Piper to the Rescue

Trail Angel Piper

After a night hike to the peak of Steven’s Pass, I began to simultaneously set up my tent, cook dinner and phoned a guy named Piper who my buddy Dancer had suggested would give me a ride to Leavenworth, WA in the morning.  Who says males can’t multi-task? 

It was late, but Piper picked up the phone and confirmed he would meet me at the bottom of the hill at 9AM the next morning.  We didn’t talk long, but I felt sure that it would be fun talking to him the next day.

I wasn’t disappointed.  Piper turned out to be a man of many interests and talents.  He told me about his career training pilots from all over the world to fly Boeing jets.  I was briefed on his adventures as a wilderness guide in British Columbia, and he described the many beautiful lakes that I had rushed past in the last two days.

But it was his job as a PCT Trail Angel that had really captured his interest the last couple of years. I say “job” because Piper was working full-time helping out PCT hikers.  He’s the main man shuttling hikers to and from Stevens Pass to Leavenworth and other places along this stretch of the trail.  North and south of the pass, just about every PCT hiker has been helped by Piper or knows someone who has.  And what we most remember about him is the gift he gives to each and every hiker: A song played on his flute.

Next year, Piper will reverse roles.  He plans to hike the PCT himself starting from Campo early in March and heading north.  God speed, brother.

Thanks a lot

Balinese ceremony saying thanks.

Saying thank you seems like such a small thing, but it can lead to a whole new way of living your life:

It changes your mood.

It changes how people react to you.

It changes how you see the world.

It changes how you see other people.

It changes how you see the earth.

It changes how you see the Supreme Being.

It makes you happy.

It makes others happy.

It sets you free.

Many years ago, when Felicity and I were writing a magazine article about the Maori people of New Zealand, I was impressed by their tradition of saying thank you to the fish they caught for a meal, to the trees they cut to build their house…you get the point. Saying thanks changed the whole equation. It expressed humility and acknowledged our relationship with the forests, rivers, fish and other natural resources we rely on in this life.  

Big thanks to this big rainbow trout who returned to the Big Horn River that day.

 We tried it out and guess what: Gratitude changes your mood…for the better.  It helps you look for the light and blessings in your life. It makes room for what comes next: Kindness, Compassion and Unconditional Love.

Thanks to our Chicago family this holiday

Thank you! 

And thanks to our North Carolina family.

Terima Kasih!

And thanks to Mother Nature for this beauty from the Knife’s Edge in Washington State.

Suksuma!

Gratsi milla!

A Special Tutor Gives Me A Gift

After a tiring, wet hike down from Pinchot Pass, George and I decided to make camp early near the Woods Creek bridge.  The sun made a surprising appearance, and I took the opportunity to dry gear and catch some Golden Trout for dinner.  After this feast, I found a granite bluff overlooking the forest for my evening yoga and meditation practice.

For Bhakti yogis like me, a goal of meditation is to build relationships with the Supreme Being (Bhagavan) and others.  Usually, my meditation is not particularly dramatic. Krishna arrives for a friendly chat, sometimes Saraswati plays a tune, Ganesha takes care of a problem on his cosmic Helpline or I just sit quietly with my own atma (soul).  But this evening a very bright wave of energy struck me right in the heart, and from there branched out to my whole body.  I felt like I was glowing while completely at peace and ecstatically happy.  Sorry, my language skills don’t come close to describing the experience. This pulsing, radiant energy continued for some time, and I identified it as pure Love in a form that I could see, feel, touch, and taste.

And then an image of Jesus appeared just in front of me in a seated, cross-legged position.  He told me that what he was giving me were the energy waves of Unconditional Love.  It turned out to be the answer to a prayer. In this blog, I’ve been writing about my mission to understand and practice Kindness, Compassion and Unconditional Love.  And here was Jesus right in front of me giving me a taste of it…pretty darn cool.  After a while of receiving this bounty, Jesus asked me if I’d like to send some of that Love energy back to him.  I gave it a try.  At first, what I sent was weak and intermittent, but gradually I improved.  My biggest challenge, however, was staying focused. Often, I would lose the moment, as my mind veered off to some other subject. Jesus told me it didn’t matter.  All I needed to do was practice to sustain the exchange of Love. I asked if he was here as my tutor, and he agreed.  Apparently, part of my curriculum in this lifetime is not only to have an intellectual understanding of Unconditional Love and to practice it, but to be able to feel its energy.

