We packed up and continued our uphill hike. The terrain was difficult and slow-going, but Shasta seemed to be keeping an eye on us.
The early morning fog made Shasta look like it was hovering
Steep trails make for good scenery, though, so there were several picturesque areas.
Marble Mountain, center, was the namesake of the wilderness areaShasta was still watching us near midday through this burn zoneSome wildflower-drenched meadows and row after row of distant mountains livened up the trail
The PCT takes a long detour west in Northern California, and turns north again near Marble Mountain, which we passed late this morning.
It looks more like "Concrete Mountain" to meI inspected the alleged "marble" of the allegedly "Marble" "Mountain"
The trail showed us Marble Mountain from two sides
There were also miscellaneous other sights along the trail.
Like this cabin, abandoned, with a stove and refrigerator from the 60s insideThis poodle (and her owners)The poodle's shoes were in much better shape than mineWe mistakenly thought these were wild blueberries. They taste like unripe blueberries, but have different leavesBig panoramasTrails drowning in purple flowersAnd trails curing through mountainside meadows
After all that, it was time to set up camp and sleep.
We had a nice slow morning in Etna. Bob’s Ranch House served me a pleasant breakfast of poached eggs, rye toast, cut fruit, pancakes, coffee, and of course a chocolate milkshake. Elizabeth had their cinnamon bun, which was the size of her plate, and was soft, flaky, and buttery.
After laundry and a few other tasks, we walked through town over to the hostel, to try to hitch to the trailhead.
Many of the downtown buildings have murals on them. Note that the laundromat's door, here, is really of ordinary construction, but with a mural on top.
Hitching looked easy at first. The first car that drove by stopped and apologized to us for not being able to pick us up.
But, after a few minutes of no rides, we decided to take the hostel’s $5 shuttle, and hoped aboard.
The shuttle was the red one. The red one in the background.
We rode with a hiker called O.G., who had thru-hiked the PCT way back in 1981. About 30 people finished that year. I asked whether getting water in the desert was harder before the PCT Water Report. He told us that getting water was actually easier, partly because the trail was not complete, so many sections were road walks in developed land, and partly because California had more water back then.
We got back to the trailhead, thanked the driver, and continued our hike. O.G. was having back problems lifting his pack out of the truck bed, but he wouldn’t have help of any kind.
Back on the trail, we entered the Marble Mountain Wilderness, and the granite started to get dramatic again.
So many preserve boundaries on this hike
The terrain here reminds me a bit of the Sierras, but with a bit more soil and consequently more trees. Which isn’t entirely a good thing — much of Yosemite’s drama comes from the bare granite faces. Here, trees obstruct much of the granite. Which is a different look.
I didn't get it in the frame, but Mt. Shasta was still following us
We pitched our tents in sight of Mt. Shasta, and went to sleep.
Today was another scenic day in the Trinity Alps. It got more and more like the Sierras the further we went, even right down to the trail construction techniques — there were stairs made of cobblestones, a very laborious construction technique. From the Russian Wilderness onward, we had huge granite bathiliths jutting out of the ground.
This is Carter Summit. Look closely enough, and you may see Jimmy Carter hiding in the woods!
Shasta was still following us...Another regulatory boundaryThe trail, heading towards a cliff with a crooked tree atopGreat panoramas just minutes after entering the Russian Wilderness
Shasta's still there... Must be a big mountain.Yosemite-like trail constructionA windbreak at a scenic (but windy) tentsiteLayers and layers of mountains in the distanceThe descent towards the highway to Etna still looked remote. The highway is only minutes away here.
Etna is a small town, and the road we hitched from was not busy, so it took almost an hour for a car to stop.
By the time we got a hitch, there were 5 hikers waiting. But, our ride was Phoenix, a trail angel, who let us all ride in the back of her seatless van, so we were all able to pile in.
The ride was long, and this crowd of hikers had many stories. Tuxedo the Clown (who got his name because he is, in fact, a professional clown) told us about the time a hitch took him to a ranch and made him install a cupola. The ranch owner apparently also sang a few bars of a country opera he was working on, about a cowboy and Jesus. The refrain was “It’s easy to be a cowboy / You just have to dress there part.”
Once in Etna, we were dropped off at Dotty’s Cafe, to get a quick dinner before it closed. It had run out of ice cream before we got there, and ran out of beer while we were there.
Elizabeth got the last beer in the building, a slightly skunky mild pale ale
After dinner, and a quick resupply at Dollar General, we started walking towards the hostel. It was a ways out, of town though. And it was still hot, and I had ice cream melting in my shopping bag. And we walled past the Motel Etna.
We checked the rates, and found that an air-conditioned room here was not much more than the hostel was charging to pitch a tent in their yard and share one shower among a dozen hikers.
So we got beds, showers, laundry, refrigerated ice cream — everything.