Entries to Win Afghan

Sign up to receive the Books Leaving Footprints Newsletter. Comes out occasionally. No spam. No list swapping. Just email me! jhyshark@gmail.com Previous gifts include a short story, a poem, and coupons. Add your name, and don't miss out!

Saturday, May 3, 2025

Day Two- Much Better!

 Day Two- yesterday- was much more pleasant. Although the sun never shone except for about 5 minutes, it was warmer (upper 40s maybe into the 50s), and the sky did not leak on us.

We enjoyed breakfast sitting outside in our little chairs. I have almost all cold-soak meals because it eliminates the need to carry a stove. But David had a stove, so I got to enjoy a hot cup of coffee. I wasn't about to turn that down!
hiker meal setup


We were on the trail at 9:10. The first part of the day was not hilly at all. The trail follows the Manistee River Bluffs, passing by many more oxbows. No sun to make the water blue, though. Most of this area is accessible by vehicles, and there are multiple campsites that are used not only by hikers but all sorts of campers. We passed through one encampment with a trailer and 3 tents with four guys standing around a campfire drinking beer for breakfast. They were friendly, but not our thing.
Manistee River Oxbow


I've probably showed you a picture of every time I've passed it. This is the marker on the Cadillac-Traverse City Indian Trail. I've been to all the markers and wrote a newspaper column about it last year. This is where I completed my 100 miles last year. I'm not there yet this year.
Indian Trail marker


One really nice trail picture with the ground covered with emerging Trout Lilies.
trail winding through woods


The final miles of the day were hilly again, and very muddy. But we got 'em done, although not very quickly. David's walking stick is a hollow tube, and he's a horn player. He celebrated our completion with a couple of good bugles!

We hiked 8 miles to the car, then grabbed some late lunch at a little restaurant. I was tired, but the whole trip was not as physically difficult as I thought it might be. My back is a little sore, so I have to work on carrying the weight, but the miles were no problem at all. We did a total of 15.5 for the two days. I know this is about what I was hiking in one day a couple of years ago, but I'm still working my way up again.
man blowing through a tube


When he sends me the pictures he took, there may be one of me I'll share.

Also, the chapter had a hike today, which I'll probably tell you about tomorrow.

Miles hiked in 2025 (at the end of yesterday):160.2. Hike 100 Challenge: 68 miles

North Country Trail, campsite along the Manistee River to east end of 12 Road near Sherman, MI. 8.0 miles

I will show you one thing I had to do today... deal with a pile of wet gear. You can't ingore that or you'll have it all moldy.
wet camping gear


See Who Wants to Be Dry?

3 comments:

Ann said...

Glad your second day was better than the first. I wouldn't have turned down a cup of hot coffee either.

Sharkbytes said...

Ann- right! I don't care much when it's warmer, but the hot liquid felt really good

The Oceanside Animals said...

Lulu: "Moldy gear doesn't sound good! Although if it smelled bad enough, it might be fun to roll around on it a little ..."