Over the next several days of meditation, Jesus returned to tutor me.  I got better at the practice.  It occurred to me that it would be helpful to give myself a physical cue to remind me to practice this new gift. Inspired by what Krishna taught in the Bhagavad Gita (Chapter Four) I began a breathing exercise to help me quickly reunite with the taste of Unconditional Love. I inhale to breathe in Love and exhale to share it. 

For several months now, on and off the trail, this breathing exercise has helped me to remember how to experience this ecstatic Unconditional Love.  This has helped me to extend the feeling longer as I build up my Unconditional Love muscles.   Sadly, I’m not living up to the goal of always remembering and never forgetting.  That may take a while.  And honestly, it’s a lot easier to experience the ecstatic feeling of love than practicing it in my everyday interactions with people. 

Fortunately, my tutor is patient with me, and is always there to help when I remember to ask.  I haven’t always had such a close relationship with Jesus.  While I grew up in the Christian religion, the churches I attended never really gave me a taste of him.  The rituals, dogma and culture of religion never spoke to me. However, that changed when I began to pray when I was in my late teens.  Prayer helped me to develop a more personal but still weak relationship with Jesus.  Later, I studied texts like the Sermon on the Mount, and this helped me to intellectually understand his very revolutionary message of Love…often far different than what the church had to say about it. When I became a yogi, I began to experience this kind of ecstatic connection first with Saraswati and then with Krishna. But this is the first time I’ve had this more in-depth relationship with Jesus.  I’ve always said a thank you to Jesus during my daily prayers but didn’t really have an energetic attachment with him.  Now I do, and I’m very grateful to call him my tutor.

Pot Farms….. on the PCT

A place dreaded by PCT hikers is the 20+ mile stretch hiking along the Los Angeles Aqueduct through the scorching Mojave Desert where there are no water holes and the sand burns through your shoes.  But I wasn’t having any problems at all because I was deliriously high off the fumes from the more than 1,000 pot farms in this area.

Hiking along the aqueduct is a weird diversion from the single-track trail I had walked on up to this point.  The big pipe sucks water from the Owens Valley into thirsty Los Angeles, destroying wildlife habitat, tribal lands and communities in its wake.  But who the hell cared because even though the air smelled skunky, I was hiking like a maniac, and giggling at my own jokes and eventually feeling a bit peckish.  So, I sat down on the cement road topping the aqueduct and pulled out my food bag.  I was ravenous, and ate not only a tortilla and tuna appetizer, but also two freeze-dried meals (Meat Ball Ravioli and Pad Thai) followed by a dessert of chocolate and trail mix.  

Los Angeles Aqueduct

I gained some elevation after my feast and began to see that the desert had been invaded by dozens of white plastic greenhouses. It was sobering.  I kept walking as night fell and the stars emerged, but then the spotlights turned on, and the desert became a forest of brightly lit shopping malls.  And then the trucks arrived.  About every 15-minutes you could hear an engine roaring as a truck careened down the dirt road next to the aqueduct. I later learned the trucks were hauling fertilizer to the farms, and taking the finished product to market. Fortunately, because of the engine noise and the glare from the headlights, I had plenty of time to jump off the road to avoid being hit.  These drivers could give a rip, and their commercial mission was far more important than any collateral damage they might cause to a careless hiker.

More than 1,000 pot farms are environmental hazards

Hikers aren’t the only collateral damage these illegal pot farms are causing to the desert environment and the communities here.  California legalized weed a few years back.  Farmers are supposed to obtain permits to grow pot, obey environmental laws, and pay taxes to local and state governments. That’s not how it gets done for much of the weed grown, sold and smoked in the state.  A Los Angeles Times story reported that there are more than a thousand unlicensed cannabis grows in this part of the desert.  They are causing havoc.  It takes a lot of water (150 gallons) to grow one pound of weed, and each of these farms cultivates thousands of plants.  Add that all up, and these weed growers are sucking up tens millions of gallons of water from the desert…which by definition is a place where water is scarce.  They also wantonly destroy wildlife habitat in their thirst for profit threatening critters like the desert tortoise. And if you live or walk by these fields you are assaulted by the skunky stench.

