Thursday, March 27, 2014

Piute Log....We've Been Had 1999

During all my 17 seasons stationed at Upper Piute Meadows I kept a daily journal using cheap, spiral-bound steno-pads provided by the Forest Service and have a cardboard box containing almost thirty  “volumes.” Over the years it evolved from a drier, work-oriented record into something more personal—an account of the not-so-mundane events in my nineteenth-century-style ranger world—living like some sort of pioneer in the wilderness with two cats, riding horses and packing mules; crazy encounters with wild animals and extraordinary characters. I’ve never quite known what to do as far as sharing them with an audience but, for now, will start posting excerpts with minimal  editing and explanation. For starters, a humorous entry: my girlfriend, Kristi, was coming up to the cabin with me for the first time…

23 Jul (Fri) 1999     After breakfast and shopping we zoomed out to Leavitt [Meadows Pack Station, where my horses were boarded] and loaded up.·····  Got underway at 2ºº. Ferried Kris across the two creeks and river. Finally taking my sweetie “home” to Piute; that makes this a big day. Most happy to introduce the two—Kris will undoubtedly fall in love with the place.·····  Once across the river I left her—Piute [one of my two horses] walks faster but she’d catch up while I was talking with people. I told her, “Hey: when you walk up, pretend you don’t know me; maybe we can play with it a little.” She was game. (Kristi had been in theater….) There’s all sorts of ways to play with the visitors with a second actor; some of them educational. ·····  At Roosevelt [Lake; the first of two along the trail] three fishermen were coming over the hill, walking out. One vivacious guy hailed me, started going off on what an ideal job I had, what do I do, where do I live. The usual questions and I fell into automatic responses. It’d gone far enough and I was just about to start veering him off so I could do the ranger thing when Kris walked up. She slowed down—looking curious, taking in the scene with horses and uniformed cowboy—and started to walk around us. The guy says to her, “Why don’t you get to ride? Won’t he give you a horse?” Kris and I shot each other quick looks. How did he…? Why had he assumed we were together? He talked on. “Oh, hey! We met two guys who said they were going up to visit you.” ·····  ”What?! Today?! Two guys?!” I was stunned. ·····  “Yeah. They said, ‘We’re going up to visit Ranger Tim.’ Said they were some kinda relatives.”·····  “No! Are you sure? Were there any names? Did they say anything else? Relatives?!” I’m completely flustered. “I don’t believe it!”·····  Right then another of their party walked up and the first guy says to him, “What kind of relative was it, the guys going to see the ranger?”·····  “I think he said he was his brother.”·····  “No way!” I said, brain spinning. But couldn’t get anything more out of them. We carried on. I’m in complete turmoil, furious. Who could it be? None of my relatives would come up here; none of them without contacting me first, and certainly not my brother. Could they have been mistaken? Maybe it’s a couple of old friends and one of them said, “he’s a brother” when those guys asked how he knew me. As much as being mystified I was livid with anger: that anyone I knew would presume to just walk in without checking with me first. On this, of all days! Aarrgh! I later told Kris, “This isn’t a perfect analogy but it’s like someone inviting themselves along on your honeymoon.” She took the news well but for about an hour I was really going, trying to figure out who it might be and what to do. Finally I mellowed and accepted whatever we were in for but was very disappointed. Visitors would ruin the impact and intimacy of Kris’ introduction. OH, WELL! ·····  Met Abe Nance of Hazen, Nevada, on the trail. I’ve seen him before—an odd, quiet, enigmatic man from over near Fallon. Said he’s been coming into this country since the 1940s; looks to be in his late 60s. Riding a fine looking Arab mare who he rides in 100 mile endurance races. Training for one this day, he’d ridden over to Kennedy Meadows and a big loop past Relief Reservoir—probably 40 miles! Hats off to Abe Nance. That ride would’ve killed me. I said, “Hey—there’s a ‘Nance Peak’ over in Yosemite. Is that some relative of yours?” He smiled and chuckled. “Noooo…but I tell people it’s named after my grandaddy.”·····  Going through the lower Piute Meadows, saw a round cobble in the trail freshly pried up by horse hooves. It was a mano! [Indian grinding stone] Like the one I found in Buckeye [Canyon], a nicely shaped granite river-rock but only slightly used.·····  It was 7:00 when we got to Upper Piute [Meadows]. I told Kris, on the last hill, the story of my first arrival at the cabin, how I felt I’d truly come home. She got up behind me on Piute to ford the river and I had her stay up for the last bit to the cabin. Had my gal behind me with her arms around my waist. Gal seeing the meadow open up and the river running through it and by, the rocky peaks rearing up behind. She was entranced and said, “Oh!” several times, very softly. Lucy [one of my cats] was waiting out by the river in the tall grass. Then, the cabin. It was quite a thrill as she preceded me through the door to see her face light up. It took me back to my first time through that door and made it all new again.····· And: no visitors. I was watching the tread [trail surface] after the last junction and, not only were there no human prints, the only tracks appeared to be day-old horse prints. No one had been to the cabin; no note. WE’VE BEEN HAD!! ·····  This had already become the predominant theory. I’d met Gordon [a packer and friend] coming out from Long Canyon with clients. Asked him almost right off if he’d passed anybody going to see me. None at all. But they could’ve been past the Long Canyon junction when he came out which meant they’d be at the cabin by now. It was late and Gordon was anxious to go and clearly knew nothing. But Bart [Cranney; pack station owner and Gordon’s boss] would stage something like this. He must’ve known those guys or at least seen them at the station and told how to really get the ranger’s goat. It just didn’t add up otherwise. What a great way to “get me”! Knavish Bart would understand that and more. Kris had met him at the pack station and no doubt there was talk about her around their supper table. ·····  I don’t seem to be able to do much about the world…mostly it seems to do things to me and I’ve concluded that the point of the whole wild ride is to relax and let the flood carry you along as it will. Watch out for bumps. I really do try to just take what comes and work with it so maybe that’s why the gods keep pitching me bones. Let’s see what he’ll do with this one, har har har!! So, today, I asked Kris to join me in some harmless fun with the visitors; just a little “life theater” work. Then, the very first guy I meet sucks me right into his movie and plays me like a fish on a line. With nothing but a few, deft mouth-sounds he completely altered my mood, brought anger and resentment, caused me to conjecture and babble in my head for hours; injected some mystery and excitement, and, finally, humor into a day that otherwise would’ve been merely spectacular. Okay…I didn’t pass this trial with high marks but did finally let go. Thanks for a most interesting day and for tossing in the joker. Kris and I had a lovely evening together and the day must have ripped her wide open. Hard to really imagine the impact. One thing sure: I’m not the same person she thought I was this morning. ····· And, by the way: this is the sixth anniversary of the day I called Elizabeth [ex…] from the Foresta firehouse. That was pretty much officially the worst day of my life. I’m riding pretty high these days…what’s next O lord?

~10 ½ miles                ~11 visitors           ~moving for 18 hours straight
                      
                    ~another dead Kennedy, buried at sea



This mystery wasn’t solved until Thanksgiving dinner with family and relatives. It turned out that my cousin Suzie’s husband, Greg, had planned to come up with a friend. I’d completely forgotten that, some years before, after telling him about Piute he told me he’d come visit sometime. I was aware Greg liked to fish and hike but hardly knew him and this was one of those times where you say, “Sure!” knowing perfectly well it’ll never happen. He explained that they’d only meant to stop by and say hello—had no expectations of being invited to stay. But it turned out that, after only a few miles, Greg’s brand-new boots had blistered his feet terribly and they turned back. I feigned disappointment, of course, and he’ll never know how upset I’d been and how glad I was that he’d chosen that trip to break in new boots.

