Название: One Best Hike: Mount Rainier's Wonderland Trail
Автор: Doug Lorain
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Книги о Путешествиях
Серия: One Best Hike
isbn: 9780899976839
isbn:
The next tip is to keep your camera easily accessible. This will allow you to take candid pictures of your hiking companions and obtain that spur-of-the-moment wildlife shot before the animal runs away. Perhaps even more important, having your camera right at hand has a psychological advantage because people whose photo gear is buried deep in the pack will often talk themselves out of taking what might turn out to be a great picture, just because they don’t want to go to the trouble of digging the camera out of its hiding place.
Next, when you have what looks to be a great scene, be sure to take 1) lots of pictures (remember, these days it only costs you digital memory; you aren’t out a penny for wasted film), 2) pictures from several different angles, and 3) shots that are framed with a tree on the side, flowers in the foreground, interesting clouds in the sky, and so on. These extra elements often make all the difference in the world in the overall quality of your photographs.
One more tip: Because you will undoubtedly be taking lots of pictures, be sure to carry an extra camera battery and a spare memory card. The odds are good that you will need both.
A final very important point about photography involves protecting your equipment. Local weather patterns being what they are, water protection for your camera should be considered a necessity. In addition, with all the rugged terrain along the Wonderland Trail, the occasional fall or bump into a tree is common enough that more than one expensive camera has broken or had its delicate electronic systems damaged. It is important, therefore, that you use good (and tough) camera equipment and protect it in a waterproof case.
Small pond in Indian Henry’s Hunting Ground
If you are camped at lower elevations during a stretch of good weather in the summer months, especially on the west side of the mountain near Longmire or along the Carbon or Mowich Rivers, you stand a good chance of waking up beneath a heavy layer of low clouds. This common phenomenon is the result of cool marine air pushing in clouds from Puget Sound and is rarely cause for concern. More often than not, the cloud deck is covering only the lowlands, and once you climb above 3,500 or 4,000 feet you will be in wonderful sunshine. By later in the day the clouds usually burn off, even at lower elevations.
Finally, there is the often-stated fact that Mount Rainier makes its own weather. Because the mountain is so much higher than everything else in the neighborhood, it frequently pokes its nose into the jet stream and gathers clouds around its summit. Thus, it is not uncommon for visitors at lower elevations to be bathed in calm and sunshine while looking up at a mountain (or, more precisely, a cloud bank where the mountain ought to be) where the conditions are very windy and either raining or snowing. Even more common is for hikers to see lenticular clouds, which form over the summit when warm air from the ocean meets the cold of the mountaintop and condenses into clouds. Usually these very photogenic clouds are either mushroom-shaped right over the top of the peak or strung out as high-level winds push them to the east. Lenticular clouds often indicate that the moisture content of the atmosphere is rising and a storm may be on the way.
A Word about Mileages
Hikers who feel the need to know exact mileages are bound to notice something along the Wonderland Trail—you cannot trust the NPS signs. The only thing you can rely on with these signs is that they will be inconsistent. On countless occasions you will be told at one end of a trail that the distance is a specific total, and then upon reaching the other end find a sign telling you that the distance you just covered is actually 0.3 mile or more different. In fairness, part of the problem is that the trail’s mileage is constantly in flux. The climate here is very tough on trails. Every year trail crews are forced to reroute sections of the Wonderland Trail to detour around flood damage, washouts, and landslides. In addition, during the high water of spring and early summer, dozens of streams and rivers in the park change their course, forcing seasonal bridges to be moved, slightly altering the trail’s total distance.
Many years ago a frustrated guidebook author had a friend get out a measuring wheel and do her own mileage numbers. She was so obsessed with numbers that she even went so far as to tell readers the exact length of every one of the hundreds of bridges along the Wonderland Trail. I am not that extreme, so in doing this book I did not take new measurements, though for maximum accuracy I have generally used the numbers from her book. For new trail sections, or for places where the path has been significantly rerouted, I have used a combination of NPS signs and my own pedometer readings. When I wrote this book, these measurements were as close to accurate as I could reasonably make them. Mother Nature is far from finished with her annual changes, however, so expect the mileages to vary somewhat over time.
That said, despite my training as a certified public accountant, I am not particularly obsessed with mileage numbers and have never seen the functional difference between a distance of, say, 3.9 miles and 4.2 miles. It simply won’t change my hiking plans one way or another based on which figure is accurate. Factors such as the elevation gain, trail conditions, my level of tiredness, and the weather all make far more difference in hiking time and enjoyment than knowing the mileage down to the nearest tenth. To me the NPS signs are usually close enough. It’s mostly a function of attitude. Still, for those of you who just can’t live without exact numbers, you will be glad to know that someone at the NPS (who apparently had way too much time on his or her hands) once produced an information sheet telling hikers that the Wonderland Trail (excluding any side trips and the inevitable walking to and around camp) has a total distance of 92.172 miles and a total elevation gain of 22,786 feet. (Unless, of course, you happen to park one or two slots farther away in the parking lot or have to take an extra step around a fallen log, and then your totals will be completely different.)
Have a Safe (And Fun) Trip
Opposite: Mount Rainier from pond in Spray Park
Despite all the bad movies you may have seen about the outdoors, the greatest dangers you are likely to encounter while backpacking are not angry bears, crazy hunters, hungry mountain lions, or “evil” rattlesnakes but more mundane threats such as being wet and cold for too long (which sounds merely uncomfortable but can actually kill you) or falling down and hurting yourself. These concerns might not be “sexy” for the moviemakers, but they are by far the most common types of dangers faced by hikers on the Wonderland Trail, so you need to know how to avoid them to have a safe trip.
Hypothermia
Hypothermia occurs when the body loses more heat than it can produce, thus causing the body’s temperature to drop. When it falls below about 95ºF (only 3.6º below normal), hypothermia sets in and symptoms begin to occur (see below). Once your core temperature drops below about 78–80ºF, your brain and heart cease to function. People who “freeze to death” actually die of hypothermia long before they freeze.
It does not have to be bitterly cold for a person to suffer from СКАЧАТЬ