Weed grows threaten the Desert Tortoise

What’s even worse than the environmental degradation is how many of these growers treat their workers.  According to the Times story, many of these grows shanghai workers from south of the border and force them to labor in despicable conditions.  In fact, many of these illegal operations are run by the same gangs who run the drug trade in Mexico.  Criminal organizations from Russia, Laos and Cambodia are also getting in on the action.

I didn’t know any of this until after I had left the trail.  Frankly, looking at the farms, it was an interesting diversion from the tedium of hiking day-after day through the desert.  Around midnight I felt tired, and found a spot far off the road to cowboy camp for the night.  I could still faintly hear the trucks, but no lights were visible and that allowed me to see the night sky.  It was universe showtime with constellations, shooting stars, and the dense Milky Way.

108 is the Magic Number

How important is the number 108? Here are just a few examples from an article that appeared in HimalayanYogaInstitute.com

  • The distance between the moon and the earth is 108 times the diameter of the moon.
  • The distance between the earth and the sun is 108 times the diameter of the sun
  • The Sarsen Circle Stonehenge has a diameter of 108 feet.
  • There are 108 double stitches on a baseball.  
108 is “Nature’s secret code,” governing the dimensions of everything from the Great Pyramid at Giza to the iconic seashell called Nautilus.

Please add a comment if you know of other examples.

I’m told that ancient yogis believed that we could attune ourselves to the rhythms of creation by completing practices in rounds of this sacred number.  More importantly, my teacher Jeffrey Armstrong, requires his students to chant mantras precisely 108 times.  This is not terribly difficult when you’re sitting down in a quiet place and use a mala (prayer beads) which has exactly 108 beads.  It’s much more difficult on the trail while maneuvering around rocks, roots, snakes, snowfields, landslides and being diverted by breath-taking views.

I worked very diligently trying to chant a mantra 108 times. I achieved a C- grade on this test by the time I arrived in Canada. I used my fingers to keep track from 1 to 10 but remembering whether I was on 50 or 60 or 90 often eluded me.  That’s because a steep trail section required attention, I stopped to talk to a fellow hiker or my memory sucks because I’m old. 

I’m not sure if I received the truly auspicious benefits from chanting a mantra 108 times, but I found belting them out did provide some specific benefits:

Shiva statue in our garden

Om namo shivaya om shakti ma: Asking Shiva for strength helped power me up those 2,000-foot ascents.

Tryambakan ya ja mahe….Also invoking Shiva, this medicine song helped heal aches and pains from shin splints, plantar fasciitis, blisters and other assorted aches and pains.

Om aing namo dewi Saraswatyai namaha. Invoking Saraswati helped me to listen more closely to the sounds and rhythms of the forests, deserts, and other places I wandered.

Om aing namo dewi Parvati namaha. Singing to Parvati helped me find peace when I was scared.

Om aing namo dewi Lakshmi namaha.  A tribute to Lakshmi and all the mothers in my life.

The Nashringa mantra.. This invoked the mighty Nashringa, the incarnation of Vishnu as both a lion and a human to ward off evil spirits.

Jesus Loves Me..This simple nursery rhyme helped me communicate in a very powerful way with Jesus.

And many more. Because after all I hiked 2,200 freaking miles.

Bad Ass Trail Angels

Sati & Melody

I thought I was a bad ass for staring down a mountain lion at Peavine Creek on the Pacific Crest Trail. But then Sati rolled out their story faking out sidewinder rattlesnakes with rope and then jumping over them in three-foot wide box canyons in the Escalante Wilderness.  That forced me to go to the time in Nepal when a Tibetan monk held a knife to my throat.  Melody countered with their adventures para-gliding from the Uluwatu cliffs in Bali, Indonesia. I reached back several decades to the story about when my pack busted and I nearly drowned crossing the Waimakarere River in New Zealand.  They both shared their adventures jumping off peaks in the Sierras in their para-gliders.  And that was before we finished the first bottle of wine and the lemon and saffron chicken dish that Melody had prepared.