                                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                               
 ©2014 Tim Forsell                                                                                   26 March 2014

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

No Mercy, No Malice 2005

This, from 2005….After over 25 years of high-risk outdoor pursuits—ropeless technical rock climbing, solo off-trail exploration, working alone deep in the backcountry as a wilderness ranger—I had several potentially serious accidents in very remote locations within a span of only fifty days. During that same period an acquaintance, who had engaged in similar activities for decades, died in an avalanche. While recuperating from my third accident, which could easily have been fatal, I was doing a lot of pondering and wrote this long piece as a type of therapy and for catharsis. Warning: contains graphic violence.

Part I    Escape From Death Valley

Death Valley averages less than two inches of rain a year. Thanks to our latest El Niño cycle, by late March more than triple that amount had already fallen. A monumental eruption of blooming plants was receiving lots of media attention and the park was experiencing record visitation as a result. Having seen this not-to-be-missed spectacle before, around equinox I drove over from Lone Pine to spend a whole week simply wandering about, flower-gazing. My only real plans were to disappear (as per usual) into seldom-seen canyons but made a final stop at Furnace Creek for water and gas. Unfortunately, it happened to be Friday and the village was teeming with people from many nations. So, with tanks full, I pointed my truck south to escape a Yosemite-like human crush. Yet another Pacific storm was on its way; Telescope Peak and other of the Panamint Range’s higher summits were already hidden in cloud.
Alluvial fans surrounding the entire valley, usually so parched-looking, were covered by expansive fields of brilliantly hued flowers. Badwater was temporarily the shore of an immense puddle with kayakers paddling across reflections of lavender mountains. Scores of tourists were wading or walking barefoot, carrying their muddy shoes; it was a crowded but otherwise heavenly scene. I drove strictly in third gear—my modus operandi whenever visiting Death Valley—to safely allow long-held gazes at truly sublime scenes. Cars blew past me constantly (or I’d pull over and let ten go by) but in time turned off on a bumpy dirt road that continued south, paralleling Amargosa River.
Though still flowing in stretches it was a mere trickle compared to January, when this normally bone-dry wash briefly became a real river and turned Badwater basin into a latter-day version of prehistoric Lake Manly. I followed it for a dozen miles before parking near the crossing (picking a spot just off the road where it was possible to avoid crushing too many little plants). Menacing clouds descended, obscuring mountaintops on the valley’s eastern side as well. A sweet breeze rose just before it began sprinkling. To find brilliant colors in austere, scent-free desert landscapes further enlivened by the heady smell of moist soil and green plants will kindle authentic gladness; one aspect of a phenomenon I call “the oasis effect.” Dramatic coastlines with crashing waves, lush alpine meadows—wonderful as they are—can’t bestow the matchless sensations granted by finding precious water where there should be none.
This was what I’d come for. If it didn’t flat-out rain I’d pack for an over-nighter into the nearby Owlshead Mountains and take off in the morning. This little sub-range is a favorite “forgotten place.” Mostly granitic with some basalt-flows, it lacks any valuable minerals. Consequently, there’s been no mining…therefore, no roads. Not a single spring. No trees. It’s truly one of the most desolate, lonely bunch of ragged hills one could hope to find—purest desert wilderness. Right now, though, they had a green and lively luster. It’d been some years but, during previous trips with a friend, I’d visited two unnamed canyons so picked a different one this time. It led to what looked (on my topographic map) like a small basin-like valley rimmed with granite outcrops.
It started raining lightly again in the morning and I almost decided not to go. But  the weather didn’t look to get much more serious so finished loading my pack and walked due west just as the light rain stopped. It was about five miles to the mouth of my chosen canyon. Got to the Amargosa shortly after leaving and followed it north (downstream) for several miles. Where it disappeared below ground I walked on firm mudflats with an amazing array of patterns and textures in the cracked and drying surfaces. Some places were covered with what felt, under my boots, like corn flakes. Others, tortilla chips. Still others, like Hershey Bars (the old-style, thin kind). When the river reappeared I’d clamber up on its bank and wade through exceptionally tall desert sunflowers—twice their normal height—that dusted my thighs with golden pollen. All this, a couple of hundred feet below sea level in North America’s dryest locale.
Left the river and started up a gentle alluvial fan, through different varieties of multicolored gardens, toward my canyon’s entrance. It was still two miles away and I aimed for an obvious round-topped outcrop near its mouth that vaguely resembled a skull. There were shadows on the crag’s face for eyes and what appeared to be a grotto for the leering grin. An hour later I scrambled inside and found what was almost surely a Shoshone grave site: one end of the little cave was covered by a sizable heap of basalt rocks hand-carried from a nearby lava flow. Old bones under that pile, I mused.
Heading up-canyon the sun finally made its appearance and lit up a wash full of palest grey gravel, bordered by granite boulders weathered golden-brown. These hills were cloaked with brittlebush, shrubs almost obscured by a profusion of lemon-yellow flowers. Easy strolling, thanks to my not-so-heavy backpack. It’s quite possible that no one had visited this canyon in ten or twenty years…maybe more (since it had absolutely nothing to recommend it aside from a profound obscurity). But on this day it was as dramatic and scenic as any corner of Death Valley National Park. Got up into the little basin which proved to be a convoluted badlands cut through thick layers of coarse sand. A dark squall swept in from the west and I hurried to find shelter. Minutes after it started to sprinkle I spotted a shallow cave just above the wash with enough room to   sleep in and, while it rained, smoothed its sandy floor and laid out my sleeping bag. The moist air was delicious and right before the sunlight returned there was a rainbow.
I still had several hours of daylight so continued up to the crest—two or three more miles—for a look into the broad valley on its west side (another amazingly remote place I’ve eyed on the map and wanted to visit). The brushy hillsides were covered with boulders large and small. This oven-baked rock was exceptionally crumbly; but not like Alabama Hills granite (even though it’s quite similar and also thoroughly baked). When I stepped on it, weathered-out crystals would crumble off under my boots.
Didn’t get up top until shortly before sunset. My plan was to loop back, down another canyon, and even though I had my map (absolutely essential…) it would still be tricky finding camp in the dark once I got back to those confused badlands.
So it was time to cover some ground; for stretches I was jogging or jumping from boulder to boulder. This rock was appallingly brittle and treacherous—I’d never seen anything quite like it—and repeatedly admonished myself to watch every step. It was warm and quite humid. Dripping sweat, I abandoned the ridgetop to descend a steep  gulley that dropped into the new side canyon. It was nothing but jumbled boulders so I was hopping from one to another. That’s how it was when everything changed.
This had been an exceptional day—the river and its intriguing mudflats, endless  scented gardens, a burial cave…the solitude and silence…such dramatic weather and lighting. Doing what I love most: exploring pristine wilderness. Up until that one instant in time I was utterly focused, fully immersed, and cruising right along.

