The Powerline
A
Traumatic Two Day Crossing of Utah’s Highest Range

Black
weather brewing above Beulah as
we neared Red Knob
Pass.
I
don’t know how or when this trip was concocted.
Perhaps it was just an outgrowth of younger aspirations from years
past. Clearly it was devised at a low
elevation in the warmth of summer, far from cold thin air. However it happened I’ve forgotten, but Hunter
and I found ourselves at the west end of the High Uintas Highline trail,
concoction complete, ready for a lightweight speed crossing of the range. Our brutal car shuttle to the other end of
the trail took nearly 10 hours from SLC due to terrible roads and some minor
car trouble; complicated by the lack of restaurants open at 11pm on a Thursday
night in Roosevelt. We spent the short night camping near Mirror Lake
at the Highline trailhead avoiding the persistent drizzle of rain.
Looking
at our packs I would have guessed we were heading up nearby Hayden’s Peak for a
quick afternoon hike. My pack weighed
maybe 12 pounds and Hunter’s was a little more- maybe 15 pounds. We were each carrying a comically serious
minimum. Both of us had good lightweight
rain gear, belay jackets, first aid kits, basic food, and well, emergency
blankets. The idea was that we would
truly lighten up by leaving the sleeping bags and only sleep in basic shelters
inside our emergency blankets wearing our belay jackets. It would be a classic bivy- substituting a
bivy sack for an emergency blanket. It
was late August and summers in the Uintas are fairly mild and besides, we could
survive anything for one night… right?
Well, maybe.
We
finally hit the trail. The first miles
nearing Rocky Sea Pass
went quickly. Scudder
Lake, the junction for Naturalist Basin, Pigeon Milk Spring, all passed
with the obligatory high spirits.
Hunter’s new trail running shoes were already giving him some grief and
he stopped periodically to patch new flesh holes. Reaching Rocky Sea Pass first, the daunting began with a
start. We were already an hour behind
schedule having purposefully overslept; blasted car shuttle. Gazing east I slowly picked out the distant
landmarks. Ostler Peak, Explorer Peak,
and finally, seeming twenty miles away, Dead Horse Pass, partly hidden by an
unnamed sub-peak. The distance was
baffling. I had stood here on another
Highline crossing ten years previous and felt a similar fate; that time I had
five days on my hands.
Hunter
arrived at the Pass shortly. We snapped
a few pictures and silently acknowledged the distance. We moved on quickly, knowing time was only
against us. The perceived distance made Rock Creek
Basin seem like an eon to
pass. We ran the first two or three
downhill miles, packs jostling along, until we hit the main stream. This began the measured climb out. Multiple miles found us back in clearings,
near the tree line, lagging. Here we
stopped our first rest of the day, about a mile from Ledge Lake. I tried to eat, but was barely able to finish
a cliff bar- Carrot Cake, my favorite.
The daunting I felt at Rocky
Sea had migrated into
anxiety and insecurity. We were going a
lot slower than I had hoped and I was feeling a lot more tired than I had
expected. I figured the hurting would
start at Red Knob Pass
(pass number three) but we were already feeling it one pass early. Choking down the end of my bar I glanced over
at Hunter patching his feet again. I
knew he must be in pain but as usual, he offered no complaint.
The
next several miles over Dead
Horse Pass
passed in a haze. I remember coming
across an odd note at a trail junction from a solo hiker worried he might be
lost. No sight of him so maybe he
survived. We watched the weather closely
as we reached the pass. The previous
gray clouds were building dark with intensity and the wind was howling like a
freeway. Weather aside it felt damn good
to be knocking off another pass. I stood
and hollered down at the blue-green Dead
Horse Lake,
hoping EJOD, the blessed lake to the west, would acknowledge. We paid our homage to the goat throne built
and destroyed nearly a decade before on a past visit to the waters of
EJOD. Finding the hidden trail off Dead Horse
Pass I was able to run
the downhill to the lake, but Hunter with his feet in pain wasn’t as quick and
hiked most of the way off. Reaching the
lake, we came across the only hikers we saw in our entire crossing. A father and his two adult boys were camped
out for the week, but had forgotten their tent and had constructed a basic
shelter with a poncho. We chatted and
shared our goal of crossing; they were disbelieving and almost laughed when we
told them where we were headed and the distance we still needed to travel. It was already after 3 P.M. and and we had hoped for two more passes and loads of
miles.
