It was hot; it was over 90 degrees both on Saturday and Sunday. It was dry; on both days we had to hike about 10 miles without encountering a water source. I couldn’t forget that the sunlight was poisonous and the mosquitoes at camp were mischievous because of the tanning and bug bites on my arms.
Not like the sections 3 and 4 of this trail, the sections 6 and 7 we hiked this time were not well marked—both the starting point and end point were hard to locate. If not because we had a participant with sharp eyes, we could have wasted so much time even before we headed into the woods. Most of the trail was either rocky plus wobbly or covered by overgrown ferns and sometimes poison ivy. But the worst experience happened when we almost got lost because a lumber company used the same color paint as the trail blazes to mark their logging area.
So you might ask, “why were you guys there?†It was fun regardless of all the hassle and sweat, and we were so excited when we finally reached a big creek, dipping in the chilling water and drinking from an abundant water supply. At night, camping at a clearing, sleeping so deeply under the starlight generated thousands of years ago. Water, food, and rest. It’s so easy to feel satisfied in the outdoors, because other than those basics, what else do we really need?
Saturday morning, the trip started with a long but gradual uphill on paved roads and dirt roads. We traveled by farms, passed some houses and a church. Local residents waved at us and we didn’t see other human beings until the next day we hiked through the Cowans Gap State Park. The road walking was pleasant but a bit boring. I was anxious to be in the woods, and hike on the “real†trail.
The trail was very real. At numerous occasions, we had to walk on top of exposed rock fields. It was not like hopping rocks in a river. It was jamming the toes this second and trying to maintain our balance the next second. Stepping on an uneven rock field was hard enough; however, on top of it, we had to deal with sharp edges of the rocks and the fear of falling off while our centers of gravity were swinging.
Another challenge was the overgrown vegetation, and the worst enemy was not poison ivy, but thorns. I was in a long sleeve shirt and pants, but I couldn’t get away from them. They covered their identities with other greens and those spikes were like those shining eyes of wild wolves in the dark. They were always ready for an ambush, and there was no way to pass through them without putting on some scars.
My water was getting low. I carried 3 liters, and that was not enough. Participants were curious about where the next water source was. “Based on the guidebook, we will cross a stream in 2 miles, and then another stream 0.1 mile after that and another one 0.8 mile after that.†An hour had passed, there was a stream but it looked more like a stream ruin; it was basically dry, with some puddles of water which didn’t look drinkable. The situation was the same for the one which was 0.1 mile away from the current one.
“Now, participants, I have an English question. Is a stream bigger or a creek bigger?†Nobody could give me an affirmative answer. “There’s a creek in another 1.7 miles.†I continued. My participants wondered whether they should aim their hope to the creek. “Wait, this creek has a name, “I happily announced this piece of new information which I just noticed, “it says ‘cross south branch of Aughwick Creek on bridge.’†“If it has a name, then it must be bigger,†said one participant. “On bridge?! Bridge is the key word,†said another participant. Every piece of evidence we gathered pointed to the direction that this creek was very promising.
Baker couldn’t wait to take off, and said “I’ll wait for you guys on the BRIDGE.†The rest of us kept our steady pace, and non-surprisingly the stream 0.8 miles farther was also dry. When the trail turned into a logging road, another stream showed up and at the side of the road, some water looked usable. Mike and Cate decided to gather some water first because they didn’t have much water left. “We will meet you guys on the bridge.â€
The four of us departed and followed the logging road. “Wait, where is the trail?†It was not because we couldn’t find any blaze, but because we found a blue blaze on every tree right next to us. It was weird, but we didn’t remember we saw any turn or side trail, and we saw the creek which had a name shortly after. “I didn’t see a bridge, and… where is Baker?†I asked my participants to gather some water, and in the meantime, I blew my whistle really hard and anxiously looked for Baker’s image towards upstream and then downstream.
