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Wilderness Home

Backpacking Alone in the wilderness

 
  Are you better off alone in the wilderness? Only you can answer that. I can say that sitting on top of a mountain or walking through an empty valley is an entirely different experience when I am alone. It is both more beautiful and perhaps also more melancholy than it could ever be with another.
Backpack alone in the wilderness and you begin to realize how entirely indifferent nature is to you. This trail or that one  it doesn't matter. You might stay warm or get cold, live or die. The sun rises and then sets. It may take away your chills or burn your skin. Nature is without intention. This is a part of its beauty.
There is a lot of food in the mountains. You can eat your  fill of currants at 13,000 feet in the Sierra Nevada of California. Trout are in small lakes, waiting to be caught if you need a meal.
  The sun can warm you in the morning, the moon can light your way on night hikes,  A misstep here or there, however, and you could have fallen a thousand feet. Lightning might have struck you down, or rain might have soaked me and allowed the night air to freeze me. You must pay more attention when you are alone in the wilderness.
  Is nature malicious? No. It is not benevolent either. It just is what it is. When you are by myself, you become very aware of my surroundings. You are aware  of any little pain in your foot or shoulder - but it is an awareness without worry.
  This awareness is present when I am awestruck by the brilliance of a turquoise lake nestled beneath fields of summer snow, in a hanging valley. This scenery is outside my control or comprehension. You watch for a moment and nothing happens, but it is clear that rocks have tumbled into the lake a thousand times. Here, things happen on a time scale unknown to my senses or experience. I just look in wonder, thought itself stops, and You are in a peaceful state of mind - one that doesn't seem possible in a group.
To experience its beauty in this way, I need to be alone. At times there is a feeling of loneliness. I want to share the experience with others. However, the most I really can do is share the view. Being alone is part of the experience.
 However, it's much easier to plan a trip alone. It's difficult to get two or more friends to schedule time off work on the same dates. Often, they can't take enough time in any case.
  There personal backpacking style differences too. I like to go lightweight and cheap. Taking a plane to a backpacking destination, as some of my friends would do, is too expensive. I could take three trips for the cost of one expensive one. As much as I would love the company, I'm not willing to give up those other two trips.
  Unlike myself, you may find the camaraderie the most important part of a backpacking trip. In that case you are not better off alone. Even if you share my taste for cheap adventure, you may value that one trip with friends more than three alone.
  One final point: Most backpackers don't fully consider the freedom that comes from being alone. Even the most compatible individuals will not need breaks at the same time, be hungry at the same time, want to do the same things or hike the same distance. When you are alone in the wilderness, there is a natural rhythm and freedom that can never be there when several people's needs have to be balanced.
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  Knowing a few wild berries you can eat can isn't just about potential survival situations. It also means you can have delicious healthy snacks and a good excuse for a break when hiking. Here are some of the wild foods we ate on one day hike in Glacier National Park: Blueberries... Service Berries... Rose Hips... Blackberries... High Bush Cranberries, Strawberries, Raspberries, Thimbleberries, Currants.
Pitching your tent in the right place can mean staying much warmer. Cold settles into valleys and cold winds blow up on the hilltops and mountain tundra. The best locations then, are often somewhere in between - as long as you can find a level spot to camp.
  A small piece of  plastic can make a nice lightweight mat outside your tent door. It makes it easier to put on shoes without getting dirt in the tent, and provides a place to cook if you are careful.
 


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