The situation: Friday afternoon.
Borderline-legal parking spot. Packs stocked with two nights
provisions, rope, and a double rack. 2.5 hours of daylight, thirty
minutes till the road closes. A forest guarded by “No
Trespassing.” And again, the solution is made apparent by asking
the obvious question: What would Jimmy Dunn do?
We shoulder packs, glance both ways,
and scramble up into the woods.
The conundrum was how best to approach
our destination, a lone crag of granite perched high on the shoulders
of Pikes Peak. Option A: hike ten miles, gaining 4,000 feet of
elevation. Option B: hitchhike up the Pikes Peak highway, which the
city's custodial staff have graciously denied to overnight parking
because tourists are more profitable than locals. Road closes at 5.
It's 4:30. The rangers, notorious for their brusque demeanor and zero
tolerance for any behavior outside the normalcy of their
fee-collecting regimen, will be patrolling the highway, but a few
cars might still be making the drive up. It's decision time; either
take the chance on the highway or drive back to Manitou and start a
5-hour hike. Do we take the chance? I pose the question, our eyes
meet, and we decide without a word.
Forty minutes later we disembark from
the sports car driven by a friendly ARMY cavalry scout. It's near
sunset at 13,000 feet and a sharp wind bites though our button-down
shirts (gotta look respectable to catch a ride). We don warmer
jackets in the lee of a boulder and hike out into the wilderness.
Above looms the steep north face of Pikes Peak; below stretches the
vast sprawl of Colorado Springs. Labyrinthine neighborhoods studded
with deciduous trees intersperse with cubic facets of strip malls,
all connected by arterial boulevards into a vast humming circuit
board that stretches out into the plains, into a limitless horizon.
We scramble over boulders and trace
sinuous grassy ledges down the ridge, pausing to gaze at the various
crags on the peak, scoping for steep rock, scoping for promising
lines. As dusk settles in, the grid below flickers in the lights of
its eternal day. The city will forge ahead without pause, despite
darkness, rain, and change of seasons. A billion bits of information
and half a million beating hearts quivering in suspended animation in
the tireless web of commerce that we call modern life. In some
sequestered corner of that throbbing matrix lie my overflowing inbox,
my credit card bills, my chores, my rent, my pending applications, my
insecurities, my fears.
We downclimb a small step and reach a
steep scree field. Our feet sink past the ankles as we bound down the
slope in gaping strides, descending in laughter towards the pines
below. In the dark forest we eat a simple meal and sip hot tea,
staring up through ponderosa silhouettes at clean, steep granite
etched against crisp stars, promise of hard things to come tomorrow.
I fall asleep without a care in the world.
Waking up in paradise, David Fay scoping the goodness
Chekhov said if you place a pistol on the mantle in the first act, it must go of by the third. Accordingly, if you hike in two #5s, two #6s, and a #4 Bigbro, you might as well use them.
Who says you can't climb 9 pitches in a day on a 3 pitch high feature? David on the last pitch of the route we saved for after dinner.
Neat stuff Drew! Hope you is well
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