“Szu-ting, where are you?†I heard Chiungyu calling my name. I got back to where we dropped our packs, and I saw Mike walking towards me without Cate and without a pack. “What is the situation now?†I asked myself, puzzled. Soon enough, Mike solved the mystery, “The trail turned to the right just shortly after where we stopped for water. We saw the bridge and Baker.â€
We regrouped at the bridge, and I saw Baker who had be chilling out for a while. I complained to Cate about the mean and unforgiving mistake the lumber company did to us, “couldn’t they use another color to mark their trees?†Holding my water filter, I pumped and pumped, and kept filling up water bottles one after another. I drank a whole water bottle, nonstop, so did other participants. The water tasted so good, sweet and cool. Everybody was happy.
We reached the campsite late, around 6:30 in the evening. It was a long day, 13 miles. Sweetly we had a piped spring right around the campsite, and it was not dry. After dinner, I couldn’t stand the mosquitoes anymore and escaped to my tent. It was eight-something and the sun had not set. I vaguely heard people walk back to their sleeping pads. All the noise began to settle, a quiet night therefore started.
Not much noise during the night, except for occasional snoring. I had to get up at 3 to respond to a natural call, and I walked to an appropriate spot without the help of a headlamp. Before I re-entered my tent, I gazed at the sky, the stars were bright. I also looked around, guessing what kind of sweet dreams my participants were having. Everybody must have been so tired, and it seemed that their sleep couldn’t be interrupted in any way.
Oh, everybody having a good night sleep was only my wishful thinking after all. The next morning, Jay asked everybody, “Did you guys hear a bear last night?†Jay, our professional bear bag hanger, must be so good at recognizing movements and noise from a bear. Poor Jay was holding his walking stick inside his tent after he sensed the possibility of a bear appearance.
Sunday was another long and dry day. After we passed Cowans Gap State Park at the first mile, we would have no water for the rest of the trip. I changed to my sports top and shorts, because the previous day too much clothing had irritated my skin. Even though long sleeves were more effective against UV and pants would shield off thorns, I figured it was worth trading the extra protection for less itchy rashes.
Mike and Cate bailed out at the state park, because poor Cate had blisters, hikers’ worst rivals. The five of us continued our journey, and that was a hard decision, because the smells of grilling hamburgers, bacon, and hot dogs were so tempting. Jay bought a soda from the park and wished there were a hot dog stand, which made me wonder whether he would be the next one to bail out. In the park, the blue blaze disappeared out of the blue; we lost the trail again and got back on track after a long while.
The trail for the second day was actually more interesting—it had more ups and downs, numerous nice vistas, less rocky terrain, and was better maintained. Along the trail, the state flower, mount laurel was in her full blossom. Everything was pleasant except for the steaming temperature; we all wished there were another bridge on a creek, even if the creek had no name.
We also had a breathtaking incident—Neil tripped on a root and fell on his face. I was behind when that happened, and I remembered I heard a loud crash, and the next second I saw the right side of Neil’s face was completely covered by dust. Thankfully he was alright, and because of his sacrifice, nobody tripped on those malicious roots again.
I only brought three liters of water with me because that was the maximum amount I could carry. I had to evenly distribute my water intake so that I could have something to drink through the whole hike. The merciless sun kept toasting us, and turned on our napping mode. During the trip, we had to stop several times just to cool down and recharge our energy, but we never dared to stop for too long in case we could never move again. It was the first time I felt so close to heat exhaustion.
We hiked out of the trail between 2 and 3 o’clock in the afternoon, we shook hands, saying goodbye to each other. Despite the hot weather, I knew that everybody enjoyed their hike according to their smiles and elevated spirits. Most importantly, all the male participants made it back home in decent hours to celebrate their Father’s Day.
