Skywalker--Highs and Lows on the Pacific Crest Trail (16 page)

BOOK: Skywalker--Highs and Lows on the Pacific Crest Trail
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The problem for Los Angeles was how to drain a lake 250 miles away from its city limits. The answer is that Owens Lake lay at 4,000 feet, while Los Angeles sits at almost sea level. Therefore, it was physically possible, even a century ago, for Los Angeles to move that water from the mountains to the city.

First, though, Los Angeles needed to acquire the rights to the water in the Owens Valley. The story, entertainingly told in Marc Reisner’s
Desert Cadillac,
is a lot like you might expect—one of high-minded vision, intermingled with greed, chicanery, exploitation, and con men. A few Los Angeles officials plotted in secrecy and conspired with a double-agent in the Owens Valley to buy up all its land. The ranchers who sold out their land consoled themselves that the Owens River was a generous enough desert river to satiate the needs of 2,000,000 people.
Los Angeles would never be that big, they thought.

The rest, as they say, is history. Los Angeles built a 223 mile aqueduct from the Owens Lake to the city of Los Angeles. No city or country had ever built anything so large across such merciless terrain. Their obsession with getting their hands on this prize was such that they did it all with city money, maintaining a work force of several thousand on the city payroll. They came in under budget and finished it in six years.

This water has allowed Los Angeles to become the second largest desert city in the world, just behind Cairo, Egypt on the Nile. But, of course, Los Angeles has now grown to multiples larger than the two million people that the Owens River can satisfy. They have since built an aqueduct draining water out of the Colorado River—a project that practically led to civil war with the state of Arizona. This was billed as the final solution to Los Angeles’ water problem. Of course, it wasn’t. They have also had to go into other rivers in northern California and southern Oregon to divert water. They now speak of trying to divert water from as far away as Alaska’s Yukon River.

Water is, and will remain, an obsession here in the West. If I was from Canada, which is the Saudi Arabia of water, sharing a long border with such a water-thirsty colossus might just make me a little uneasy. Just as the 20th century was all too often the era of
petroconflict
, the 21st century may be the age of
aqua-conflict.

 

Finally, the PCT diverted away from the monotony of the Los Angeles aqueduct piping. For the first time since arriving at the Mexican border, I even felt a few drops of rain.
What do you do when it rains in the desert?
Desert rainstorms usually only last about ten minutes, but during that time you can expect to be lashed.

We arrived at our intended destination, the Cottonwood Creek Bridge. The water was flowing, which gave me a sigh of relief. Had it not been, I might have had to turn around tomorrow and backtrack all the way to the faucet outside Big Dick’s garage. Given this particular prospect, let me say it again—I was relieved to see the water was flowing.

The foursome I was with was not of the free-flowing campsite conversation ilk. Rather, they set their tents up right next to each other, and quickly buried themselves inside.

“What, do ya’ll miss Richard or something?” I yelled at them ensconced in their tents.

“Speak for yourself,” Laura corrected me.

Of course, it was raining so maybe it just showed they had a little bit more sense than somebody like me who wanted to sit out in the rain yakking about the day’s hike.

 

To my great surprise, the British girl, Laura, burst away like a rocket the next morning, looking like a runaway slave fleeing from the master’s dogs. Perhaps her soft British accent and effeminate mannerisms had fooled me. Actually, though, I found Laura’s speed somewhat instructive. She was about 5’4”, and didn’t appear very athletic. But if you looked closely at her (which, of course, I assiduously did), she was solidly built in the mid-section. That’s where your speed comes from. Dirk, who was only about 5’7”, was the only one who could keep up with her. The two trailing hikers were the lanky ones, myself and Ingrid.

Ingrid was an interesting case study. She had just completed a doctorate in English Linguistics, and was interviewing for college professorships. In fact, just since beginning the trail, she had traveled back to Germany to accept an academic award. She was more than just a European intellectual, though. During college, she had worked as a back-country ranger one season in Olympic National Park in Washington State. In a deliberate German way, she did everything by the book—continually followed her maps, hung her food at campsites, bathed in streams, and ate better than any other hiker out here. In fact, she needed two different food bags to hold all the nutritious foods she routinely bought. She also routinely carried two weighty tomes for nighttime reading in her tent, which made her backpack bulging heavy.

Her backpack wasn’t as heavy as it could have been, however. The reason was that Dirk was carrying one of her two food bags in his backpack. This had generated the predictable winks and nods amongst other hikers, to be sure. But hiking along with them, I quickly saw it wasn’t the Faustian bargain that some had hypothesized.

Best-selling novelist, Nelson DeMille, wrote in the
The Gatehouse:

When women and men are friends, there’s almost always a sexual element present. Not romantic sex, perhaps, but a sort of Freudian concept of sex that acknowledges the attraction as more than platonic, but not quite rising to the level of ‘let’s screw’.