Two
miles further and were moving up the Scottish-like green slopes of Red Knob
Pass. Somehow horse meat was the topic
conversation keeping our minds off the task ahead. We were moving slower now and clouds were
growing sinister and the rain was wetting my brim. It was too steep to run, and we instead paced
ourselves moderately uphill. As we
neared the base of the Pass we looked west to see Beulah, and the entire Allsop Lake
area engulfed in the blackness of a Uinta fall storm. It was moving our way, and we needed to turn
the power on. The western peaks were
already white with snow and we knew our time was short. Reached the first of the two Red Knob passes the
thunder was already deafening and the lightning sickly close. Flash… one, two, Boom. It was too near. We hit the true pass and strangely found time
to take several pictures before the deluge of hail and snow hit us from behind. Hastily we were running again, this time to preserve
our lives. Initially we stuck to the
mellow switchbacks descending into Lake
Fork, but as the hail increased
and the lightning struck nearby we took to barreling straight down the
hill. The nearest trees were nearly a
mile off and in our minds, our only salvation from the lightning. We should have taken the advice of the sheep
we passed as we ran and stayed put- doing a lightning drill. But somehow that mile passed almost
momentarily fueled by adrenaline and thoughts of self preservation. We squatted in the stunted trees and waited. Fifteen minutes and the lighting had passed,
but the hail was still pounding, mixed with snow. We moved on sighting sheep herder smoke in
the distance. Maybe they would let us
stop in for a visit and dry out- an over-protective blue heeler gave us our
answer.
The
trail into Lake Fork was long since lost and we were
soaked. The clouds and incessant hail
brought a darkness that made it seem like a early winter evening. We trudged downhill, feet soaked, avoiding
the bogged meadows and the overgrown pines.
Finally, we unearthed the map out and figured the trail was on the opposite
side of the river and there we headed.
The trail was a river of melted hail and snow which further waterlogged
my aching feet. But it felt good to at
least know where we were with three major passes and over twenty miles behind
us. We reached the next junction and
knew we needed to get dry. Hypothermia
was gnawing at my body. Optimally we had
hoped to cross Porcupine
Pass the first day,
leaving day two much easier. Yet, here
we were, at least 8 miles from the pass with only two hours of wet dusk-light
left with both of us borderline hypothermic.
We decided to gut it out for another hour and then make camp. The next two miles were hell. We were both frozen; the trail was a river of
ice, we were beat, and for me, the anxiety was overwhelming. My mind we filled with fears of hypothermia,
snowfall, extreme distances, and the thought of having left my wife home
alone.
-
The
hour passed and we found some basic shelter in a dwarfed grove of trees at
nearly 10,500 feet. We wasted no time in
building a fire knowing it would be our only salvation from the moisture. My hip which was injured training for a past
marathon began to seize up and I shuffled around looking for firewood. Hunter was hobbling too on his tortured
feet. The hail had changed to a bitter
cold rain and all the wood was soaked and gray.
Only with coercion from Hunter’s small stove were we able to finally get
a small fire started. What a difference. Spirits were lifted from trauma to
moderation. We set about building our
shelters. Mine the footprint from my SD
tent tarped over me in an A-Frame; Hunter’s, a
hammock with a rigged rainfly. We had
left the tent at the last minute to shave an extra pound. Fools we were.
The
rain broke for a period just long enough for us to cook and eat. I couldn’t wait to get into my shelter and go
to sleep and opted against the sleeping pills.
Finally I was listening to the crinkling of the emergency blankets as we
each crawled into our foil cocoon. The
temperature was dropping and the struggle to get into dry clothes left me
shivering uncontrollably. I thought the
blanket would warm quickly, but an hour later I was still shivering
direly. From the sound of quivering foil
nearby I knew that Hunter was suffering a similar fate. Making the cold worse was the continual
condensation that was building up inside the blanket. It was slowly dripping down the foil bag and
soaking my jacket, my thermal tights, and anything else inside the bag. My cotton bandana did a quick mop-up job
every 15 minutes in hopes of thwarting the condensation but two hours later I
was still fighting the same battle: shivering, condensation, moping, hiding
from the rain. I doze off for an
hour. Thunder. Boom.