這次的行程,如果åªä»¥å…©å€‹å—來概括形容,就是熱和乾。兩天的氣溫都超éŽæ”æ°ä¸‰åå…度;åŒæ™‚,行程ä¸ï¼Œæ¯å¤©å„有超éŽå五公里的行程,是毫無水æºçš„。回到家ä¸ï¼Œæ›¬ç´…的肌膚以åŠç´…腫的蟲咬痕跡,å†ä¸‰å–šèµ·ï¼Œæˆ‘å°æ–¼è¡Œç¨‹ä¸ï¼Œè±”陽殘酷,以åŠç‡Ÿå€èšŠå無情的記憶。
æ¤æ¬¡å¥è¡Œçš„å€æ®µï¼Œä¸ä¼¼å››æœˆæ™‚å¥è¡Œçš„å¦ä¸€å€æ®µä¸€èˆ¬ï¼Œæ¨™ç¤ºåœ°æ¸…楚明白。è¦ä¸æ˜¯ä¸€å€‹éšŠå“¡çœ¼å°–,在行程真æ£é–‹å§‹å‰ï¼Œé‚„ä¸çŸ¥é“è¦æµªè²»å¤šå°‘時間,在確定å¥è¡Œèµ·é»žä»¥åŠçµ‚點的所在地上。大部分的æ¥é“都是岩跡斑斑,該些石塊在隊ä¼èµ°éŽæ™‚,ä¸è«–大å°ï¼Œç¸½æ˜¯æœƒä¸åœæ™ƒå‹•ï¼›å¦å¤–,春å¤ä¹‹éš›ï¼Œé›œè‰æ¨¹æœ¨å¢ç”Ÿï¼ŒåŠ 上滿地都是有毒的poison ivy,將æ¥é“幾乎整個掩蓋ä½äº†ã€‚但這些還ä¸æ˜¯æœ€å£žçš„,最令人沮喪的經驗是:當地的ä¼æœ¨å…¬å¸ç”¨å’Œæ¥é“標示一樣é¡è‰²çš„油漆,來劃分他們ä¼æœ¨çš„é ˜åŸŸï¼Œå®³å¾—éšŠä¼å·®é»žè¿·å¤±è·¯å¾‘。
çœ‹åˆ°é€™è£¡ï¼Œä¹Ÿè¨±ä½ æœƒå•æˆ‘ï¼šã€Œé‚£ä½ å€‘åŽ»é‚£å¹¹å•¥ï¼Ÿã€æ—…途的艱辛,和眾人æ®ç‘的汗水以外,得來的經æ·æ˜¯ä»¤äººæ„‰æ‚…的。ä¸èƒ½å¿˜è¨˜ï¼šéšŠä¼å¥½ä¸å®¹æ˜“抵é”å°æºªï¼Œæµ¸å…¥æ²æ¶¼çš„溪水,æ£æ„地享å—ä¸è™žåŒ±ä¹çš„æ°´æºçš„æ¡å–œã€‚å‚晚,隊ä¼åœ¨è¦–野開闊處紮營,在數åƒè¬å¹´å‰ç”¢ç”Ÿçš„星光下沈ç¡ã€‚æ°´ã€é£Ÿç‰©ã€ä¼‘æ¯ã€‚在戶外,心éˆå¾ˆå®¹æ˜“就得到滿足,畢竟,除了那些基本需è¦ï¼Œæˆ‘們還è¦è¦æ±‚什麼嗎?
星期å…早晨,一段在æŸæ²¹è·¯å’Œç ‚石路上,長且緩的上å¡è·¯ï¼Œæ˜¯æ—…程的åºæ›²ã€‚隊ä¼ç©¿éŽè¾²ç”°ï¼Œé„‰é–“äººå®¶ï¼Œæ•™å ‚å»ºç¯‰ã€‚ç•¶åœ°çš„å±…æ°‘é–’å在åºé™¢é–“,å‹å–„地和我們æ®æ‰‹æ‹›å‘¼ï¼Œé€™äº›å±…民也是當天見到的最後人煙。走在這鄉間å°è·¯ï¼Œæ‚ 然愜æ„å»ä¹Ÿæœ‰äº›ç„¡è¶£ï¼Œè®“人ç‰ä¸åŠè¦èµ°ä¸Šã€ŒçœŸå¯¦ã€çš„æ¥é“。