About to take another leap, I had a look at my next landing and judged the boulder sound—a sort of hasty-but-conscious calculation that’s made hundreds of times on a day in such traitorous terrain. It was in a narrow slot between two larger blocks and when my full weight came down, the end broke off, crumbling like a giant dirt-clod. There was a lot of momentum behind my 170 pounds when the trapdoor dropped.
 To my left was an inclined slab the size of a small tabletop. Falling only a couple of feet, my left thigh slammed into the slab’s edge, which was about the width and curve of a baseball bat, absolutely bristling with razor-edged crystals. At the same time, my left arm—instantly reaching to catch my fall—raked that jagged edge from wrist to armpit. I heard (but it was as if someone else heard) a fleshy thud! along with a horrible, grunted exhalation and found myself awkwardly splayed over this angular boulder, but just as suddenly was standing again, knowing I could still walk. All this seemed to happen in one fluid motion. An electric surge flooded my entire body—the first of several. This one, sheer relief bursting through a dreamlike adrenaline haze that had taken over while the slow-motion fall was in progress. All in one…long…moment.
When I saw my arm, another surge; this one a strange blend of relief and nausea. The inner surface of my arm had been thoroughly cheese-grated and I looked on—with astonishment—as blood began welling, started to drip, and then rained in fat drops. A dime-sized chunk had been partially torn from the heel of my palm—just the thick skin, though—and like a wild animal I instinctively gnawed off the ragged flap with my incisors. (I’ve done this before; you have a few seconds before the pain arrives and it needed to go—loose pieces of dead skin tissue around a wound promote infection.) The soft inside of my biceps was cherry-red and raw. Because of my forearm’s state it wasn’t obvious that the real bleeder was a deep, inch-long slice beside my elbow. But my upper thigh had taken the brunt of impact; I could feel a large, mushy bulge—already swelling—through my thin nylon pants but couldn’t see blood yet so thought it was only badly bruised. (This deep contusion proved to be the most serious injury.)
There was nothing to do but press on so did just that. Move! Get going! All I had with me was the map, binoculars, a snack, and a pint of water (all gone).
I’d travelled a good ten miles already; had a couple more to reach camp. There was a compelling urgency to find the bivouac before dark. Aside from that, I knew everything was going to work out fine. But my mind—in a fever of calculations, conjectures, and instant-replays—kept returning to the chilling notion that if my knee had crashed into that slab instead of my flesh-padded thigh I’d be crawling instead of striding. It was with a limp, but I was striding….
I paused where I’d planned on exiting this canyon to start traversing back toward the campsite. My map agreed. I was saturated with sweat and trying to hold the arm overhead to slow its bleeding. There was a rope of coagulating blood running down my arm to the elbow, concluding in a stubby “blood-cicle” which quivered like jello. Incredible stuff, I thought, but…can’t have that. With two fingers I squeegeed down my arm and most of the goop dribbled off. (That’s when I first saw the gash by my elbow.) This left me with a goodly dollop of maroon-colored pudding on my fingers and I flung it into the sand, licked off the digits like a spoon and spat out a wad. Seeing what I’d just done unleashed a wave of nausea. But I remained completely calm.
Finding my gear was going to be tricky and, because I was “going against the grain” of the badlands, had to constantly climb in and out of steep-sided gullies. I finally cut my earlier tracks—a major relief—as the first stars were beginning to gleam and ten minutes later spotted my little cave up ahead. One more weighty pressure lifted. Thankfully, from this point on most of my road would be fairly smooth. The moon, past half-full, had already been up at sunset and now gave off plenty of light.
I had no first-aid kit; never carry one. Even during my ranger years I’d never traveled with one, knowing that the sort of non-critical situations these small kits are designed for could be adequately served with the roll of cloth adhesive tape I always carried and a bandanna or T-shirt until real help was reached. Band-aids and little gauze pads aren’t much use in serious cases. (Ironically, I’d recently used up my roll of  cloth tape without replacing it but did have antibiotic ointment.)
There were several quarts of water to dump so I rinsed off some blood, assessed damages, and applied some antibiotic ointment. I dropped my pants for a look at the thigh and found that my cotton undershorts had absorbed most of the blood oozing from a ½”-wide puncture wound that sat atop a mushy, purple dome. Pain coming from that quarter had been of a dull sort, easy to ignore with all the more pressing concerns. I’d smashed my upper quadriceps, which was bleeding internally. One of those razor-edged crystals had punched the hole. (Oddly, my pants weren’t ripped.)
A thick chunk of skin was peeled back from the hole and, since I couldn’t reach to gnaw it off, I compulsively started yanking at the thing, which was fairly painful. Amazing! Had no idea skin was this tough. It’s like leather! It refused to come off, even after five or six tries. (Later, nipped the flap off with nail-clippers.) But suddenly, I was able to see myself and quit, feeling something akin to embarrassment. That was weird, Tim.
This was one of those moments where I caught an objective glimpse of myself from the outside; it’s a function of being in what I refer to as “survival mode” and have confronted this disquieting phenomenon during other desperate episodes. When under extreme stress, an astonishingly calm and hyper-rational part of your being can take control to insure efficient, purposeful action. But this can elicit the odd sensation of feeling like an actor in a movie while simultaneously—and with cool detachment—you find yourself watching the performance, which may include  another part of yourself that’s screaming or doing something bizarre. Many people have experienced this.
After hastily repacking I started down, still adrenalated but all business…still in survival mode. The truck was about six miles away. Just minutes after I got going there was a 40 foot tall dry waterfall (a common feature of desert canyons) that I had to skirt but otherwise this was one of the levelest, gentlest washes I’ve ever traversed; mostly flat gravel and a few sections of water-carved basalt bedrock, winding between big boulders. An almost giddy joy caused by my good fortune eclipsed various pains and I even stopped to admire lovely scenes in the wash or while wading through those fragrant, thigh-high sunflowers. Later, along the river flats, I trod upon corn flakes and tortilla chips and relished the peculiar sensations underfoot. Everything was so…vivid.
Using the silhouette of a prominent point near the river crossing, it was a cinch to locate my truck and when I saw its whiteness begin to materialize, there was one more swelling wave of relief. This has gone really well! Not crawling! I’d been moving almost continually for well over twelve hours and had covered close to 18 miles.
Surveying the bloody mess under my camper’s harsh overhead light just made me feel incredibly fortunate, even while I stunk of blood and fear-sweat. The shattered boulder…no one could foresee such a peril. The escape had gone flawlessly; I’d been so lucky. But kneeling on the floor I looked in my little mirror and saw the eyes of some wild animal—wide open and glistening with charged intensity—staring into mine.
I cleaned myself up using wet paper towels, changed clothes, put a big bandage over the still-bleeding elbow cut, and drove. It took 45 minutes, driving much faster than yesterday, just to get back to the blissfully smooth pavement. Then a dreamlike ride past Badwater, Furnace Creek, Stovepipe Wells…over Towne Pass and down into Panamint Valley. (No one else abroad, lending this exodus even more of a twilight-zone feel.) Then the final long grade from Panamint Springs to the top of Darwin Plateau. I’d gone far enough and at 3:30 a.m. pulled off on a dirt road near the Saline Valley cut-off.
 I’d escaped.
Woke up a few hours later feeling pretty much as expected. I headed straight for the Frickel’s house up in the Alabama Hills where Gayle (my good friend and personal physician—she’s a nurse-practitioner) did “second-aid.” By then it was too late for the few stitches my elbow cut needed so it was a gauze, tape, and band-aid job after all.
Later that day I drove down to Ventura to heal the body and do some thinking.

While inhabiting one world, I live in another inside my mind and long ago found them both beyond real understanding. I try to figure things out, take well-informed guesses when necessary, and have learned to live comfortably within a tenuous framework we call “reality.” What upholds me is the beautiful intricacy of The Creation and a sense of order, or harmony, that underlies all its chaos. Strange forces and influences are at work here. I don’t know what these things are and I don’t believe it necessary to try and explain with words or even concepts. I have a deep-seated faith in the Universe’s unfolding as it should and have consciously placed myself at its disposal.
My openness to Life is how I “explain” all the strange things that happen to me: perfectly timed events, improbable meetings in obscure places, the metaphoric quality of many odd occurrences…and also those periodic collapses that usher in my next life-phase. From a tender age I began to formulate a myth with Tim as its central figure and hero.  I can say with some objectivity by glancing at the places and ways I’ve lived, and the things I’ve done, that Tim is a favored child of the Universe. Repeatedly, I’ve seen my worst times lead me through twisty turns to a place I’d dreamed of. I feel, deeply, that this life is my one chance, a true gift, and that it all counts for something. Long ago, Lorenzo  introduced me to a concept of “luck” divorced from its usual associations with fortune and chance. It’s better to be lucky than rich or good lookin’ is one of his most famous aphorisms. I consider myself both fortunate and exceptionally lucky—entirely different matters. The unending string of strange events and connections tells me not that I’m  right but at least on the right path. This gives me a special breed of self-confidence.