Captain Melody on the river

And on it went through dessert.  We had a great time.  Melody and Sati are educators and family friends who now live in Mount Shasta.  I fortunately found them at home, and they generously agreed to be my trail angels for the night.  They had hiked 700-miles on the PCT, and they knew exactly what hiker trash like me needed: A shower, a good meal, a change of clothes while my laundry dried and a trip to the grocery store.

Yikes

They gave up para-gliding a few years back because they were taking too many risks, so instead they are now leisurely rafting the rapids on the Klamath, Rogue, Snake and other western rivers. 

Bad Ass Trail Angels that cook like…angels (PakDave & Sati)

The next morning these two adventurers were off to the Klamath River for a shakedown trip with friends.  I put on my pack and headed towards the Trinity Alps with a full belly, a treasure trove of new stories, and warm thoughts of good friends and BAD ASS TRAIL ANGELS.

Even their four-legged visitors are wild

Pancakes: Trail Angel Extraordinaire

You ever heard of Ridgecrest, CA?  Not me, even though I’ve lived in California for many decades. But I visited this desert town twice this year while on the trail.  And both times Pancakes (Laura) made the experience memorable…plus I gained weight thanks to her home cooking.

The folks at TC Outfitters in Kennedy Meadows connected me with her when I was looking for a ride after walking 700 miles from Campo. 

Pancakes offers reasonably priced rooms for PCT hikers, and she knows exactly what hikers need: Shower, laundry, groceries and best of all a hearty breakfast featuring sausages wrapped in her signature “pancakes.”

Pancakes has spent her whole life serving people.  She’s raised many foster kids in her loving home in addition to a few of her own and adopted ones. In her spare time, she cooks up lunch and dinner for veterans at Ridgecrest’s American Legion Hall.

Pancakes & Pak Dave

From Ridgecrest, it’s possible to hitch or take a bus to Bakersfield or head south to the Los Angeles area. But the town itself is interesting.  Ridgecrest is home to more PhD’s per capita in the country, mainly physicists and math wizards who work at China Lake Naval Weapons Station.  They in turn help attract businesses like Red Rock Books which houses all the classics, plus big sections of science fiction and high-level math puzzle books.

What’s A Guy Gonna Do with Ten Hours a Day?

I’m slow, so walking 25 miles a day takes me at least ten hours, plus another hour for lunch, breaks, socializing with other hikers and stopping to take in the views.

Most of my mornings are devoted to wildlife watching because the bears, deer and other critters are still lurking about.  Around 7am they go to bed, and so I start belting out my morning prayers.

Lyell Creek, Yosemite just before dawn

I usually don’t see many other hikers on the trail in the early morning, but occasionally a hiker, perhaps freaked out by my chanting, warily passes me by. However, most of the time PCT hikers don’t notice because they can’t hear anything but the music blasting from their ear buds.

Many people have asked me if I’ve ever felt lonely hiking solo for five months. Never.  That’s because I feel like my family, friends and other beloved beings are hiking right along with me. It’s what I’ve been learning in the practice of Bhakti Yoga: Chanting or singing the names of your loved ones and the deities that you cherish is a way of invoking them. It’s like my morning prayers are a chatty gathering around the breakfast table.

Okay, that last paragraph may seem weird to some of you.  You may even think that it’s a bit delusional.  I’m not asking you to buy into it. But it’s a Vedic tradition that’s thousands of years old with a long line of teachers and books defining the practice.  I’m still a rank beginner.

It’s interesting that many of my fellow hikers take other paths to experience something similar. For example, a very large percentage of PCT hikers eat Psilocybin mushrooms to help them enhance the trail experience. They may be searching for the same place of being connected with the earth that we are walking on, the Gods they worship and, most importantly, their real selves.

I’ve never tried these magic mushrooms.  Maybe eating them invokes a similar experience to what I have with Bhakti yoga, maybe not. For me, the key to whatever path you choose to build relationships with other humans and spiritual deities is intention.  Do you have a philosophical concept of what you’re looking for, or is your intention simply entertainment?  Come to think of it, you can enjoy these spiritual relationships and be entertained all at the same time. 