I’m awake again and colder than ever feeling like I am trapped in a
morgue body bag.
“How’s
it going man?” Hunter mumbled my way.
His tone hid his discomfort. I
reached for the indiglo on my watch; it’s only just
past midnight. I muttered a weak
response and so began our hourly discourse.
Neither of us could sleep; too cold, too nervous, and maybe just too
scared. The night drags on; hypothermia
was what I had felt three hours ago. I
struggled to remember the last time I was ever this cold. Winter scout camp? No…
Five A.M. the rain and hail had stopped and we were both finally too
miserable to stay on our personal foil hell.
I hear the crinkling of foil and Hunter is out of his hammock heading
for dry firewood. We were both in dire
need of warmth. The prior night’s fire
was long since dead and we spent a half hour stumbling around in search of dry
wood. With the final help of the
portable blowtorch our respite was delivered.
Dawn was finally struggling to break through the heavy clouds.
An
hour of warming beside the fire breathed some limited life back into our tired
minds and stiff legs. Breakfast was left
over dehydrated dinner for Hunter and dried fruit for me. We broke camp slowly and finally hit the
trail at 8:30 A.M. anxious to be on the far side of something; at least one
more step closer to motorized travel. I
figured at a minimum we had 40 miles to go today. I tried not to think about it. Our first checkpoint was the junction for Squaw Pass,
our first reasonable emergency exit to the south. The GPS said it was 4 miles as the crow flies
and the distance seemed to drag on. We
descended off our camp’s high plateau and hear an elk bugle in the distance. A cow elk and her calf dashed north away from
our trail. We head through high country
and pass several old sheep herding camps and move from light timber into the
high elevation plateau of upper Lake
Fork. The junction for Squaw Pass
was passed without a word, deciding to continue on and abandon an easy
exit. The clouds were slowly rising and
sun hit one of the higher peaks to the east.
I prayed it would melt off the hail that blanketed the ground and save
my feet from the constant cold.
The giant switchback that
sweeps upward towards Porcupine
Pass loomed ahead like a
trail to Mordor. It was white with snow
and seemed to be chiseled out of the dark mountainside as it traversed several
cliff bands before one last crooked turn to the clouded Pass. The skeletal cairns, as tall as a man, haunted the valley
and led the vague trail up to the switchback.
I reached the swithback and looked back at Hunter and the distance
behind. Lake Fork, which we just crossed
spreads south as far as my eyes can see, fading into cloud covered peaks in the
distance. A monstrous
distance leaving me shuddering to think of the distance ahead.
In the past miles we had
heard two separate rock slides, likely due to the thawing rocks. Hunter caught me at the base of the
switchback. He wisely suggested we
better move quick up the swithback in order to avoid
any chance of getting nailed by a avalanche of rock. I followed his lead and removed my
omnipresent techno in hope of hearing something before seeing it. The trail was now the only area not covered
in white due to the stream of foot-soaking water running down. The elevation climb began again. We reached the pass and looked east. The sun was impressing itself on Tungsten Basin below; a siren song to our sodden,
cold feet. We quickly put the seemingly
perpetually stormy and endless stretch of Lake Fork
behind us and ran the short swithbacks down to the lakes below. Soon I was jogging between the hearty cairns picking the trail to the nearby Tungsten Pass. Here, for the first time time
in twenty four hours, I thought that we might just pull it off. Only a heap of distance to go and one final
pass: Anderson Pass, the chief of Uinta passes.
At
Tungsten Pass we stopped and rested for the first
time that day. We had already covered
over ten miles in poor conditions and the spark of hope was rekindled. Once again I struggled to eat anything more
than a Clif Bar.
The beef jerky I had so lovingly created a week earlier brought only
feelings of nausea. We dropped directly
off Tungsten Pass downclimbing some short cliff bands
to avoid a long trail jog. The weather
appeared to improve to the south, but in every other direction the clouds were
again building. Emmons and Kings Peak
were both shrouded in heavy clouds and Anderson Pass
was entirely hidden. Porcupine Pass
behind us was again enclosed in a blanket of gray. The Tungsten sun had been a fleeting prize.