Part II    A Big Loss Informs My Musings

After a week in Ventura with family my two deep wounds finally scabbed over and new skin was beginning to form over the chunk taken out of my palm. The thigh contusion’s bruising—garish shades of yellow, purple, and green—spread downward all the way to my knee and the whole upper leg was painful to even a gentle touch.
A dozen times a day I’d play a little movie in my head in which I’d landed on my knee instead and been forced to crawl out. Having read the book Touching the Void—in which a fallen climber (thought to be dead) has to crawl for miles across glacier ice and talus with a compound fracture—it was easy to conjure that bleak scenario. In an instant I could visualize my shattered leg, the excruciating pain, the terribly slow pace, the thirst. At best, I might’ve made it back to my campsite (where there was a gallon of water) by the next day. My hands and knees would be hamburger, with six more miles to cover. Not a single person had even known I was in Death Valley. Throughout any day I’d sporadically be visited by these flashes, shudder with revulsion, and at the very same time exult with a silent ha ha haw! because I’d dodged the bullet—once again. One more time. Now I was off the hook for, oh, maybe years to come: bad luck all played out. Never once did I feel that what’d happened was a “bad” thing; only gratitude for how easily I’d escaped, for having such a powerful experience so successfully concluded.
Another aspect of this was similarly paradoxical: when you engage in any risky and dangerous activity, the odds of something eventually going awry are continually mounting. I’ve faced this cruel truth all along and, in recent times, looked squarely at the notion that—sooner or later—I would fall; it was inevitable. Too many things can go wrong in the wilds. Somehow I’d survived all those years of unroped solo climbing but this obviously didn’t mean I couldn’t die as a result of tripping on a stone or twig while off alone in some obscure wilderness. That’s why I felt so very fortunate. I’d gotten off easy: The luck held is an expression Hemingway used under similar circumstances.
The most bothersome element of all: when that boulder shattered I was doing everything right. Fully aware of lurking pitfalls, over and over I’d repeat this mantra in my head to help keep the edge: YOU CANNOT SCREW UP! NOT EVEN A LITTLE BIT! That Owlshead rock felt odd underfoot in the same way a snowslope can feel “funny” just before an avalanche cuts loose. I’d never had a big chunk of granite break in half under me as if it were made of clay; but neither was I terribly intimate with traveling over rocky terrain that sees ground temperatures of 200° F. during the hottest summer days, with its crystal constituents subject to different expansion and contraction rates.
I hadn’t expected to reach any conclusions or receive new wisdom and headed back to the Eastside, still beat-up, with an ambivalent lease on life. Started off with short walks and wasn’t surprised to find myself somewhat wobbly on talus—a little hesitant.
Exactly a week after getting back to Lone Pine I went to the annual Easter party at my friend Jim Macey’s sprawling place on the outskirts of Keeler, near the shore of Owens Lakebed. This is the premier assemblage of eastern Sierra geologists, other scientist-types, artists, and iconoclasts of all stripes. Local friends. A couple of hundred people will pass through (many of us camping nearby) and it lasts four long days.
I drove over on Saturday for the pre-party campfire jam session. Cheery reunions and great music; golden hours. Until a cell phone rang, after which someone hastily departed and the whispering began. A friend sidled up and stopped me cold by saying, “Will Crljenko died in an avalanche on Mt. Tom. It happened this afternoon. Denise just got the call and headed back to Bishop to be with Frances.” (Frances is…was…Will’s wife.) The party ended right then for me and a few others. Shortly, I wandered into the shadows, drove to a nearby campsite and stewed over this grim news.
On occasion, I’d quip that Will wouldn’t have been able to avoid fame if his name wasn’t nearly impossible to spell (C…r…l…j…!?) and so hard to pronounce (so far as I can tell it hovers between curl-janko and crull-janko). He was only 52, still at the top of his game. By the mid 80s, Will was already legendary among local outdoors-people for his Olympian efforts in the high Sierra—on slope, peak, and crag. He was a top-level skier, in particular, and during my winters working at Rock Creek Lodge the staff would pass around rumored reports of his (often solo) backcountry exploits. Crazy stuff; first-descents of narrow chutes on skinny, cross-country skis (instead of fat alpine boards) with potential death-falls. Marathon tours. He was an iron-man; without doubt competitive to some degree, but was known for his self-effacing humor and humility, clearly wishing to avoid celebrity. He was quiet and shy but very funny. I barely knew Will but he was obviously a true mountain-brother, though in a league of his own.
I’d known Frances since first moving to the Owens Valley and, when we’d meet, would talk about her husband as if he and I were close. We were, in spirit; both of us had our own agendas but with congruent styles, outlooks, and backcountry ethics. Had I not been almost exclusively a solo traveler it’s likely we would’ve at least occasionally shared adventures. Will and I lived too far apart to become regular social acquaintances but had many friends in common. We met in person at Lorenzo’s 60th birthday bash in April, 1995 and finally went on our first and only hike together just two years ago. That day, a half dozen of us walked up into the Inyos to visit an Indian cave containing some unusual artifacts. On the walk Will and I chatted like old pals. Not long before this, I hadn’t even known he was also an avid amateur archaeologist (me, too…), a passionate desert rat (ditto), or that we’d both stumbled on many of the same obscure Indian sites.
Will and Frances were childless but had a wide circle of exceptionally fine people for friends. After years of grooming slopes on Mammoth Mountain--a night job so that he could play by day--he went back to school and became a radiologist at Bishop Hospital and was also the dobro player in a local bluegrass band.
News of his death on Mt. Tom spread through the community instantaneously. Will was one of our best; it was a terrible loss. And, tragically…an unnecessary one.
He’d been buried under at least ten feet of snow. They were a party of seven, only three of whom were caught, but one woman died and another was injured in a second avalanche. All were expert skiers and carried electronic rescue beacons, shovels, and probe-poles—standard equipment for just such emergencies—so were able to locate the victims and dig out their corpses. (The other woman, who I knew somewhat, had only been partially buried. She was able to ski out with a broken ankle.)
My recent brush with mortality made this disaster even more deflating. The vision I carry of Will’s friends digging and digging, then all of them huddled around those deep holes, weeping, is vividly in my mind. Will’s cell phone rang several times; everyone could hear it as they took turns digging—he was late, his wife was worried, knew something had gone wrong, and she’d been calling. After they’d pulled his body out it rang again. One of them answered. So that’s how Frances found out.

As shocked as we all were, no one was completely surprised. By virtue of the sheer amount of time he’d spent doing risky things in the mountains, Will had been a marked man for years. The broad chute of Elderberry Canyon on Mt. Tom—a fine, long run—was clearly visible from his own living room window and for miles around.  I’m guessing he’d descended it at least two dozen times. Will Crljenko departed this world doing what he loved most, in his backyard playground. (A few years ago Galen and Barbara Rowell died within sight of their residence, too, on the very last leg of a long journey home—from Siberia, of all places—when the small plane piloted by a friend ran into powerlines and crashed on its final approach to the Bishop airport.) In the face of such cruel tragedies we try to reduce them to something graspable by saying trite things like, “It was their time to go.” That idea may capture a seed of truth but…I’m not so sure. Fate is too readily invoked when discussing needless deaths.
I do know Will needn’t have died that day (unless, of course, it was indeed his “time”). Having never heard the story’s finer details I can’t claim to know all the true facts but, based on personal experiences, have some conjectures and possible insights.
One critical factor in this accident was a known instability hidden deep within the snowpack (which was very thick after well-above-average winter precipitation). Earlier, unusual conditions had created a layer within the pack that could suddenly “collapse,” triggering an avalanche. Local skiers were well aware of this hazard; a month or so before, one of Will’s best ski partners was caught in a small slide caused by that unstable layer and, luckily, was only partially buried…instead of six feet under.
Mt. Tom is a prominent mountain, rising directly behind Bishop. Elderberry Canyon, curving down its huge east face all the way to desert scrub, is accessed by ascending from below (using climbing skins) and is considered perhaps the classic ski descent on an eastern Sierra peak. Of the seven, only three were locals. The other four hailed from Montana. Pure conjecture: it’s only natural to treat out-of-state guests to your very best. The whole group could tell the snow was funky. Apparently they’d dug a test-pit to look at the pack in detail and discussed turning back more than once but opted to continue upward. I can’t help wondering if they’d pressed on, not out of any competitiveness, but because all of them were committed to a grand day tour. Seven is a large group for big backcountry descents; larger parties move slower, unavoidably. They didn’t start down (from about 12,000 feet) until after 1 p.m. but should’ve been cutting turns probably no later than 11 a.m. Those two extra hours allowed meltwater to percolate down, lubricating the unstable layer.
Will was fourth to drop in. He triggered the first avalanche and his companions watched a nightmare unfold. Of the three skiers below, one was able to zip out of the slide’s path; one took a thousand-foot ride and came out on top uninjured; the third—Christine Seashore of Darby, Montana— like Will, was buried deeply. But none of this had to happen. They could’ve left earlier, started down sooner or turned back. Group-influenced pressure may have caused the small voice of prudence to be ignored.
Despite the risks he took during all those solo exploits, it cost Will Crljenko his life to have the added safeguard of multiple partners on that sad day.


