Barky Faces Death
I have traveled all over the country. I’ve hiked in forests and mountains and brush and swamps and beaches. I almost always hike alone, therefore I have to be very well prepared. I plan my trips carefully, carry the right gear, dress for the weather (current and potential), and stick to the trails. I’ve seen too many idiots hiking in flip-flops, and read too many stories of people getting lost in blizzards. There are many ways I may end up leaving this world, but dying in the wilderness due to unpreparedness, that’s not for me.
At least, that’s what I used to think.
My trip to Arizona was the first time I took two consecutive weeks’ vacation and visited multiple park sites on a grand tour. I was excited, of course. Arizona would be great. It has the most NPS sites of any state in the country and, best of all, it has deserts! One of the great joys in touring this country is walking terrains one normally doesn’t see. New England is known for rolling hills, deciduous forests, urban jungles, and snow. There are no deserts in New England, and there probably won’t be any in our lifetimes, unless we initiate a global apocalypse or something. My trip to Arizona would be the first time I’ve ever walked in a desert.
After weeks of planning, I landed in Tucson, checked into the hotel, and hit the sack. First on the list for the AM: Chiricahua National Monument, home of fantastic rocky spires, eons worth of erosional glory. I had plenty of water, salty snacks, light clothing, sunscreen, wide-brimmed hat, good shoes, and a dogged determination that I would walk at an uncharacteristically gentle pace, fully in line with the challenges of the environment. I hit the Echo Canyon loop trail (only 3.1 miles long, much shorter than my normal day hikes, again being cognizant of the heat) with great excitement.
After less than a mile on the trail (the downhill leg no doubt), I thought I’d die.
Something was seriously wrong. I was drinking enough water. I was pacing myself. I was just exhausted! I had never felt so bad walking on a trail in my life. I had to stop every 100′ and catch a breather. Nearly every step was a chore. I finally hit a point of near-panic when the thought hit my head: beautiful scenery be damned, I was going to die on this very trail. Here, thousands of miles from home, far away from family and friends, a stranger in a strange land, I was going to die. At least the next hiker would find me, perhaps my sunburnt corpse would be saved from the buzzards.
It was at that very moment that I heard the sound, a sound that I’ve only heard on television and in the movies …
Some time ago, I heard this theory: “There are two ways to hear a rattlesnake. If you hear it and see the tail, you have a story to tell your friends. If you hear it and see the head, no one will ever hear your story.”
As you have undoubtedly guessed, I spotted the tail. It was about a foot from my left shoe, darting into some low shrubbery.
I think most people would have panicked. For some odd reason, I found this comforting. If my time was up, it would have been the head of that rattlesnake, not the tail, and I would be dead. I was not going to die that day, I was convinced of that. All that was left was getting my head back into the game and focus my attention on getting out of the bad situation.
Slowly I continued my way up the trail. Fortunately, the way back up was shady. It was still trouble going but, eventually, I plodded my way back to the rental car and headed to the hotel. A foot-long Subway sub and a gallon of water later, I hit the sack and slept 13 hours straight. I felt great the next morning, and headed to Fort Bowie, Saguaro, and all of the rest of the parks in Arizona without incident over the next two weeks.
It wasn’t until much, much later that it came to me. I live in Connecticut, mean altitude a whopping 500′ above sea level. Altitude at the entrance of the Echo Canyon Trail? 6,780 feet! Oof, no wonder I almost collapsed & died amidst the rocky spires of Chiricahua!
Nowadays, when I travel to high-altitude areas, I always take at least a full day to acclimate before taking to the trails. Fortunately, I’ve lived long enough to apply that hard-taught lesson.
[I travelled to Arizona before I bought a digital camera. These pics are courtesy of, and used with permission of, Roger Hall at photography.inkart.net. He has nice photos of other NPS sites, I may ask him to use more in the future. But don’t just check out his photos, he does some really cool pen-and-ink scientific illustrations. Check them out at www.inkart.net. I hope he doesn’t begrudge me posting his western diamondback rattlesnake … I’ve actually ordered a copy for my den.]
==================================================================
Links:
Roger Hall Scientific Illustrations & Wildlife Art
Hi Paul;
You write a fine article, and have a great website – nice!
For the second time, I noticed that your link to Americaincontext.com at the foot of your National Parks Traveler comments leads to a page on NPT which simply reports an error (http://www.nationalparkstraveler.com/2008/08/americaincontext.com).
So, I copied the domain-name, pasted it in the browser and was redirected to your present WordPress location – where I can now view your site.
As it stands, on NPT, folks who click your link are just ‘dead-lettered’.
I have also had a very similar experience to what you describe, and also tentatively credited it to altitude-distress (or DEET-toxicity…). I drove from my home at sea-level to a trailhead at 2,000 feet, then hike a trail 8 miles to over 5,000′, then left the trail and traveled over rough paths along a known route into rugged backcountry. What caught my attention was that I had fallen (more like ‘collapsed’) – for the second time. I very rarely stumble or fall in challenging country. My judgment was feeble: I made an emergency (but gorgeous) camp, slept a long time and by noon the next day was able to continue cautiously, but in a normal mental condition, and with tolerable physical resources. I believed when I first realized my distressed state, than I must be seriously & possibly dangerously ill. Oddly, though, I had made this same sea-level to sub-alpine hike previously, and have before & since done others of greater difficulty. That’s the only time I ever had those particular symptoms.
I look forward to reading more on your site!
Ted
Hmmm, thanks for that about NPT. I’ll dig into that — I swear it was working at one time.
For those of you who don’t know what “NPT” is, it’s a website called National Parks Traveler (http://nationalparkstraveler.com/). It’s a great site focusing on NPS news & opinion. I post there occasionally under (surprise) “BarKy”. 🙂
Ted, I’m glad to know I’m not the only one who’s had that problem. I was absolutely shocked by how quickly altitude distress overcomes one. I had never encountered it before, and hope not to ever again. I’m planning to go to New Mexico in the fall, I’ll definitely carry this lesson forward.
I wouldn’t have worried about the rattlesnake so much – most bites are “dry,” meaning the snake doesn’t inject any venom (why waste it?), and I don’t think anyone’s died of an accidental rattlesnake bite (ie, not trying to play with it during a drunken stupor) in Arizona in something like 55 years.
55 years, wow! So that means I was due, right?
Seriously, thanks for the info. People shouldn’t be afraid of the wild (if you call a well-marked NPS trail “wild”), but they should understand all the “what’s” and “where’s” whenever they venture forth, and not muck with Mother Nature.
Thanks for the comment. 🙂
[…] cool Northeast, I had a really hard time adjusting to the blast furnace of southern Arizona (see my post on Chiricahua). Saguaro is a desert, Organ Pipe is the hottest spot in America, and Tucson and Phoenix are […]
[…] recommendation dovetails not only into Denali, but also into my Chiricahua post. That post was about man’s stupidity (specifically my own stupidity) in the face of […]