æ¥é“還的確相當地真實。多處都是暴露在外的岩石層,高下åƒå·®ã€‚èµ°éŽé€™äº›å²©çŸ³å±¤ï¼Œå¯ä¸åƒåœ¨å°æºªæµä¸è·³çŸ³é 那樣好玩。這一秒腳指é çµ¦æ“ å¾—é›£éŽï¼Œä¸‹ä¸€ç§’嘗試著努力ä¿æŒå¹³è¡¡ã€‚é€™å·²ç¶“å¤ å—了,å»é‚„得擔心被銳利的岩石邊刮傷,é‡å¿ƒæ–擺的時候怕會跌è½å¤ªå¤§çš„è·é›¢ã€‚
å¦ä¸€å€‹æŒ‘戰則是崢嶸生長的æ¤ç‰©ï¼Œæœ€å¯æ€•çš„é‚„ä¸æ˜¯poison ivy,是多刺的æžæ¢ã€‚我穿著長袖和長褲,還是ä¸èƒ½å€–å…。這些長滿刺的æžæ¢ï¼Œç”¨è‘—其他æ¤ç‰©çš„ç¶ é¡è‰²ä½œç‚ºæŽ©è·ï¼Œé‚£äº›åˆºï¼Œå°±åƒå¤œæ™šé–“野狼的冷眼,隨時隨地準備著å·è¥²ï¼Œæƒ³è¦å…¨èº«è€Œé€€ï¼Œç°¡ç›´æ˜¯å¤©æ–¹å¤œèšã€‚
我的飲水é€æ¼¸å°‡è¦å‘Šç½„,帶了三公å‡ï¼Œé‚„是ä¸å¤ 。隊員紛紛å•è‘—é‚„è¦å¤šä¹…æ‰æœƒæŠµé”下一個水æºã€‚「手冊上說,兩英里之後有æ¢ç´°æµï¼ˆstream),之後0.1英里還有一æ¢ï¼Œå†ä¾†0.8英里之後則是å¦ä¸€æ¢ã€‚ã€ä¸€å€‹å°æ™‚後,呃,看到的哪å«åšç´°æµå•Šï¼Œå«ç´°æµéºè·¡é‚„å·®ä¸å¤šã€‚它基本上是乾的,點綴著三三兩兩的å°æ°´çªªï¼Œç››è‘—的是éžå¸¸å¯ç–‘的水。0.1英里後的那æ¢ç´°æµï¼Œæƒ…æ³ä¹Ÿæ˜¯å·®ç›¸å½·å½¿ã€‚
「隊員們,讓我å•ä½ 們一個英文å•é¡Œï¼Œæ˜¯stream大還是creek大啊?ã€æ²’有人給予我肯定的ç”覆。「1.7英里éŽå¾Œï¼Œæœ‰ä¸€æ¢æºªï¼Œã€æˆ‘繼續說著。隊員們æ€è€ƒè‘—該ä¸è©²å°‡å¸Œæœ›çŒæ³¨åœ¨é€™æ¢æºªä¸Šã€‚「ç‰ä¸€ä¸‹ï¼Œé€™æ¢æºªæœ‰åå—ㄟ,ã€æˆ‘興奮地宣布這æ¢å‰›å¾žæ‰‹å†Šä¸Šç¿»ä¾†çš„消æ¯ï¼Œé€å—地唸著「cross south branch of Aughwick Creek on bridge.ã€ã€Œå¦‚果有åå—,éµå®šæ˜¯æ¯”較大æ¢äº†ï¼Œã€ä¸€å€‹éšŠå“¡é€™æ¨£èªªè‘—。「éŽæ©‹ï¼Ÿã€Žæ©‹ã€å¯æ˜¯é—œéµå—ï¼ã€å¦å¤–ä¸€å€‹éšŠå“¡å–Šè‘—ã€‚æ ¹æ“šæ”¶é›†åˆ°çš„è‰æ“šï¼Œé€™æ¢æºªè‚¯å®šæ˜¯æ¢æœ‰å‡ºæ¯çš„溪啊。
