Day 45
2.3 trail miles, 2.4 off trail miles to Cottonwood Pass trailhead, hitched into Lone Pine
I woke up in the middle of the night to some soft pitter patters on the tent. It was the first rain of the trail, 45 days in! When it rains we always double check that everything is set in the tent and won’t get wet. At Kennedy Meadows we did a bit of repair to the tent to make sure it won’t leak in us. I’m still not convinced it won’t leak but last night it held just fine! The tent only has roughly 3,200 miles on it! I know that is a lot, but tents are expensive and I don’t want to have to replace it.
Anyways, it is still drizzling when we wake up and have to get started for the day. A bit of dread fills me as my subconscious brings up every rainy morning of every previous trip and all the days where it didn’t stop raining and my gear never dried out. Then Kevin says the same thing and we talk ourselves through the facts. That we are going into town, if the sun comes out then we will actually get dry here (since there isn’t as much humidity), and it can still be okay. So we get started on our day and soon get warm and don’t mind the drizzle.

We made it down to the campground and it is a 20 mile hitch from a remote place to a small town. Sometimes people have a hard time hitching from here but we get a ride in about half an hour. An absolute answer to prayer. The guy had brought another hiker up and offered to take us down the mountain. He was in an “across the west” road trip and had hiked the John Muir trail so he could let us know about the upcoming trail!

Once in town, we got our boxes and began to see more and more hikers. There was even a deli here that had gluten free bread which was magic. While we were eating there, the power went out in the entire town. They said this happens quite regularly and would probably come back in a few hours. Small town problems.
In the deli, we ran into another couple who we had seen a bit ago and they told us about how they had come down into town because of the storm. From what we had heard, there was a small chance of rain but this rain had turned to snow just a couple miles down trail from where we had gotten off. Roughly where we were planning to camp tonight. From Lone Pine, you can look up at the Sierras a few thousand feet above you and see the weather rolling in. We could see the clouds and the rain in the distance and the snowy ridges. Then we decided to stay the night in town. This is something we never did on the AT l, stay in town because of weather, but told ourselves that on the PCT if there was weather, we would have a budget line saved just for these kind of town stays.
Later in the day, the clouds kind of broke up but the snowy ridges remain. We will see what kind of hiking this makes for tomorrow!