Part III    Further Musings and Another Hard Lesson

After a few more days of recuperation it was “back to work.”
Greg, his wonder-dog, Althea, and I took a big day-trip into the heart of the Saline Range—low mountains that separate Saline and Eureka Valleys (and, like the Owlsheads, are devoid of surface water, trees, and roads). After the long drive and rambling for miles through open desert scrubland we stumbled into a narrow, no-name, no-place canyon that led to an amphitheater. At its head was a dry waterfall and, below it, a pool of murky water held in a natural bedrock “tank.” Fresh lion prints there in sandy mud. The surrounding walls of vertical basalt were covered with petroglyphs, and a bleached bighorn ram skull with half-curl horns was laying in the wash. This  place had a palpable aura and we ended up dallying too long. Then, on the way back—as a cap to this excellent day—we found a coyote den in a little fissure with seven squirming, brand-new pups. With miles yet to go, we ended up slightly lost, trying to find Greg’s truck in total darkness with our headlamps. (Althea found it for us.) It’d been one of our most inspiring trips ever into these desert ranges, a stirring example of wonders still to be found in little known, out-of-the-way places.
The next day was a wake celebrating Will Crljenko’s amazing life. Very few know what it’s like to live so richly…that it comes at a cost. He died with his boots on.
Following that I left immediately on an overnighter up onto the Winnedumah benches, east of Independence, with two friends to revisit favorite Indian sites. The day after coming down, went on a hike in the Alabama hills with Gayle Frickel. The day after that I drove out toward Darwin for another short backpack; this one into the Nelson Range—another waterless place where virtually no one goes backpacking.
My winter activities had been curtailed while being stranded for two weeks at Saline Hotsprings in January (when successive storms completely blocked both passes to 2WD rigs) then marooned in Ventura most of February, waiting for those roads to melt-out so I could go reclaim my pickup. But a fine spring was under full steam.
Me, too: aside from the odd rest day, a couple of gatherings, plus that week on the disabled list, I kept going on long walks into places-no-one-ever-goes. My chronic foot-problem—a type of nerve cyst—started worsening this last year but the sporadic pain it causes hasn’t held me back. Aside from the neuroma in my left foot and a lingering (but mild) lower-back strain that flared up on occasion, I was in tip-top shape.
A few years ago I had to leave the shack on Granite View Drive when it was sold and resumed living out of my camper. Since becoming a “houseless person” again, with so much free time, so few responsibilities, and no partner (other than my cat, Lucy) I’ve dedicated myself to Walking the Earth. More avocation than hobby, this has become, by default, my raison d’être. Just in this region—so many places yet to visit, so much yet to see. Walking along the Nelson Range crest had been a priority for years.
April’s weather had been excellent thus far and I knew there’d be a few residual snow-patches for drinking water; this was an ideal opportunity. Drove out on the Saline Valley road, parked along Lee Flat, and finished loading my pack. I planned to hike about seven miles on the crest, bivouac twice, then make a long loop back to my truck.
 The weather had been unseasonably warm but, without warning, a cold-front barreled in almost immediately after I left. A bitter wind blew for two solid days.

Why all this traveling-alone? It’s always frowned upon and considered the height of irresponsibility. In particular, why go to remote places and not tell anyone my plans?
I’ve enjoyed going off unaccompanied all along and do it for several reasons:
The first is practical. Especially during my six months of not-working, I have lots of free time for exploring. Most people don’t have this luxury. In addition, my trips are often fairly spontaneous or hastily-planned to take advantage of exceptional weather. I simply wouldn’t set out on lots of these outings if I weren’t willing to go alone.
Second, many potential partners wouldn’t even enjoy my typical jaunts; I go off-trail in little-known desert locales, often when the days are short and nights long. They often require carrying a gallon or two of water. Some friends refer to my trips as “death marches,” due to much steep, rugged, brushy terrain. My natural inclination is to travel steadily for stretches but then take long breaks while checking out archaeological sites or old mines and it can be unfair, subjecting others to my shifting paces and whims.
Third, and most important: traveling solo is by preference. It makes possible an entirely different kind of experience. Backpacking or hiking with others often turns into a purely social event with ceaseless talking. Which is fine, but to become genuinely connected with the natural environment, being alone is almost imperative; you not only see and hear much more, but actually become part of your surroundings. This creates space to think about, feel, and reflect on all the things that are so immediate and real.
Lastly: because traveling alone is risky. Going solo forces you to be fully attentive and vigilant in everything you do. Being self-reliant teaches valuable lessons and offers many intangible rewards. It lends any day a finer edge, sharpens the senses, and underscores our personal responsibility for all the choices we make and things we do—something worth being reminded of. I believe taking deliberate risks makes life sweeter.
Gamblers and risk-takers seem to share some gene that influences their decision-making process. Conservative types find it very difficult to justify voluntarily taking actions that can result in loss of money, property—or lives—while the opposing camp accepts uncertainty and risk as an essential (or at least unavoidable) part of being alive. The risk-taking paradigm is utterly foreign to those who believe taking chances should be avoided whenever possible, so this voodoo-logic I’m about to employ in explaining my stance isn’t likely to sway the opinions of anyone with that outlook.
For years I’ve gone rock or mountain climbing, on short backpacks, without telling a soul of my plans or when I’d return. I view this practice as a sort of insurance by significantly upping the commitment factor. Heading off into the wilds, I’m never naive about the consequences of any error or lapse in judgment. And Will Crljenko certainly wasn’t. Agreeing to play by nature’s rules, with or without partners, can get you killed in a wide variety of ways. Mountains don’t care is another of Lorenzo’s pithy aphorisms. Its corollary—No mercy, no malice—captures the stark reality of what you risk by entering the temple. Going alone requires a mindset of utter confidence that you won’t make a serious mistake. Mark Twain gave us the risk-takers’ creed: “Put all your eggs in one basket…and watch that basket!” [his italics]. But we know that things can and will and do go wrong. By definition, it’s a risk we’re willing to accept.
Selfish? Terribly. (More on this, later.)
Other times, I’d give a friend a detailed itinerary and specific return-time. Or sometimes I’d leave a note on the truck’s dashboard. But the fact is that no one (not any of my friends, at least) is going to call out a rescue the evening I don’t return. Or the next morning; they’d assume there was some problem or I’d gone too far and wouldn’t act until maybe midday. That note I’d left might not get read until my truck had been there a week or more. None of this was of consequence; I wouldn’t have embarked without feeling certain of returning under my own steam—even if at a slow crawl.
But these last few years, feeling the odds mounting, I began leaving word with friends or a note on my dashboard though…not always. When I walked into the Nelson Range, no one had any idea of my whereabouts. I’d crashed less than three weeks before and my reasoning was that I’d had my bit of bad luck, had my semi-epic, and could now get back to being “focused and flawless.” One step at a time. My good fortune would hold up. That was the idea but I ended up dead-wrong. Again.