Bakerç‰ä¸åŠè¦å‡ºç™¼ï¼Œè·Ÿæˆ‘å ±å‚™èªªã€Œæˆ‘å…ˆèµ°ä¸€æ¥ï¼Œæœƒåœ¨ã€Žæ©‹ã€ä¸Šç‰ä½ 們。ã€å‰©ä¸‹çš„隊ä¼å‰‡è¸è‘—篤定的æ¥ä¼å‰é€²ï¼Œæžœä¸å…¶ç„¶ï¼Œ0.8英里之後的細æµé‚„是乾的。ä¸ä¹…之後,æ¥é“轉æˆä¸€æ¢ä¼æœ¨é“路,é“è·¯æ—轉出æ¢ç´°æµï¼Œæœ‰äº›æ°´çœ‹èµ·ä¾†é‚„å¯ä»¥ç”¨ã€‚Mikeå’ŒCate決定先å–些水å†èªªï¼Œä»–們實在ä¸èƒ½å†ç‰å¤ªä¹…ï¼Œæˆ‘å¾®å¾®é ·é¦–ï¼Œèªªï¼šã€Œé‚£æˆ‘å€‘åœ¨æ©‹ä¸Šç‰ä½ 們囉ï¼ã€
剩下的四個人繼續沿著ä¼æœ¨é“è·¯å‰é€²ï¼Œã€Œç‰ä¸€ä¸‹ï¼Œæ¥é“呢?ã€é€™å¯ä¸æ˜¯å› 為我們找ä¸åˆ°æ¥é“標示(trail blaze),而是在身æ—çš„æ¯ä¸€å€‹æ¨¹ä¸Šï¼Œæˆ‘們都看到一個æ¥é“標示。這å¯æ€ªäº†ï¼Œä½†æ˜¯æˆ‘們明明沒有看到轉彎或是岔é“啊?ï¼åŒæ™‚,那æ¢é¼Žé¼Žå¤§å的溪也很快地出ç¾åœ¨çœ¼å‰äº†ã€‚「嗯,沒有看到橋呢,而且……Baker呢?ã€æˆ‘讓其他三人先å–些水,自己則用力地å¹è‘—哨å,焦急地上游下游走來走去,尋找Baker的蹤跡。
「æ€å©·ï¼Œå¦³åœ¨å“ªï¼Ÿã€æˆ‘è½åˆ°ç“ŠçŽ‰çš„呼喚,於是走回å¸ä¸‹å¤§èƒŒçš„地點。看到Mike緩緩地å‘我行來,奇的是他背上空空,身邊也沒有Cate的倩影。疑團馬上被Mikeçš„å‘Šç™½æ‰€æ‰“ç ´ã€Œæ¥é“在我們åœä¸‹ä¾†å–水後ä¸é ,就往å³è½‰äº†ï¼Œæˆ‘們看到那座橋,也看到Baker。ã€
隊ä¼ç¸½ç®—在橋邊團圓了,Baker已經乘涼了好一會兒了。我絮絮地和Cate抱怨著ä¼æœ¨å…¬å¸ï¼Œæ®˜é…·è€Œä¸”ä¸å¯åŽŸè«’的錯誤:「他們難é“ä¸èƒ½ç”¨å…¶ä»–é¡è‰²çš„漆嗎?ã€ä¸€é‚Šæ著飲水éŽæ¿¾å™¨ï¼Œæ±²è‘—一ç½æŽ¥è‘—一ç½çš„水。我一å£æ°£çŒä¸‹äº†ä¸€æ•´å…¬å‡çš„水,其他團員似乎也咕嚕咕嚕地å–了ä¸å°‘。水的滋味真好,åˆå†°åˆç”œï¼Œå¤§å®¶éƒ½é–‹å¿ƒçš„了ä¸å¾—。
到營å€å·²æ™šï¼Œç´„莫å‚晚å…點åŠå·¦å³ã€‚這是一個冗長的一天,å三英里的å¥è¡Œã€‚令人高興的是,營å€æ—有水æµä¸æ–·çš„清泉。用é¤ç½·ï¼Œè¢«èšŠå騷擾地å—ä¸äº†çš„我,決定快快躲到帳棚裡去,當時已經八點多了,太陽å»é‚„沒有下山。隱約間,我è½åˆ°åœ˜å“¡ä¸€å€‹å€‹èµ°å›žç¡è¦ºå´—ä½ï¼Œæ…¢æ…¢åœ°ï¼Œå„種è²éŸ³éƒ½æ²ˆæ¾±ä¸‹ä¾†ï¼Œå¤œæ™šæ–¼ç„‰é–‹å§‹ã€‚