The
muddy rolling hills of Yellowstone
Basin passed slowly. Thunder boomed in the direction of Anderson Pass we again felt ominously like
hobbits approaching the gates of Mordor on a quest gone wrong. Maybe it would lift by the time we reached
the foundation of monolith. We herded
random sheep as we moved, starting them from their grazing posts. Surely we were two of only a handful of
humanoids seen this summer by these creatures.
Mutton was the conversation. We
slowly moved up the lightly tree’d hillside and then
up to the barren slopes below the pass.
Large boulders were strewn across the area like jacks in a game of
marbles. Out of the mental safety of the
trees the anxiety of being hit by lightning accentuated suddenly. The lighting was now more frequent and
thunder tore through our ears. The ever
present drizzle upgraded itself to full rain and snow appeared to be falling
just above us on the mountainside. Kings Peak just to the east was being beaten by whips of
lightning. We huddled next to one of
these boulders feeling like mice trapped below an ogre. If we continued on we faced serious risk of
being struck by lightning. If we waited
we risked having to spend another night of hypothermia or worse. We opted instead for some divine guidance,
apologizing for putting ourselves once again in a bad situation.
With
the entreaty spoken, we looked at each other.
“What do you think?” Hunter asks through the pelting rain. I had a strange ease that to me signaled us
to move on. I responded as such and
asked him what he felt. Nothing
definitive was his response. We both
started to move, the decision was made.
There was a chance we might get struck by lightning on the crossing, but
then there was a certainty that we would be hurting or possibly die by delaying
our progress and spending another night.
The swithbacks were arduous and the echoing thunder resounded around us. Yet the electricity seemed to be far above
us. As we moved up the mountainside the
clouds seemed to rise with us. Although
our surrounding peaks were still socked in, we could see south and west across
the vast expanse that we had just crossed in the last couple of hours.
The
snow was getting deeper. Again, the only
area clear of snow was the small stream running down the middle of the
trail. The snow and hail was hitting us
sideways like standing in front of a snow making machine. The lightning had seemed to lift as well and
our optimism grew. Maybe we’d see
another group waiting out the storm on Anderson Pass. Fat chance; we rounded the last switchback,
crested the pass, and entered onto the King’s Peak super highway. Henry’s Fork to the north almost looked dry:
another potential emergency exit. We could
take the chute and be at Dollar
Lake in an hour
surrounded by babbling scouts. Or we
could finish off the last 20 miles. At
this point, the answer was obvious and the question didn’t even get
entertained.
The
miles leading down into Pinter
Basin were a relief but
at the same time filled with trepidation.
The clouds were soon far above us as we dropped down into the vast basin
but the snow was still over our ankles and the trail that we were following was
dubious at best. The entire area was a
mix of gray and white, with the peaks around us stretching into the
clouds. The familiar Gunsight Pass finally came into view and I kept expecting to
see a cluster of Boy Scouts or Wasatch
Mountain Clubbers hiking
towards the now destitute summit of King’s Peak. Miles in the distance we could see the dark
hollow of North Pole Pass- the literal last pass on the route. In the dark gray of the late afternoon it
looked like the end of the world away. I
figured it was at least 10 miles away, maybe 15 miles by trail. Three hours I mistakenly thought. We reached the Painter
Basin trail junction and decided in
the interest of time to take the more direct route along the Uintah River,
even though it meant eventually more climbing than the circumspect upper route.
Luckily
the route along the river was mostly straightforward and dropped elevation
quickly taking us out of the snow. We
made good time following the occasionally vague trail for the next six miles. We passed a huge herd of elk hiding on the
outskirts of a massive meadow. We
finally passed the first trail junction which I mistook as the second. Three miles further we were dragging. We hadn’t stopped in nearly 20 miles and were
didn’t realize we were running on empty.
At what seemed like an eternity we reached the final trail junction for Fox Lake. Even with the impending darkness we both
decided to sit and rest. We both choked
down some food and I offer Hunter some Ibuprophen,
which he hesitantly took. It was the
first drugs he had taken in years.
The
food and drugs did wonders and within a mile we were each feeling far superior
to our previous lagging. The elevation
we had so enjoyed loosing now required gaining and in three miles we were back
to our previous elevation. North Pole
Pass gleemed
with a gap in the clouds and we knew we were getting close. If we could just make it to the pass before
it was pitch black, we would be fine.
