Monday, September 24, 2018

Having a Grand Time








Blogpost  - Sept 24, 2018

FMM: 62,000 steps

            As I crawled into the chilly waters of Bright Angel Creek fully dressed, I heaved a sigh of relief.  Despite a 105 degree day and a frantic a final hour of searching for cool drinking water (thank you, Linda) while a fellow hiker (ok, it was Bob) carried my backpack, poles, and me as I staggered across the final bridge after nine hours and thirty minutes, I had made it to the bottom of the Grand Canyon.  Yes, indeed.  The only problem was that niggling sign that is posted throughout the the Grand Canyon: “Hiking down is optional.  Hiking up is mandatory.”  But more on that later.

            A little over a year ago, my friend Linda announced at bunco one night that she would like to hike to the bottom of the Grand Canyon and back up again.  That seemed like a fun and interesting thing to do as I sipped wine and nibbled hors d’ ouerves in comfortable surroundings .  Sure.  Why not?  I was in.   My husband decided he was, too.   And so began our quest to prove that we weren’t actually old and out of shape.

            We were lucky to get a reservation at Phantom Ranch, the only lodging available at the bottom of the canyon; it can accommodate fewer than 100 people.   Nowadays one has to enter a lottery in order to get a spot; we were able to secure ours by persistent phone calling exactly one year in advance.

            We started a training program in January.  I joined a running group and ran a 5K.  I ran it nearly ten minutes slower than I had run the same distance three years before. That wasn’t too encouraging. Of course, I was carrying a few extra pounds, and I was without my uber-fit former training partner Bunny.   I even joined Weight Watchers.

            We spent June in Germany for a month.  We hiked up the mountainside each week and rode bikes most nights.  We were feeling fitter and firmer.  Miraculously, a few pounds were disappearing.

            Back in Columbia, MO, Bob, Linda, and I started training on hills several nights a week.  I must admit that Chapel Hill is decidedly NOT the Grand Canyon; however, Columbians were most impressed when they learned that we climbed up and down it several times in a row and also that we even went to the eight floor parking garage downtown to hone our skills.  We walked on the treadmill in the air -conditioned recreation center and boldly set the incline at 12%, the steepest incline in the Grand Canyon. We hiked with temperatures in the 90s , went to state parks and reconnoitered  through the woods on the weekends, often getting quite lost, and practiced carrying our backpacks.  Why, I even got a tick bite.  I was ready for anything.   At the last minute, I purchased a snake bite kit lest we encounter any rattlers in Arizona.  I am woman; hear me scream.    And I was sure I would get the lengthy direction book out and read it carefully if the kit should be needed.  


            I also did what I do best:  gathered way too much information about hiking in the Grand Canyon.  Out most trusted source?  You Tube, of course. We watched  GoPro videos created by fit young hikers who made it to the bottom in two and a half hours.  We carefully observed the trails and determined that they didn’t seem that bad.   How hard could it be to walk on a few boulders or down a few steps? Furthermore, no one on the videos – even the jogger – seemed to be scared or out of breath.  Bob announced that it might take us an extra hour or so, but that we would certainly reach the bottom of the South Kaibab Trail in four to five hours.   Then we would have lots of time to enjoy ourselves at the bottom.

            The day before our hike, we got our first look at the Grand Canyon not as a natural wonder, but as a natural adversary.   We listened to a guide pointing and telling two tourists that the green area below called Indian Gardens was a four and a half hour hike.  We could see it with our own eyes; it didn’t look that far away.  Bob looked at me and whispered, “No way will it take us that long.”  I felt reassured. 

Finally, we began our descent down South Kaibab Trail  (7.5 miles) at 5:48 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 8, 2018.    One hour later when we still hadn’t covered quite a mile, we discovered just how long a mile could be.  I also learned just how tall those steps are and just how short my legs are.  

            When we had visited the Grand Canyon a few years ago, Bob had purchased the book Over the Edge: Death in the Grand Canyon.  It contains “gripping accounts of all known fatal mishaps in the most famous of the World’s Seven Natural Wonders.”
He read it avidly before our trip, and later was able to recount mishaps that had occurred at nearly every point along our journey.  It was a bit unnerving to hear, “this is the spot where a 35-year-old very fit woman stepped back to let a hiker by and fell into the canyon. “ Or, “this is where the marathoners got off the trail.”  You get the picture?   The three of us made a pact that should one of us fall into the canyon, the other two would make sure that the story got into the next edition of the book.   I promised to make Bob’s story extra gripping.
           