除了å¶çˆ¾çš„打呼è²ï¼Œæ•´å€‹æ™šä¸Šéƒ½å¾ˆå®‰éœã€‚凌晨三點,起身回應自然的呼喚,ä¸éœ€è¦é 燈的幫助,就找到了é©å®œè§£æ”¾çš„地方。在é‡å›žå¸³æ£šä¹‹å‰ï¼Œæˆ‘抬é å‡æœ›è‘—天空,星星æ£å°æˆ‘眨眼。環顧四周,心é 猜想著團員ä¸çŸ¥é“æ£åšè‘—什麼好夢呢ï¼å¤§å®¶ä¼¼ä¹Žéƒ½ç¡å¾—很沈很香,æ怕沒有人å¯ä»¥æ‰“擾他們的ç¡çœ 。
後來,æ‰çŸ¥é“é‚£åªä¸éŽæ˜¯æˆ‘一廂情願的猜測罷了。第二天早上,Jayå•è‘—ã€Œæ˜¨å¤œï¼Œä½ å€‘æœ‰æ²’æœ‰è½åˆ°ç†Šçš„è²éŸ³ï¼Ÿã€Jay,隊ä¼çš„å°ˆæ¥ç†Šè¢‹æ‡¸æŽ›å®¶ï¼Œæƒ³å¿…å°æ–¼è¾¨è˜ç†Šçš„å‹•éœï¼Œç›¸ç•¶åœ°æœ‰å¿ƒå¾—。å¯æ†çš„Jay在昨晚,è½åˆ°ç–‘似熊的è²éŸ¿ä¹‹å¾Œï¼Œåœ¨å¸³æ£šè£¡å¿ƒç¥žä¸å¯§åœ°ç·Šæ¡è‘—木æ–,輾轉了一晚上。
星期天,還是一樣乾,也是一樣長。在第一英里,éŽäº†Cowans Gap州立公園之後,就å†ä¹Ÿæ²’有水了。由於å‰ä¸€å¤©è¡£è‘—太多,悶熱的çµæžœï¼Œèº«ä¸Šé•·äº†ä¸å°‘ç–¹å,今天,我æ›ä¸Šæ¸…涼的é‹å‹•ä¸Šè¡£ï¼Œä»¥åŠçŸè¤²ã€‚雖然說長袖防曬較為容易,長褲也å¯ä»¥æ“‹ä¸€äº›èŠæ£˜ï¼Œæˆ‘還是寧願用一些é¡å¤–çš„ä¿è·ï¼Œä¾†ç·©å–少一些紅癢疹å的折磨。
Mikeå’ŒCate在隊ä¼ç¶“éŽå·žç«‹å…¬åœ’的時候,決定先行撤退,這是個ä¸å¾—已的決定,但考慮Cate的雙腳,都長了登山者的最終敵人—水泡,我了解也åŒæ„這個抉擇是相當明智的。剩下的五人,則繼續接下來的行程,而這也是經éŽç›¸ç•¶çš„一番掙扎,想想,州立公園間,到處都是éŠäººç‡»çƒ¤è‘—æ¼¢å ¡è‚‰ã€åŸ¹æ ¹å’Œç†±ç‹—,這香味是è¦å¤šå°‘æ„志力æ‰æŠµæŠ—地éŽå•Šï¼ŸJay在州立公園的åˆä½œç¤¾è²·äº†ç½æ±½æ°´ï¼Œåš·åš·è‘—è¦åƒç†±ç‹—,真怕他是下一個脫隊的人。在該個州立公園ä¸ï¼Œæ¥é“標示åˆç¥žå¥‡åœ°å¤±è¹¤äº†ï¼ŒèŠ±äº†å¥½ä¸€ç•ªåŠŸå¤«ï¼ŒéšŠä¼æ‰åˆå›žåˆ°æ£é€”。
第二天的行程,說實在話,比第一天有趣些:多了些高低起ä¼ï¼Œå¤šäº†äº›çµ•ä½³çš„çžæœ›æ™¯é»žï¼Œå°‘了些岩石å€æ®µï¼Œæ›´é‡è¦çš„是,æ¥é“似乎較有整ç†ã€‚æ¥é“æ—,賓州州花—mount laurel—百花çˆæ”¾ã€‚除了居高ä¸ä¸‹çš„溫度以外,å¯ä»¥èªªæ˜¯å®Œç¾Žäº†ã€‚這溫度讓隊ä¼å¿ƒè£¡é ,默默希望å¯ä»¥å†ç©¿éŽä¸€æ¢å°æºªï¼Œå°±ç®—這æ¢æºªæ²’有åå—也沒有關係。