Just as that cold-front and its strong winds arrived I took off on this walk, heading east for several hours through a true forest of Joshua trees, then north up a winding canyon cut through basalt, to the granitic backbone of this little range (a spur of the Inyos, bordering  Saline Valley’s southern end). The terrain was genial; instead of rock-hopping on the exposed ridgeline I was able to stroll across level benches (formed by faulting) with occasional big views looking down into Saline Valley and across at the Racetrack playa. Delightful mixed-forests of pinyon, juniper, and Joshua tree with a few boulder-gardens thrown in. At sundown, having walked about nine miles, I began to look for a sheltered spot and found an overhang that made a fine windbreak. Beneath it was a Paiute homesite—a crude semicircle of stones. After clearing away some rocks and pinyon cones (plus thousands of woodrat pellets) I laid out my sleeping bag where, long ago, others slept. Only yards away there was a snow-patch for meltwater.
The wind blew all night long. My shelter faced due north. I slept warmly but hadn’t brought real cold-weather clothes. I got up and made tea then tried to find a place with sun but out of the stiff breeze. No luck, so I went back to make breakfast and begin packing. It was still below freezing and fairly gusty even under the overhang. Cold and stiff, I spent half an hour on my knees making more tea, chewing granola, and getting organized. There was nowhere to sit; the ground was covered with woodrat dung so I was squatting uncomfortably. I reached for something and felt an electric twinge zip across my lower back—a grim harbinger. Oh…no. In my mind, my own voice calmly spoke those two words, without any emotion. Just like that [snap fingers here] I was injured, perhaps badly. The nagging muscle strain (which originated back in November) had spasmed. I still had several miles to go on the crest—the trickiest part—followed by a rubbly descent of 2000 vertical feet plus five easy miles back to my truck.
In a way, I’d lucked out…again. This spasm wasn’t like others, where further movement was not an option. (If it’d been a bad one, I’d be immobilized for three days.) In minutes it became evident that, not only could I continue, but my pack’s semi-rigid frame—with its tight waist-belt—would provide ideal support. Also, I carry painkillers and muscle relaxants for just such emergencies. It could’ve been much worse.
Later, traversing the range’s 7700 foot highpoint, I was crouching in a full gale, between powerful blasts. There was still pain but the Vicodin helped take away some of that wind’s bite. The sun was shining and I was finally warm again, with a single goal—my pickup. Head out of the noose, it was just like coming down from the Owlsheads: I felt keenly alive, brimming with gratitude. The narcotic no doubt was responsible in part. (I hadn’t taken any that night but did have adrenaline coursing through my veins). Again, I had enough energy, enough enthusiasm, to pause and admire views or particularly venerable Joshua trees…was genuinely happy just to be walking through high desert country. After a couple more miles a distant white speck appeared. Relief. The speck became a white dot, gradually grew, and turned into my truck.
Several days later, I was almost pain-free. This back injury was no big deal; I’ve been prone to sudden neck- or back-muscle spasms since high school. Every four or five years my back seizes up so badly I literally can’t walk. But aside from Piute Meadows it’s only happened once while I was out in the boondocks….
It was terrible. This was in 1989 during a week-long professional horse-packer training and we were deep in the backcountry. Taking my tent down one morning, I reached up and twisted wrong. Oh, no! Had this happened “at home” I’d have been bedridden. The two-day ride back over those rocky trails, with the unavoidable twisting in my saddle and horrible jolting, was the most brutal pain I’ve ever endured. So there’s long been a terror that something like this might happen again.

A week after the Nelson Range debacle I was all healed and it was right back to attack-mode with an overnighter into the Saline Range from Eureka Valley—25+ miles of rough terrain. I found more petroglyph sites plus a couple of classic limestone grottoes (one containing a piece of pitch-lined basketry—part of a water flask). Again, no one knew where I was; I’d told two friends, separately, but only a vague plan—no mention of when I was coming out or that I’d check in again. They were both long-time hiking partners and knew not to feel any responsibility…that I’d just been sharing news.
This typifies of my approach to mountaineering during the last quarter century: I’m on my own. It’s exactly the same, if no one knows my whereabouts or if I’m with someone; I would never take extra risks just because I had a partner along.
The rest of April was a succession of full day-trips. Half those were with friends passing through and groups of us visited several of the region’s very finest treats. And I went on several more forays of my own into remote corners of Inyo County to discover new natural wonders and historic sites. High times….

Part IV    Life is Frail…I Make Mikey’s Top-10 List

Even with the death of an incipient friend and two personal collapses, March and April had been an unprecedented run. A big part of it was rebounding from two months of being constrained by lack-of-truck. Then, this spring’s inspiring verdure lent each day spent outdoors an almost hallucinogenic edge.
Another factor was an urgency brought on by my worsening neuroma. It’s almost as bad now as before the surgery, and may require another, more permanent fix (in the form of simply severing the offending nerve, which would leave me with two toes I can’t feel). Plus: at almost 47, my places-to-visit list keeps getting longer while time grows shorter. All in all, I’d been on a roll; excursions into a dozen desert ranges, each with wonderful, unanticipated features. I was extremely fit. And inspired by an amazing collection of people who—in short order—came together at the Keeler Easter gathering, Will Crljenko’s wake, and then Lorenzo’s 70th birthday party on the last day of April (where we all danced like happy fools). These and other merry meetings, sandwiched between crises, had turned this into one of my life’s more potent chapters.
 It was hard tearing myself away from all these soulful happenings but a visit with family was overdue so right after Lorenzo’s bash I drove down to Ventura.