Another two miles brought us to a Forest
Service trail detour which we promptly ignored.
One more mile was Fox
Lake and the ruined
cabins of a past era. On the far side of
the lake, we saw only the second people of our whole trip hidden off in the
trees enjoying the early evening. I
wonder what they thought as we trooped by with our small packs into the early night.
The
base of North Pole Pass
was finally reached in the last moments of visibility. I had remembered this pass as being the
easiest of the passing, but now found it abrupt, barren, and name
appropriately, cold. The starlight
provided enough light for us to see the trail without needing headlamps and I
struggled to keep up with Hunter’s climbing power. We were both fighting a personal battle
trying to keep up with whoever was in front.
Unable to see the distance above, the trail dragged on forever. But soon we were on the upper tundra of the
North Pole making our way across the mile wide pass. Once again the trail was marked by massive
stacks of rocks the stood out eerily against our newly donned headlamps. They were spaced just far enough apart to
make us think we had lost the trail only to pick out a shape in the
distance. Far in the bottoms below, I
could see the headlamps of a car; presumably near the end of our trail. I felt a hint of relief.
We
pass the vertical pine pole that apparently marked the North Pole and started
our hopefully short descent to Chepeta Lake. We spread out as we travel down the snowy,
wide, east side of the pass, each of us watching for the cairns that fed us downward. The trail was entirely inobvious
due to the snow, lack of traffic, and darkness, but somehow we are draw
northward and find ourselves switchbacking down into
the black depths of our final miles. The
trail leveled and we decided to stop and rest next to an old creepy sign
pointing to lands unknown. Our last rest
was nearly ten miles past and now in the dark, our race against the light was
already lost.
I
remembered my last descent into Chepeta Lake,
ten years earlier, as being somewhat confusing but this time I underestimated
the dark and our physical exhaustion. We
started downward on those last four miles, finally leaving the snow, but once
again entering the mud. The sky was
moonless, the stars covered by clouds and then we entered into thickets of
trees; it was the wild dark you rarely discover. Our weak LED headlamps did a poor job of
dividing the obscurity and we stumbled from cairn to cairn, poor trail to poor
trail. I watched the GPS incessantly,
watching the tenths of a mile tick by.
2.1 miles left, 2.0, 1.9. Finally
we were a half mile from the glorious finish I had dreamed about for months and
prayed for what seemed like days. We
moved out of the trees, pushed ourselves through a thicket of brush and
suddenly we were standing on the shore of a partially drained lake. We had done it! It was just past 11 pm and over 65 miles and
nearly 24 hours total travel hours of difficult, anxious, if not borderline
perilous, hiking behind us. We had
crossed the greater Uintah
Range in two days,
matching seven towering passes, sleeping in hypothermic conditions,
and surviving heinous electrical storms and near blizzard conditions.
Hunter’s
truck was just beyond the knoll and we could finally rest from our near
trauma. Just beyond which knoll? Somehow in the next 15 minutes we became disorientated. With the inability to see more than thirty
feet in front of ourselves, with no stars in the sky, and in our exhausted
state we found ourselves walking in every which direction sure that this way
was the correct way. A trail would be
found, then lost, then another found. We
would pass the same log again and again, follow a river downstream, then back
upstream. Frustrations ran high. I almost smashed the GPS in irritation; how
could it be so wrong?
It wasn’t. Near 2 AM we stood at a spot we had passed
several times. One of us noticed an odd
shape to the right; it was a berm of earth too linear
to be natural. We shuffled over and
found ourselves on the western edge of Chepeta Lake’s
dam. Damn. We been within 100 yards of the road
countless times, but our bubble of light never reached the necessary
distance. We walked the quarter mile
length of the dam and found ourselves walking the dirt road towards the
trailhead parking. For nearly three
hours we had bumbled in frustration.
We
both crashed in the front bucket seats of Hunter’s truck and soon passed
out. We were only awake long enough to
start the car and blast the heater on every hour or so. My dreams are surreal. Am I hiking or have I lost the game? I wake early, far from lost, happy to be so
worn down, so far from home, our goal so complete. We start the car and head for home down the
beaten, wet, washboard dirt road. The
dishes were done.

Sour weather, round one. Hunter
below Red Knob Pass.
www.greysaltlake.com
© Arie
Leeflang Collection 2006-2008