喔,忘了æ起一æ¨æœ‰é©šç„¡éšªçš„æ„外:Neil絆到了一段çªèµ·çš„æ¨¹æ ¹ï¼Œæ•´å€‹è‡‰æ ½é€²æ¥é“上é 。事件發生時,我在隊ä¼çš„最後é ,åªè½åˆ°å‹•é„的轟然巨響,接著就看到Neilçš„å³è‡‰ç°æ’²æ’²çš„æ²¾æ»¿äº†æ³¥æ²™ã€‚å¹¸å¥½æ²’æœ‰ä»€éº¼å¤§ç¤™ï¼Œä¹Ÿå› ç‚ºä»–çš„çŠ§ç‰²ï¼Œå…¶ä»–éšŠå“¡æ²’æœ‰å†è¢«æƒ¡æ„çš„æ¨¹æ ¹çµ†å€’ã€‚
當天,我帶了三公å‡çš„æ°´ï¼Œä¹Ÿæ˜¯æˆ‘èƒ½å¤ æ”œå¸¶çš„æœ€å¤§æ°´é‡ã€‚å°å¿ƒç¿¼ç¿¼åœ°ï¼Œæˆ‘å¹³å‡åˆ†é…一路上的飲水é‡ï¼Œå…得在後é¢çš„旅程,éé‡åˆ°ç„¡æ°´å¯å–的窘境。無情的太陽æŒçºŒåœ°ç…Žçƒ¤è‘—眾人,眾人都熱得想è¦æ‰“瞌ç¡äº†ã€‚一路上,好幾次隊ä¼å¿…é ˆé§è¶³æ‡æ¯ï¼Œè—‰è‘—沈éœæœŸè¨±ä¸€äº›é™æº«ï¼Œé †ä¾¿å…’åƒäº›é›¶é£Ÿï¼Œè£œå……一些能é‡ã€‚ä¸éŽå¤§å¤¥å…’也ä¸æ•¢åœç•™å¤ªä¹…,怕一åœä¸‹ä¾†ï¼Œå°±è³´åœ¨é‚£å…’,ä¸æƒ³å‹•äº†ã€‚那天,真是我離ä¸æš‘è·é›¢æœ€è¿‘的一次。
下åˆå…©ä¸‰é»žå·¦å³ï¼Œçµ‚於到了目的地。大家æ¡è‘—手,互é“çé‡ã€‚這次行程的客觀æ¢ä»¶å¯¦åœ¨ä¸ä½³ï¼Œä½†å¾žçœ¾äººçš„微笑和振奮的精神間,我知é“大家從這次旅程得到了滿足。最é‡è¦çš„是,男性團員們,趕上了爸爸回家åƒæ™šé£¯çš„光陰,享å—父親節最後幾å°æ™‚與妻兒共處的溫馨時光。(註:該日是美國的父親節)
Related Link:
Trip Announcement: Tuscarora Trail Backpack (Sec 6&7)
我們車隊這個星期的 100club 行程 (æ„指騎100km)
也是åªèƒ½ä»¥ç†±å’Œä¹¾ä¾†å½¢å®¹
æ¼«é•·çš„å…¬è·¯ä¸Šï¼Œæ²’æœ‰ç¶ è”
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ä¹Ÿè¨±ä½ æœƒå•æˆ‘ï¼šã€Œé‚£ä½ å€‘åŽ»é‚£å¹¹å•¥ï¼Ÿã€
旅途的艱辛,和眾人æ®ç‘的汗水以外,
得來的經æ·ç¸½æ˜¯ä»¤äººæ„‰æ‚…的。
完全åŒæ„å‘€ï¼
å°Po沒考慮éŽå°è¬›æ©Ÿ(walky-talky)?
