at our hands, including on line updates about important aspects like trail conditions or water availability. You typically leave town knowing how long it will take to get to the next.

Water in the dry grasslands

Final push, CDT Southern Terminus

This entry is part 6 of 6 in the series Continental Divide Trail live

It’s interesting how the mind works and how body and mind go together. Southern New Mexico had been very hard on both after my decision of sticking to the main CDT trail, avoiding all the easier/shorter alternates. My mind then focused on making it to Silver City, NM as a reasonable, meaningful mid-term goal. When I got there, I was relieved and happy. When I tried to keep going after a short break, it was like I couldn’t make it anymore.

The high desert of Southern New Mexico

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