For several years my brother, Steve, and I have taken a spring trip to the eastern Mojave, where a few isolated ranges rise out of the surrounding desert to over 7000 feet. This time we decided to head back for a second try at Kingston Peak. (Last May,  without a map, we missed its true highpoint.) These mountains are notable botanically. There’s a small grove of white fir, for example, just below the actual peak—one of only three occurrences in these Mojave mountain ranges. Just getting to the summit ridge (as far as we got last year…) is a three hour bushwhack through chaparral followed by two more miles of boney granite ridgeline with craggy outcrops and more brush to skirt.
 We did the long drive from Ventura through those oddly disturbing towns of Victorville, Barstow, and Baker and then 30+ miles of partially-paved and gravel  roads, past Horsethief Spring (where John C. Fremont once camped) and on to Tecopa Pass where we stayed at our same spot on a broad tailings-pile below the old mine.
Next morning, an early start. After the first hour it was obvious this was going to be a long haul and a hot day. We walked in a dry creek bed but when the brush became too dense would have to climb out and thrash around or scramble over boulder piles. It was already very humid so we hid in shade-patches whenever possible.
We popped into a small clearing—only a few yards wide and long but the only open, flat spot we’d seen thus far. We’re always watching for birds and Steve spotted something interesting that, from where I stood, was hidden from view behind the top of a large boulder. Raising my binoculars, I took a step back to get a clear line of sight.
This is a commonly used maneuver when birding; you might or might not take a quick glance down to check the footing and sometimes take multiple backsteps, staying in balance while blindly feeling for obstacles with your heel.
I only took one short step backward before my right heel fetched up against a partially buried rock. With the lovely Lazuli Bunting now in view I shifted my weight evenly between both legs without knowing there was a leafy plant growing above the little stone; its leaves effectively turned into grease. The rock’s surface was aslant and  my foot skated right off. Completely unbalanced, trying to catch myself, I staggered and collapsed awkwardly right onto what was little more than a pebble.
I wasn’t really hurt but, given recent events, this stumble left me fairly shaken. It wasn’t the first time I’d tripped under these circumstances but usually there’s a chance to recover before actually going down. In this instance I fell awkwardly and certainly could’ve been injured by landing on something sharp. As it was, I’d literally reopened an old wound—a measly scratch, but I’d cut into delicate, new skin covering the place that’d been torn off my left palm in the Owlsheads.
I thought I was done falling down! This was becoming downright creepy. Dusted myself off and, muttering angrily, started up the canyon’s steepest slope. Steve probably didn’t know how much that tumble shook me and I quickly put it away.
Rain had recently fallen and it was extremely humid; sweat was pouring out of us both. We’d not counted on this and brought only a half gallon of water (plus a small can of fruit juice) each. By the time we crested I’d already finished one quart. The two miles of ridge took hours more with lots of ups and downs and brush. Fortunately, not much rock scrambling but there was almost no easy terrain getting to the summit.
We finally made it; had a bite and a sip, and visited the stunted white firs before turning back. This time, we stayed closer to the ridgeline’s crest or on its other side; this proved easier and went much faster. (I did take one wrong turn and we backtracked to reach a small plateau near the dropoff point for our canyon.)
To be accurate, this “plateau” was just a flattish portion of the frequently narrow ridge, without boulder outcrops. It’d been an open pinyon grove prior to having burned in a lightning-fire ten years or so back. Brush had partly grown back in but there was still much open ground; aside from having to weave through a virtual maze of charred and fallen pinyon snags this was perhaps the easiest stretch we’d crossed all day.
We were just then intersecting the range’s east-west trending crest. Unnoticed by me, Steve had apparently paused to look at something and was maybe three minutes behind; if I dashed over to the edge, a quick appraisal might reveal a more direct path back down. I doubted this alternative’s feasibility but could take a peek just in case; in the time my little detour would take, Steve would catch up and we could continue the way we’d come. It was getting late and we had a long way yet to go.
So I put it in third gear (a fast walk, almost jogging) and started cutting through the burned-over forest, taking a circuitous path. The snags had been reduced to their trunks and main limbs—it’d been a very hot fire. Many had subsequently toppled. I came to one fallen snag whose trunk I could simply step over. Before taking that step I cast a quick glance over my shoulder to see how far back Steve was.
And in that instant I fell. I know exactly what happened—saw it all, very clearly.
The sandy soil was loose and and sort of fluffed-up from “frost-heaving.” This results when soil, saturated by melting snow, is repeatedly frozen at night and thawed during the day. When finally dry, it’s quite airy; footprints are deep impressions.
There were a few stones and cobbles mixed with it. My last footstep was directly onto a half-buried, plum-sized cobble that I noticed, but didn’t bother trying to avoid, recognizing it’d just be pressed harmlessly into that spongy soil.
But I didn’t know—couldn’t see—that it was lying directly above a larger, flat-topped rock. As my weight came onto that little round cobble I felt it make contact with a solid surface. Too late: it was just like the marble on the kitchen floor: my right foot shot back, right out from under me, and I plunged onto my knees, arms outstretched with that lightning-fast instinctive reaction to catch any sort of fall. I “saw it all” and had plenty of time—instantly, everything happening in slow motion—to feel astonished by finding myself falling!…again! Glancing back toward Steve had nothing to do with it; that glance was comparable to shooting a look in the side-view mirror before changing lanes and I was already facing forward again while going down. There was no time to react more than throwing out my arms to take the brunt.
My left forearm, with my entire mass behind it moving at 5 m.p.h., collided with the tip of a charred pinyon branch. All I “felt” was the sensation of my inner arm being scraped from wrist to elbow—no pain whatsoever—before collapsing onto my left hip. Getting back to my knees, the first thing I saw was what I’d fallen on: that branch had been reduced to a foot-long spike and was protruding upward from the trunk, pointed straight at my throat. It was only about an inch wide at its terminus, which had burned in such fashion that its looked like the beveled tip of a chisel. There was some weird shiny substance wrapped around it. I was puzzled. Hunh? Wha…? Then, aware that I’d probably scraped myself pretty badly, raised the arm—bending it back from the elbow so that my left hand was by my chin—for a close look. I was fully expecting to see some damaged flesh at very close range, but was utterly unprepared for what I saw.
My forearm was flayed wide open.
As if it were coming from someone else, from someplace else, I heard myself speaking softly but with desperation: Oh, no…oh, no…oh, no! and the whole world closed in; all that remained was a blossoming terror. (But behind it, watching, was that calm and dispassionate witness again.)
As if through a magnifying glass I saw a clean incision over six inches long and maybe a half inch deep. Worse, that wooden chisel had sliced at an acute angle through muscle tissue; this wound’s depth wasn’t the main issue—bleeding to death was. It’d all happened so fast that, in the instant before blood started gushing, I saw what’s actually “inside” my arm. Wow! It’s like chicken! I thought it would look more like beef. The silent witness was surprised by this fascinating insight.
Steve, a hundred yards away, hadn’t seen me trip. I yelled, “I’m HURT!…I’m hurt BAD!” He looked up…raised his binoculars. Still on my knees, I held up the arm and saw his body stiffen and mouth fall open in obvious horror. It seemed impossible that this was happening, so unreal. One of the most repulsive things we can experience is seeing our own flesh torn and bleeding profusely. (Disbelief seems to be a common first reaction.) Before I could do anything Steve was there, engaged in his own drama.
 Despite the frightful stream I could tell right away that, miraculously, no major artery or vein had been severed. Near my elbow was a protruding lump and, next to it, a shallow depression. (The silent witness found this curious as well.) I assumed the lump was a chunk of broken-off wood so, knowing that pain would be arriving shortly, tried to knead it out. Nothing…but so much blood! And we were so far from help.
Of course, I didn’t have a first aid kit and still hadn’t replaced that used-up roll of cloth athletic tape. The only thing available was my nylon windshirt so, with blood streaming, together we wrapped it tightly around the wound and tied it up with the sleeves. This worked fine—would’ve been even better with tape, especially with us  being so rattled and shaky—but it proved a more-than-adequate bandage (validating my notion that in emergencies you’ll be able to get by using what’s on hand).
In only five minutes or so our evacuation was almost under way. Last thing, I surveyed the scene. The charred branch’s tip was wrapped in that weird, filmy substance—like sausage casing—and I realized it was fascia tissue (a thin membrane that separates bundles of muscles, allowing them to slide freely against one another). There was a ghastly amount of blood. Little puddles were soaking into the sand.
Both of us were nearly frantic. Right off, we had to get over a big, rocky outcrop but couldn’t recall the way. I forged ahead, close to panicking, then spotted our tracks. After that short stretch the rest was mostly downhill and, somewhat calmer, stopped to drink my last water. We were both already significantly dehydrated. But my case was serious (because of the blood-loss) and Steve didn’t hesitate when I asked for the rest of his—almost another cup. I assured him that we were going to get out but had to keep it together. The upper canyon was very steep with lots of loose scree and talus. I tried to hold the arm up over my head to slow the bleeding and grasped it with my right hand but, even with this direct pressure, could feel the “bandage” becoming more saturated. Entirely focused on making it to help, the pain barely registered—was just a distraction.
This was new territory; I’ve nearly died in the mountains quite a few times with the crises lasting minutes or only moments…but we were hours away from help. We’d been hiking and sweating profusely for over nine hours, had eaten little, and still had three miles of rough terrain ahead with lots of bushwhacking. I’d warned Steve that  there was some likelihood of my going into shock; not to panic if it happened, and what to do if I fainted. We were out of the sun at last but it was still hot.
Reaching the truck took two more hours (but would’ve taken at least thirty more minutes if we’d been going our normal pace). I arrived first; got into the camper and  blissfully guzzled a full quart, then took off my blood-spattered clothes. During the last hour we’d formed a strategy and, after my brother had his own long drink, got to it.
With a wet rag, swabbed off some of the gore. Steve cut athletic tape into “steri-strips” and bravely—he’d readily admit being very squeamish—taped the swollen and curled-up flap of meat roughly back in place. This hurt. Naturally, my blood flowed with renewed vigor; I mopped it up with the rag while he worked. Steve—his face a picture of revulsion—kept apologizing when I’d yelp or groan. Together we wrapped a plastic produce-bag around the entire forearm before adding layers of paper towel, another bag, and more tape. At this point, as expected, I ran out of adrenaline and could  feel my body again so took a second Vicodin. I climbed into my truck’s passenger seat (one of the first times ever…) and settled in for the long ride. We both kept sucking down water and bolted a few cookies.
It took over an hour to get back to the I-15 freeway.
The closest medical help was in Las Vegas but when I started talking about getting a motel room, smuggling Lucy in—as usual, my cat had accompanied us on this trip—and somehow coming up with a litter box, Steve assertively vetoed that plan and insisted we seek help in the direction of home. So we made for Barstow instead—almost a hundred miles away—which was only slightly farther. (I was more concerned about possibly inferior small-town medical care.)
We finally spotted a blue sign with big, white “H,” took the next offramp, and followed more of them to a poorly lit parking lot on some Barstow back-street. We walked through the emergency room doors a little after 10 p.m. There’s not many places in California where it takes three-hours to reach an emergency room; from Tecopa Pass to Barstow happens to be one of them.  
An Egyptian surgeon, Dr. Abbas (who’d spent all twenty years since emigrating at this one hospital) sewed me up with assistance from a gigantic intern, “Mikey.” Both were impressed with my gruesome wound, saying they don’t often see lacerations this bad. In fact, the jovial intern—a local-boy and former football player—told us that mine had shot straight to #2 on “Mikey’s top-10 list,” though it was a distant second behind some guy who’d been scalped by going part-way through his windshield in a collision.
The doc injected lidocaine into a bunch of places and began to work.
Lying on my side with arm bent at the elbow—hand by chin—I couldn’t really see (and didn’t want to) but as Dr. Abbas pulled the flap wide open to pluck out debris with his forceps, I could see raw meat almost up to the second joint of his gloved fingers. He pulled out chunks of charcoal—showing me a few choice specimens—and flushed out smaller bits with a squeeze-bottle of sterile water before sewing me back together; one layer of stitches inside (using dissolvable thread) and another out. Steve sat in a chair, also not watching. Dr. Abbas, friendly and chatty, said that I’d been extremely fortunate to have not severed any major vessels and that my muscles hadn’t been cut so much as separated. The bulging lump was one muscle that had been severed and its lower end shriveled into a knot. (No mention of possible reattachment….)
The whole job took only a little over an hour but, with paperwork and waiting on either end, we walked back to my truck just after midnight—seven hours after impact. All that was left was the dreamlike 200 mile drive to Ventura.
I finally crawled into my sleeping bag right about first light on a new day.