Dirk was obviously not immune to the charms of having a European girl with a bit of glamor as his steady hiking partner. Nonetheless, he admirably steeled himself several times a day to mention “my girlfriend”, referring to a woman back at his home in Washington.

The fourth person in this group was Snake Charmer, who had picked up his name when a rattlesnake had lunged at him in the early days in the desert. Snake Charmer had this horrible crush on Laura. I say horrible—what was wrong with it at all? For starters, he was following a centuries-long tradition of American males and females swooning over our more articulate, and polished British cousins (at least until we get to know them a little better!). In fact,
guess who
was a bit in the thrall of Laura for a short time—
myself,
although I wasn’t nearly in the catatonic state of Snake Charmer.

Having Snake Charmer and Dirk in the foursome shielded Ingrid and Laura from enduring the kinds of
sorties
from male hikers that other female hikers habitually face. And foursome, not a fivesome, is what it would remain. I never was able to crack this group’s
omerta code.

That was okay, though. My hiking style had always been a bit nomadic—to bounce from one group to another, and often hike alone as well. Most importantly, though, was that my feet were finally feeling better. Given that 2,000 trail miles lay ahead, I was cautiously optimistic for the first time in a good while.

Chapter 17

Final Desert Surprises

 

Don’t believe anything you hear, and only half of what you see.

Mark Twain

 

“I
s THERE ANY WATER? EXCUSE ME. IS THERE ANY WATER?” I yelled at the top of my lungs.

I was hiking alone at dusk. As was always the case as night approached, I was wondering where I was going to camp and get water. The Joshua Tree Spring was listed as having water and campsites. Normally, this would have been a no-brainer. On this occasion, however, there was a strange new issue.

Yogi’s generally accurate guidebook had an odd note for Joshua Tree Spring: “2005 hikers reported that a bear lives at this spring.”

A
bear living in the desert?
Wouldn’t that be like seeing an alligator in Alaska or a penguin in Kansas? Granted, our water reports showed that the only water in the area was the swampy water at the Joshua Tree Spring. Did I really want to go try to spend the night where a bear might be living? I decided on yelling down there with the ostensible purpose of finding out about water. Finally, I heard a faint voice several hundred yards down a hill yell back, “Yes.” That settled it. This was my stopping point for the day, and I headed down there.

Carlos and Gabe, both members of the University of Colorado track team that I had met yesterday, were sitting there eating dinner when I arrived. But they hadn’t set up their tents yet.

“Skywalker,” Carlos said. “We wondered if that was your voice.”

“Yeah, how’s the water?” I asked expectantly.

“Well, you can take a look,” Carlos said wearily. “It’s over in that heavy grass.”

I dropped my food bag next to them, but then greed got the best out of me. I quietly walked over and found the flattest spot to pitch my tent.

“Hey, Skywalker,” Carlos called out in a conversational manner, “Look, there’s a bear.”

He wasn’t kidding. A large bear had slowly clambered up about 100 feet away, and begun drinking water out of a tub full of grotesque water. Besides the fact we were looking at a bear in the desert, the strangest thing was its color—
cinnamon.
Nonetheless, the people in the West routinely refer to their bears as black bears. It all made me wonder.

California once crawled with grizzlies—by some estimates 125,000. The natives maintained an uneasy truce with them. Western settlers countenanced no such accommodation, however, and fanatically hunted the grizzly. By the early twentieth century, the grizzly was completely extinct in California (although the grizzly remains on the state flag). But why was this bear more the color of a grizzly bear, as opposed to the jet-black bears found in the East? Did it have to do with the stronger sunlight in the West? Maybe. Or was it because the grizzlies had interbred with other bears, and hybrid strains of the grizzly remain in California?

Carlos and Gabe didn’t seem worried and pulled their cameras out to snap some photographs. But then the bear started slowly sauntering in their direction, which black bears aren’t supposed to do. They quickly started stuffing their food bags away into their backpacks.

“Will you grab my food bag?” I yelled to them.

“Yes, we got it.”

The bear very slowly, but very surely, kept approaching them as they went into a quick retreat. Now they
and the bear
were headed in the direction of my tent.

My previous record for breaking down my tent was probably about three minutes. I demolished that record right here, as I frantically stuffed various parts into my backpack. But everything didn’t fit in there when done in such grab-bag fashion.

“Hey, can you carry a couple of these parts,” I quickly said to Carlos and Gabe, handing them tent poles and water. Petrified, we all tore up the hill.

Then the strangest thing happened. The bear had now gotten within twenty feet of us and we were completely on the lam. Suddenly and inexplicably, however, it turned on a dime and tore away like a scared rabbit. I had always heard bears are good climbers, but couldn’t believe my eyes. This bear shot up a tree like a squirrel, without the slightest hesitation. At that point Carlos and Gabe began flinging rocks at it.

We raced up the hill in the dark and found our way to the intersection with the PCT. The next mile was the fastest I’d ever hiked, trying to keep up with these two athletes. I just kept my headlamp focused right on Gabe’s heels and didn’t say a word.

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