Monday, January 5, 2009

South Cumberland State Recreational Area Backpack

Three of us did this trip over Thanksgiving weekend. It was my first two night backpack. We hiked in from Stone Door along the Big Creek Gulf trail to the Connector trail and set up camp at the Sawmill campsite. It was cool and cloudy and the forecast for Saturday called for rain! We hiked to Schwoon Spring for water on the Collins west loop and then back to the campsite. After setting up camp we gathered enough firewood for the weekend and cooked dinner. This was the second trip out for my Tarptent Rainbow and I was interested to see how it would preform in the rain.



* Photo of rock retaining walls along the historic Stagecoach road

On Saturday we took the precaution of covering our firewood with a garbage bag and took off up the trail to hike the Historic Stagecoach Road. This was a trail I had wanted to hike for quite some time. The rock retaining walls that were built by slave labor are still visible and quite interesting. We hiked on to the South Rim trail to the Stage Road campsite for lunch (we had decided to leave our campsite intact and just dayhike on Saturday). Just as we were getting settled into our lunch the rain started and it didn't stop for several hours. We hiked back to our camp in the rain stopping to fill our water bottles at a small creek. We all decided to hunker down in our tents in hopes the rain would taper off.

My raingear did not hold out! I hadn't purchased "ultralight" raingear yet and was using Stearns brand waterproof breathable jacket and pants. I think I should have seam sealed them because they failed right at the top where the zipper meets the hood. Basically I was soaked from my neck to my waist on my front side. Luckily, we were keeping a fairly brisk pace so I didn't get cold but as the temps dropped with the rainfall I could see that hypothermia could have been an issue had we had more than a couple of miles to cover. After changing into dry clothes and reading for a while I began to get in better spirits. The rain stopped around 3pm and we all jumped out of our tents and quickly got a fire going. We managed to dry out most of our wet gear...thank goodness...I was not looking forward to putting that soaking wet rain jacket back on!

* drying out our gear!!!

Sunday morning we got an early start and hiked in just a steady mist for an hour or so. It cleared up for a while but finally got around to raining on us with about a half mile to go. The rain gear held out long enough to get back to the cars. We made tracks to Mary's Diner for a big buffet lunch and then on to home.

I didn't have any new gear on this trip but came to the conclusion that raingear needs to be a purchase I make soon!

Pack weight was right at 30lbs., this was heavier than usual since I carried two days of food, an extra t-shirt, extra change of underwear and the heavier raingear about 25oz total (since giving up the 10oz Dri Ducks that shredded on the first use!). I could have skipped the extra clothes as I really didn't need them.

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