7.7 miles on Wednesday Night. I got caught in the monsoon midway through the hike and got wet.
This is the triplog I posted on HAZ:
A wet hike in MMRP…
I was planning on just doing one of my normal workout loops in MMRP. I figured it’d be hot and dry.
After my wife dropped me off at the entrance station, I walked through the horse staging area and then hiked Shallmo, getting what I think might be a good photo along the way. Not sure I’ll be able to retrieve it because the camera seems to be dead at the moment – but the memory card might still work.
Anyway, I continued on Pemberton and started seeing lightning off in the distance. Started up Scenic and noticed rain converging on the park from both east and west. Took a photo of this phenomenon, put the camera in a plastic zip lock bag (which I maybe didn’t totally zip?) and continued on. Moments later the rain started…
It was coming at me sideways from the east. Gusts of wind while hiking the ridgeline of the Scenic trail nearly caused me to lose my balance several times. As I continued on, the trail turned into a small stream, forcing me to one side and then the other (repeatedly) for better footing. At other times, I walked through the water because that was easier. The wind was especially fierce at a few points where it was funneled over the ridge by terrain to the east. The sideways rain was especially hard in these areas and gave my exposed skin a good scouring. The brim of my hat protected my face and side of my head.
I got out my headlamp for the last descent from the ridge. The rain had, somehow, started blowing at me from the other direction. I got a call from my daughter wondering where I was as I made my way down. She and my son set out to pick me up. I told them to bring lots of towels.
The rain let up somewhat by the time I got to Cinch, but a relatively minor wash was flowing pretty heavily and I had to figure out how to ford it. I tried crossing at a narrower section, but the bank on the other side was too high to go up in the wet conditions. I backtracked and crossed where the trail was. The water was about calf deep.
The rain had pretty much stopped by the time I got to Escondido. I met my kids at the entrance station. My son had driven his jeep and had somehow managed to cross three heavily flowing washes on the way to the park.
On the way back, he passed some stopped vehicles and crossed two of the washes, but at the last wash a police officer had blocked the road on the other side. We got out and crossed the wash on foot, then talked to the officer for a while. We waited and noticed that the water level was going down. But there was still a lot of debris – large rocks and some branches in the road. Four of us, myself, my kids, and another motorist spent 15-20 minutes clearing the worst of the debris. There was now a driveable path from one side to the other. Somewhat to my surprise, the cop let us all cross – first the northbound direction and then the southbound.
It turned out to be a much bigger adventure than I expected!
Nora says:
We were in town for two nights last week and got to watch that storm blow in while standing in our driveway. The headlights near the park were clearly visible even though it was still sunny at our house. Then the clear line of the rain and dust advanced quickly from the north and east until we were fully engulfed by the wind and fat drops. Hope your camera is ok, wish you had more photos to go with your description. It sure is nice to have a family that cares about your safety, and lucky they had the right vehicle.
August 11, 2018 — 5:52 pm
Kevin says:
Hi Nora,
Sadly, that camera still seems to be dead. It’s an expensive repair – I haven’t decided yet whether I’ll have it repaired.
Waterproof cases are available for the various Sony RX100, but they’re large and bulky.
Kevin
August 12, 2018 — 12:05 am
Ben Huot says:
Ben and Marilyn were in town as well. Quite the show. Rain, wind and lightning. But warm rain sure is weird.
August 11, 2018 — 7:54 pm
Kevin says:
Yes, warm rain… I was wearing a shorts and a short sleeved shirt, but was never cold during my hike through the rain.
August 12, 2018 — 12:01 am
Amy says:
I’m so glad that I did not know at the time that you were out there in this storm! The lightening was fierce and crazy amounts of rain! Glad you made it safely off the trail and home!
August 12, 2018 — 3:41 pm
Linda says:
Well that WAS an adventure!!! It is very reminiscent of the hike in the park Janet, Bob, you and I experienced a few years back but worse !! Glad you made it out safely but so sorry about the camera. Always think one zip lock is enough but I guess not!
August 12, 2018 — 5:27 pm
Kevin says:
Yes, I did think of that hike that you, me, Janet, and Bob did – especially when the rain started coming down sideways.
About the zip-lock bag… it had been sitting in the bottom of my camera bag for a while. It may have had a hole in it. Or, as I said in the HAZ triplog, it might be that it wasn’t totally zipped or became somewhat unzipped when I folded the zip-lock to stuff it back into my camera bag.
August 13, 2018 — 10:09 am