å‰ä¸å¾Œå„一支連絡,確ä¿éšŠä¼æ•´é«”安全
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å°å•Šï¼Œåšè‡ªå·±å–œæ¡çš„事,好åƒå¤šç´¯éƒ½è¦ºå¾—還是值得的。
我們出隊倒是ä¸ç”¨å°è¬›æ©Ÿï¼Œå› 為隊ä¼çš„人數通常é™åˆ¶åœ¨åäººä»¥ä¸‹ï¼Œå¦‚æžœèƒ½å¤ ç¢ºå®šéšŠå“¡äº’ç›¸çœ‹å¾—åˆ°å°æ–¹çš„話,基本上還沒有該個需求。åŒæ™‚,å°è¬›æ©Ÿä¹Ÿæ˜¯é¡å¤–çš„é‡é‡å•Šã€‚背上背的已經很多嚕。
å°ä¸èµ·ï¼Œæœ€è¿‘åªæ’¿ä½ 有ä¸æ–‡çš„ç¯‡ç« çœ‹ï¼Œå¯¦åœ¨æ˜¯æœ€è¿‘è…¦å裡塞了太多英文,有些è£ä¸ä¸‹å•¦ (苦笑)
çœ‹åˆ°ä½ ç…§ç‰‡è£¡æ™´æœ—çš„æ¹–ç•”å±±æ™¯ï¼Œå†å›žé … 啊,阿爾å‘æ–¯å±±æ ¹æœ¬ä¸è¦‹è¹¤å½±ï¼Œé€™å¹¾å¤©å¹•å°¼é»‘çš„å¤©æ°£çœŸæ˜¯æœ‰å¤ é™°æ™´ä¸å®šï¼Œæˆ‘們沒幾天能看到山的說。
å¯æ˜¯ï¼Œæˆ‘很喜æ¡ç†±å’Œä¹¾åŠ 起來的那種感覺,å³ä½¿æµäº†æ±—,也ä¸æœƒè¦ºå¾—é»è†©å¿ƒç…©ã€‚å«æˆ‘在å°ç£å¤å¤©è£¡çˆ¬å±±çš„話,那簡直是è¦æˆ‘的命哪
哈ï¼åœ¨ä¹¾ç‡¥çš„環境下爬éŽå±±ä¹‹å¾Œï¼Œå°æ–¼å°ç£æ¿•ç†±çš„環境,是會有點ä¸ç¿’慣呢ï¼
但是,看到蓊鬱的山稜,一切都值得啦ï¼
è¬è¬å°Po,這次的backpacking讓我留下美好的回憶呢ï¼
以後有機會å†åŽ»æ‰¾ä½ å–”ï¼ ^-^
kathy,
我也常常會這樣ㄟ,有時候怎麼都ä¸æƒ³çœ‹è‹±æ–‡ã€‚ä¸éŽï¼Œè‡ªå·±å¯«çš„ä¸çœ‹ä¸è¡Œï¼Œå‘µå‘µã€‚
以後è¦æ˜¯æœ‰æ©ŸæœƒåŽ»é˜¿çˆ¾å‘斯山的話,一定è¦çœ‹èƒ½ä¸èƒ½åŽ»æ…•å°¼é»‘æ‹œè¨ªä½ å•Šã€‚
藑鷸,
æ¡è¿Žä½ å†ä¾†çŽ©å–”,æžä¸å¥½ä¸‹æ¬¡ä½ å†ä¾†æˆ‘已經ä¸åœ¨è²»åŸŽäº†ï¼Œæˆ–者我們å¯ä»¥åŽ»æ‰¾æ¯”較高的山玩雪。
æ©ï¼Œèªªä¸å®šå¦³é€±éŠåˆ—國去了
去高一點的山玩雪,是一定è¦çš„
æœŸå¾…ä½ çš„NOLS分享喔ï¼
我一定會很驕傲的跟人說,我有èªè˜çš„女性å‹äººæ˜¯NOLSç•¢æ¥çš„
呵呵,是真的很想周éŠåˆ—國,ä¸éŽå•Šï¼Œè‡ªå¾žé–‹å§‹å¾žäº‹æˆ¶å¤–é‹å‹•ä»¥ä¾†ï¼Œç™¼ç¾å…‰æ˜¯ç¾Žåœ‹å°±çŽ©ä¸å®Œäº†ã€‚登山ã€æ»‘雪ã€æ³›èˆŸ …
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