The 24 Hour Hike(II)
Camping without a tent not so much fun |
“Hey, how's it going? Well, I'm calling because um.. Jean and I lost in the Blue Mountains."
"Really, we are. It's crazy isn't it? But don't worry. Neither us is hurt or anything. I think we'll be okay."
"Yeah, I know, it seems like people get lost in the Blue Mountains all the time. We've become statistic."
"Yeah, I'll tell Jean in a second. I'm sure she'll think that's ironic too. Anyway, we'll be spending the night out here I guess. We should be fine but if you don’t hear from us by midday tomorrow, call the police I guess, alright? Yeah, thanks. Bye. Yep, you too. Bye.”
"Really, we are. It's crazy isn't it? But don't worry. Neither us is hurt or anything. I think we'll be okay."
"Yeah, I know, it seems like people get lost in the Blue Mountains all the time. We've become statistic."
"Yeah, I'll tell Jean in a second. I'm sure she'll think that's ironic too. Anyway, we'll be spending the night out here I guess. We should be fine but if you don’t hear from us by midday tomorrow, call the police I guess, alright? Yeah, thanks. Bye. Yep, you too. Bye.”
Turning off the mobiles Jean and I took stock of our
supplies. Two apples, some trail mix, a liter of water…
Clothing wise we were in fairly good shape. Throughout the
warm, humid day Jean had bemoaned having packed a fleece and wooly hat. She
gladly put them on now. We both had rain jackets that would serve well to hold
in body heat. The only real downside was that I was wearing shorts. At least my legs are on the furry side.
Jean and I picked a spot in the middle of the clearing to
settle in and began removing stray twigs and pushing leaves together to for some cushioning. That activity brought back the memory of another night I had
spent in the open in the mountains. I warned Jean that I was about to launch
into a Georgia story. She conceded and allowed me to continue.
In the early autumn of my first year in the village of
Mukhaestate I had shown an interest in eating trout and to a lesser extent
fishing for them. My host father, Olegi, had picked up on the idea and began
talking about a fishing trip into the lower Caucasus Mountains. All during the
year and into the next he continued to talk about it. I would ask him when we
were going and he would tell me that the time was not quite right but it would be soon.
He would explain that there was either not enough water in the river or too much or the fish weren’t
ready.
Summer came and went and I had written off the trip until
one day in early October, Olegi said the time was finally right and we’d be leaving
the next day. Never mind that school was supposedly starting in a few days. He would talk to the school director.
Nika, Tamazi and Olegi |
Several bumpy hours over unsealed roads brought us to a
large wooden house perched on a mountainside. We spent a couple of nights there
and then one morning Olegi woke me up early and told me I should get ready. I
asked him what the plan was and didn’t understand his explanation but I was
able to gather that I needed a fleece, long trousers and perhaps a bottle of
water.
Tamazi and Olegi fishing and hiking up the river |
By evening, Tamazi’s satchel was full of trout and we were
far upstream. My companions didn’t seem to be terribly preoccupied with getting
back to shelter. We stopped at a wide rocky section beside the river. Tamazi
began cleaning the captured fish beside the water. Olegi told me to go find
some wood and he began chopping up the larger pieces I brought back.
Returning with a third armful of fallen limbs I found Tamazi
finished with the fish and now stripping a large bush bare of leaves. He pushed
the fallen leaves into a pile and told me that it was my bed.
Olegi built a fire and as darkness fell he and Tamazi had
stoked it into a small conflagration. We dined on the stale bread, tomatoes and
cucumbers. After dinner conversation trailed off and I began to doze. It was a
cold night and I woke frequently either to relieve some crick or to rotate a
numb portion of my body toward the warmth of the fire.
In the Blue Mountains, Jean and I unfortunately didn’t have
any matches or a lighter and I’m not mountain man enough to start a fire
without those aids. However, It was going to be much warmer then it had been
that night in Georgia. Recalling the forecast, over night the temperature was
predicted to dip into the neighborhood of 14° C (~55° F). I figured it would
be uncomfortable but bearable.
I finished my in the mountains with Olegi and Tamazi narrative, relating how we’d made the hike out
the next morning and even how the director had even held off starting school
until I got back. I thanked Jean for allowing me interject a Georgia story. She
told me that it did make her feel better about our current situation but I have
my doubts because Jean is very nice, even in extreme situations.
We soon gave up on the leaves idea and huddled together in
our meager pile. The faint sound of a siren caused us to wonder if one of our
SOS text messages had gone through. A helicopter buzzed overhead and we toyed with the
idea of running out to the creek and trying to signal it. The sounds soon faded
and the night was quiet again. Jean suggested that we try to get in some sleep
in while it was still relatively warm so she and I curled up together and
quickly fell asleep.
There goes my leg modeling career |
Creeping into the early hours of my morning my lower body became so numb
with the chill that I wasn’t able to drift off to sleep anymore. I spent a
while rubbing my legs and wiggling my toes to get the blood flowing. Then Jean
and I got up and did a few minutes of jumping jacks. The exercise worked
wonders and inspired the telling of another, shorter Georgia story which I’ll save the
readers.
We were able to slip off to sleep for a while longer before
the basin began to lighten. Taking in our environs in the predawn gloom we were struck by the seeming impassibility of the path we had come. No wonder my legs were so banged up. Jean and I walked down to the
sandy beach and tried fording the creek but it soon became too deep to continue
without more submersion then we cared for on a cool morning.
We moved downstream weaving our way though the undergrowth.
After much searching and still finding no discernible paths or marking we
crossed over the creek and doubled back up the waterway on the opposite side.
The elusive trail marker |
She hurried over and we followed the trail up as it undulated
over the hillside. The path soon came to an intersection listed in our trail
notes. After forty-five minutes of twists and turns we emerged into a library
car park. At 9:00 Sunday morning we tromped into the Blaxland train station
just shy of 24 hours since we left on our little excursion.
Comments
love the final photo!