So I started on the hike in the morning. Immediately, I realized the trail had been rerouted from what my maps had. I hiked up a pretty steep incline at first. Within a half hour, I was checking my feet because my left heel was bothering me. I had just hiked uphill and that seemed to really irritate the back of my left heel.
Burn Area |
I was in the burn area for a few hours and started running out of water. I had been in the Buffalo Creek Recreation Area before and knew there was a lot of water but not here. I thought this was the Hayman Fire Burn Area and I knew that went about 20-30 miles. I started wondering if I was going to be in burn area for a long time. I should have done more research. I couldn't tell how far I had hiked and what looked like a short distance proved to be a lot longer with all the switchbacks and curves. I also started thinking that every mile I hike, I have to hike back. I decided to turn around after sitting on a large rock in the middle of the burn area for about 30 minutes.
Buffalo Creek Fire Burn Area |
The next day, I updated my trip on Spot Adventures. You can see my trip there. I also got my notebook and wrote down what I learned:
- The Spot Connect device had worked well. It hadn't sent the first "check-in" message and it left a couple gaps.
- Cell phone - it was connected to the Spot Connect device by bluetooth. I could text people from high ridges since I was still pretty close to SW Denver. The battery lost a lot when I turned the phone off and later turned it back on. I wondered if I should get a solar charger and started researching those. Maybe I needed an additional GPS in case my phone died after a few hours.
- The pain in my feet and knees made me wonder about taking a shorter trip next time but I just HATE sitting around, waiting until the time I can go to sleep. I had brought my iPad but I had wondered about that choice.
- I realized I had forgotten to take one of my meals. I was fine because I didn't end up staying overnight.
- Water - I ran out about an hour after I turned back. I had to eat snow and food with water in it for the last 4 hours. There wasn't much snow at all. I also wondered about a lighter water purifier. I also remembered stories on spotadventures.com about Segment hikers knowing the water availability. I needed to research that.
- Boots - blister on left heel, knees started hurting after 5 hours and the soles of my feet hurt. Did I need to break them in longer?
- Fleece jacket and pants - they seemed heavy for summer hiking and I needed a light weight option. I wondered if thermal underwear would be enough.
- I really need to lose weight. My backpack weighed about 25 pounds. If I could lose 25 pounds, it would be like I was carrying nothing. If I lost 50 pounds, it would be like I was floating.
After all this misery with my feet, I realized I enjoyed hiking. I looked up the Colorado Trail and found that they had maps and a guidebook. I ordered both. The Guide Book was amazing. After buying the Colorado Trail Guide Book, I figured I had hiked about 8-8.5 miles each way. I would verify on my next trip when I hiked back to where I started. I figured I had hiked 16-17 miles round trip.
After the trip, I bought a light weight down jacket by Patagonia, a Steripen water purifier, and a GPS on Ebay for $52.50 (including shipping). I made quite a few trips to REI, even getting a pair of Black Diamond Distance Z-poles the night before I left for my second trip. I tried to break in the boots further by wearing them 4-5 days before my next trip. I decided against a solar charger. Maybe if I brought my iPad, it could talk to the Spot Connect when the phone died.
Colorado Trail Segment 2 Day HIke
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