          The temperature at bottom of the canyon is about twenty degrees warmer than the temperature at the top.  So, as we climbed down, it got hotter and hotter .  The day we went, the temperature at the top was predicted to be 85; the temperature at the bottom reached 105. 

          We had packed lots of high calorie foods such as Clif bars, trail mix,  peanut butter, etc.  By Weight Watchers standards, I had way exceeded my daily points count before I got to the first mile.    I thought I was just fine.  We were also drinking lots of water and electrolytes.

          As our journey dragged on hour after hour, we began to wonder just how long it was really going to take us.  We had already exceeded the average descent time of four to five hours. Bob was reminded of his three knee surgeries, and began to feel a bit unsteady. Linda was reminded of her previous trip down and despaired a bit at Skeleton Point. Me?  Linda deemed me “Tough trekkin’ Tizzie ” as I had no real complaints.  I seemed to be faring better than my partners.   I wasn’t hungry, thirsty, tired, or overly hot.  At least I didn’t think I was any of those things. Furthermore, turning back was not really an option.

            As the day wore on and the sun beat down, the water in our water bladders got hotter and hotter.  It wasn’t very refreshing, so I didn’t drink it as often.  It was so hot that I didn’t want to eat much, and I wasn’t hungry. And I hate electrolyte drinks anyway, so I drank what I thought was the bare minimum of them.  And I keep trekkin’ along.

          Finally, we saw the Colorado River, a sign that we were nearing the bottom.  Linda and I were out in front, and we began to pick up our pace.  We had only a few more steep switchbacks to maneuver.  On we went.  The next milestone was the bridge across the river followed by a tunnel that promised shelter and relief from the heat.  We got inside and sat down.  Now we were just a mile from Phantom Ranch, and that mile was blessedly all flat.   I had made it!  Or had I?

          I suddenly felt very ill.  I was nauseous and light-headed.  Bob and Linda were urging me on as we were, officially, at the bottom.  We had just a flat and easy mile to go.  I could not be urged along.  I was weak, wobbly, and on the verge of something bad happening.  Bob took my backpack and poles, and helped me along.  He urged me to drink the last of the water, which was hot and made me feel worse.  Linda found some drinking water, and they deposited me in Bright Angel Creek for a cool down.  After about forty-five minutes, I felt a little better.  I had just plain gotten overheated.  I should have rested more, drunk more, and eaten more.  I didn’t realize that I was getting dehydrated as I felt fine.


          We mostly enjoyed our two nights at the bottom of the canyon.  We wandered a very short distance to some scenic nearby areas.   As we were taking a photo, Bob asked, “I wonder if there’s a name for this canyon.”  Linda’s reply, “Grand?”   


          Remember that sign about “ hiking up is mandatory”?  It ruined Bob’s time at the bottom as he was worrying about getting me to the top.  We consulted the ranger and several other hikers and came up with a plan.   The most torturous part of the plan was the day before our climb up.  Bob determined that I needed to be plied with constant bottles of flavored electrolyte water.  I hate the stuff.  To me, it tastes like colonoscopy prep drinks.  Most of you readers know what those taste like.  Nonetheless, he continuously gave me never-ending large  room-temperature water bottles filled with the stuff to guard me against the next day’s depletion.   Can I say that it ruined my day?  However, I was at his mercy as I was now the weak one who might derail our journey. Previously, I had been worried how I might explain his demise to the kids should his knees give out as this whole thing was my idea .  Turns out he was worried about explaining my demise to the kids if he failed to deliver me to the top.   Luckily, neither of us had any explaining to do.

          I’m happy to report that the hike up Bright Angel Trail (9.5 miles) occurred without incident.  There was much more shade.  The higher we got, the cooler it got.  We took off our backpacks every thirty minutes and rested, ate, and drank.  It only took us nine and a half hours to get up.  Best of all, we didn’t have to write any gripping tales about each other.

          Would I do it again?  Well, it is going to make a great tale at bunco tonight where I am headed shortly to nibble and sip once again.   Ask me again a year or two when I’ve forgotten the details, and I might be talked into it.  In the meantime, I’m happy to wear my Phantom Ranch tee shirt and have begun to prepare for a hike up Taum Sauk, the highest peak in Missouri.  Ok, it’s not really that high, but the book say that it is located in a real mountain range.  I wonder if YouTube has a video on it.


Marching and parching,
I remain

Tizzie/Tiz/ Tizmom/Liz/Elizabeth/Grandma Tizzie/Grizzie/Tough trekkin’ Tizzie