Actually, it was my idea.:lol:
Rita-that’s the wife-and I hike- a lot. We used to backpack a lot, but life and work got in the way, and it’s been quite some time since we’ve done much more than "car camp" or go on a long day hike. Last year, we were hiking-just a short four hour deal up one of the many canyons in Los Alamos-and chatting, and the subject of backpacking came up, and a possible "tune-up" overnight to see where we stood with backpacking-both in terms of equipment and our ability-even our liking for such an endeavor. I said, We should hike into Capulln Canyon, so I can take some pictures…it’d be a good test, and Rita (that’s the wife) said something along the lines of ok, we’ll do it in the fall-of course, this was on June 26, 2011-too late in the year for anyone with any sense to hike into Capulin Canyon, and the very day that what would come to be called the Las Conchas fire started, and afterward, well-Bandelier National Monument-and Capulin Canyon-were closed.
So, this year rolls around, and I bring up Capulin Canyon again, so we dragged out what we thought was appropriate equipment, and started getting ready. I had all this stuff:
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to carry. I was pretty sure we’d need the rope, the tent, and might need spare layers of clothing-I knew I’d need the comfy shoes after walking in my boots for more than 10 miles, in my boots. Oh, and since this is the desert, in a drought, and after a fire, there’d be no source of water until we reached Capulin Canyon-after crossing four other canyons on what were relatively pleasant days for the southwestern desert in late May-so I was carrying in 2 gallons of water and a purification pump, and Rita was carrying about a gallon.
We got our backcountry permit from the park, and, Wednesday morning, we set out-we were going to have the whole trail to ourselves.
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(Oh, and I know the knife looks goofy-it is goofy, and didn't last more than a few steps before I took it off-it's been on that shoulder strap for years, and where it was riding might have been the first indication that I'd outgrown that pack....if I'd bothered looking in a mirror...:lol: )
I love the desert this time of year-it’s funny, since I’m really a seacoast person-maybe that’s why I came to keep my boat on the Sea of Cortez, but the desert is pretty cool (to see!) in the springtime-it's in bloom!
there's Barrel Cactus:
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and Prickly Pear Cactus:
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and Desert Lily (this one’s called "Mormon Lily):
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and a few where the pictures weren't so good, and some I still have to look up (I so totally know those others, though-and if I don't, Rita does...…….:lol: )
So, the hike- I eventually made a new friend, our MSR Microfilter-I’ve had several water filtration systems over the years, but this one is the best- simple to use, simple to clean, and very efficient.
I also lost an old one.
My Gregory pack has been my expedition grade backpack for a long time-though I haven’t used it much at all in the last 10 years. Along the way, my belly got a little bigger-I’m sporting a 34" waist these days, instead of 31", but that actually should have made the pack more comfortable (assuming my *** has gotten bigger as well….:lol: ) but, for reasons I won’t get into, my shoulders and chest have gotten bigger as well, and this pack-which wasn’t an ideal fit, but was more than servicable at the beginning-no longer fits me well at all, and was very uncomfortable-especially with about 65 lbs. in it…..trail wasn’t a good place to find that out, and now my old friend, who accompanied me to Denali, Rainier, Nanga Parbat, Cho Oyu, and Everest-as well as a bunch of other places-and still quite servicable, except for the faint hint of vomit from a German tourist about 18 years ag-is going on Craigslist.
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Anyway, we set out from the visitor’s center in Frijoles Canyon-where the more famous and accessible Bandelier Pueblo ruins are-up to the top of the mesa. Bandelier, btw, is thought by the people of Tesuque, Cochiti and San Ildefonso (where I lived for 4 years) pueblos to be their ancestral home-of course, now it belongs to all of you….
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From there, we proceeded into a canyon that doesn’t really have a name-down and up..
And then into Lummis Canyon-about 300 ft., down and up
then into another nameless canyon…..
then Alamo Canyon.
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