But for me, it’s been helpful to be grounded in a Vedic philosophy that’s been written down and practiced for such a long time.  It’s helped me to understand what’s going on during these intense energetic experiences, rather than just being wowed by the sensations, and that helps deepen things even more.

Note: Interested in Bhakti Yoga, see my teacher’s website at GitaComesAlive.com

Soda Pop is a Straight Shooter

Soda Pop at the US/Canada Border

When a guy from southeast Minnesota makes a promise, you can take it to the bank he’s gonna keep his word.  Take my young friend Soda Pop.  I met up with him in northern Washington. 

He seemed normal enough for a thru-hiker: Lean, long red beard. Hikes faster than a Porsche.  But then something weird happened.  He’s pulling stuff out of his pack one day at camp, and out pops what appears to be a volleyball.  “What the hell is that?” I ask politely.  “It’s a ball,” he answers.  Did I mention that southeast Minnesotans are quite literal?

“Got it,” I said.  “But what’s it doing in your pack?”  Soda Pop carries a bigger pack than most thru-hikers, about 70 liters.  But even so this ball must have occupied about 30% of the pack’s total volume. That’s enough room for a lot of food, warm clothes, even a bottle of Jack Daniels.

“I promised to carry this ball to the Canadian border if I lost a bet I made with a friend in Cascade Locks,” said Soda Pop. 

“Were you drinking?”I responded.

“Perhaps a little,” he answered.  Two days later, Soda Pop bounced his ball back and forth between the US and Canada.  Nice trick.

The lesson here: If a tall red-headed guy from southeastern Minnesota makes a bet with you to jump off the Empire State Building, please, just say no.

PCT Goldrush: Miner Ben’s Story

PakDave, Moving Target & Goldminer Ben

There’s gold out there on the trail. 

My partner Moving Target and I met Ben in the Marble Mountains of northern California just before the turnoff to Etna.  He’d been panning for gold in the streams for most of the spring and early summer.  He showed us his vial of gold nuggets which he was planning to sell to a pawn shop owner in Crescent City.

Ben has been living in the wilderness for nearly a year, living off food stamps and the money he makes from panning gold. He’s a little rough around the edges socially, but who wouldn’t be if you only talked to humans every couple of months.  We were a little wary at first of this wild-looking being, but Target and I weren’t all that stylish ourselves after months on the trail. He seemed stable enough, except occasionally, he’d let out a war whoop.  But again, Target and I were also a bit feral.

Ben decided to camp with us at Payne’s Lake.  He told us his story of being an ultra-bicycle rider doing races across the United States.  He’d been injured in a race and decided to recover by camping out on the California coast for a few months.  He started panning for gold at the mouth of Klamath River and said he could make a few hundred dollars by working the river silt for a few days. The price of gold is nearly $1,800 per ounce, but he only makes about $500 per ounce after the pawn shop owner or jeweler takes his cut.  (According to TieDyed, you can get a much better price from jewelers in downtown LA)

Ben said he’s pared back from the lavish camping style he started with.  He ditched his stove and fancy tent in a cache somewhere in Siskiyou County and now eats uncooked food out of his gold pan and cowboy camps with a tarp and sleeping bag. 

Ben’s smart and articulate, but he likes living off the grid and in the wilderness.  He gave us a wealth of information about long lost trails, the gold market, wildlife in the area, ultra-bicycling racing…and a few other subjects. He’s not completely divorced from society.  He can use the Internet, and has the savvy to sign up for food stamps. He’s not sure when he wants to return to a bed and a job but seems to believe it will happen…in the future…on his own terms.

 I just have to admire the guy.  He’s walking his own walk.  Not particularly caring what others think, and not at all worried that he’s not conforming to any of society’s rules.  

P.S: Ben is not the only goldminer I’ve met on the trail.  I don’t know if you can mine enough gold to pay for your trip from Mexico to Canada, but Trail Angel TieDyed says there’s a lost gold mine somewhere near the Walker Pass that could make you rich.  Just saying.

Photo/video credits:  Moving Target

Ben, playing with fire