Part V…Trying to Make Sense of the Senseless

It’s been three weeks now and I’m healing up well but will have nasty scars—inside and out. There’s been plenty to think about.
In the space of a month and a half I suffered three potentially serious accidents in some of the more remote corners of California. All three required hasty self-rescues. In my 26 years of mountaineering and off-trail exploration I’d previously had to evacuate once (April 1981) after falling on a solo peak-climb in Rocky Mountain National Park.
(On snowshoes, coming down off the mountain in a whiteout, I broke through a snow-bridge and tumbled head-over-heels into the “moat” surrounding a little bluff. In the process I somehow impaled my left thigh on a ski pole’s blunt tip, a deep puncture-wound that needed a few stitches. But I had no insurance and was virtually broke at the time so treated my wound with iodine ointment instead. This early misadventure earned me a good story and one of my first battle-scars.)
As mentioned, many odd things happen to me and, while I don’t try to attribute any particular meaning to them, do notice. There were curious features regarding my recent disfigurements: my Kingston Peak “trip” reinjured two specific places damaged in the earlier accident. And the tight cluster of mementos on my left thigh.
The grotesque scar on my forearm  runs directly over the shallow incisions—a dozen thin, pink lines—acquired in Death Valley. In addition, when my arm was filleted I also nicked the deep Owlsheads’ scar near my elbow and it bled some (as had the freshly-opened scar on my palm from that day’s earlier, portending tumble). And I hadn’t mentioned this yet: on Kingston Peak, when collapsing onto my hip after being impaled, I somehow poked another hole in my thigh; didn’t even notice it then and never knew what’d caused it. This was nothing compared to that awful contusion but it was fairly deep; deep enough to leave a permanent scar just a few inches from the small, purple depression that looks like a bullet entry-wound. And, just a few inches from both—forming a neat, almost equilateral triangle—is my reminder of the 1½” gash that I sustained in that fall up near the Continental Divide, 24 years ago.
All these wounds are on my left side and, in fact, the wide majority of my scars and injuries have been to my body’s left half.

If one examined my person carefully they’d find scores…maybe several hundred scars—most of them tiny; some not so tiny.
Between climbing, rangering and day-to-day abuse, the surfaces of my knuckles have all been replaced many times. Pale dots and lines, everywhere, on my hands and arms where I’ve been torn and bled from hand-jams (climbing), bush-bites, bike wrecks, major cat scratches, and encounters with barbed wire (among many other sharp things). Shins, as thrashed as my hands; legs scored by countless spiny bushes and rock-scrapes. Various road-rashes. Plus a few whose origin I can’t recall.
Some of the better ones: A goodly cut on my scalp from an inattentive belayer dropping me on my head. A chunk out of my knee where I fell, while skiing, onto an invisible rock. A thumbnail-sized splinter of steel from a wood-splitting wedge that lodged in my chest. A constellation of scars near my right elbow resulting from a mule slamming me into a boulder, an unfriendly horse that reared up and stomped me, and one of several bike wrecks.
Then there’s the surgical scars: two repair-jobs to fix different kinds of nerve- damage in my left foot, and a pin installed in a badly-broken left ankle when I was 17.
I’ve also broken a bone in the back of my hand and my tailbone in separate skiing falls, my thumb in another, and dislocated a shoulder after falling on a short climb (boulder route) when a hold broke. For years, before I started wearing boots and shoes with higher tops—for ankle support—I was prone to ankle sprains; had a number of bad ones. And there’s countless pulled muscles, back spasms and neck strains.
In a word: I’ve played hard.
The list of my various injuries and wounds is long. The list of near-misses is longer still; read out in full, anyone would think me very accident-prone. I disagree, and really do believe I’m not in denial.
As a mountaineer—and particularly as a solo rock climber—I’m extremely cautious and capable of remaining intensely focused for long periods. I’d have been dead long ago if I weren’t and have spent a significant portion of my waking hours, even compared to many climbers, traveling over terrain that can kill or maim with the  slightest misstep. (I climbed without using ropes and equipment for most of my twenty-year climbing career. A racecar driver can crash going 200 m.p.h. and walk away from the flames; for a solo climber, a single mistake is his last. There are no “accident prone” soloists…not living ones, at least.)
 Something else is going on. My theory:
I’ve taken so many hits, not from being accident-prone, but because I seem to have a disdain for my mortality; a sort of benign death wish.
As a child I was self-confident but neither athletic nor competitive. I was a natural-born philosopher, though, and by puberty had a well-formed code of ethics that was already at odds with my Christian upbringing. From about seven on, knew I was different from all my peers. This has never changed

I left off here….No surprise that I gave up after staring at the blank page for a long while, right when it was time to finally delve into what exactly makes me tick; why, for so many years, I’d subjected myself continuously to hazardous situations where actions had potentially dire consequences. Nine years have passed and much has changed in my life. Perhaps, with the new perspectives, I can finish this chapter.