The Black Forest Trail is a 42 mile loop trail located in the mountains of north central PA. It’s about as remote as you can get in PA – it only crosses one paved road. I had done this trail 6 or 7 years ago and apparently was in a fog the whole time because I remembered almost none of the trail from the previous trip.

Day 1 – Saturday, May 13, 2006 – 7.5 miles
Got to the trail about 11:30 after a three hour drive. Started out a little rough. First, about 20 paces into the hike, Charlie tripped, rolled, got his foot caught in the harness of his backpack, and then rolled another 20 feet down the hill. Second, about a half mile later we came to a 30 foot wide stream crossing with no hope of hopping across it on rocks. I tried it barefoot but had problems staying vertical after about three steps because the rocky bottom was so slippery. Put my shoes and socks back on, trudged across the stream, and made a mental note to NEVER leave my Tevas behind again.

Have you ever seen a dog just after he’s gotten a bath where he runs around like a maniac? That was Duncan on our first break three miles in. This dog has enough energy for three dogs. When I took the dogs’ packs off, Charlie (5 years old) and Ackey (8 years old) sauntered around the camp area, got a drink from the spring and ate some food. Not Duncan. Duncan (1 year old) started ripping around at top speed, jumping in the spring and through the stream, bounding off rocks, grabbing twigs and small limbs and dragging them along. At one point he was pouncing on a rock and then throwing it in the air.

Surprisingly, when I started putting the dogs’ packs back on Duncan came right to me to get his. He usually plays “catch me if you can” when you call him.

Got to camp about 5. Set up, ate supper, cleaned up, and crawled into the tent and not a moment too soon. I zippered the door and immediately started hearing rain drops. It rained on and off for the rest of the trip.

Day 2 – Sunday, May 14, 2006 – 11 miles
Ahh! Nothing like putting on wet, slimy shoes and socks on a cold morning. It rained overnight quite a bit so everything inside the tent was damp from the air. Overcast and drizzly most of the day.

Duncan decided he was not going to come to me to get his pack back on after morning break so he’ll be on the leash for the rest of the trip.

Took a break at noon, set up the tent and took a 2 hour nap!!!!!!! And people call this “roughing it”!

The afternoon hike was spent crossing the SAME stream 22 times. At first the stream was narrow and shallow and we could rock hop across. The further downstream we got, the more difficult this became. Around the 8th or 9th crossing, I slipped off a rock and one shoe went in. At the next crossing, the other shoe got it. After that I gave up and just walked through the water, shoes and all. I had to carry Charlie across a few times because the water was too deep for him to walk and the current was to swift for him to swim.

Day 3 – Monday, May 15, 2006 – 10.5 miles
Soggy. That pretty much sums it up. It poured all day. Woke up to 42 degrees (it was a 3 dog night!!!). Put our wet gear back on and headed out. As the day wore on, the rain didn’t let up and the temperature didn’t rise. I kept warm with three layers of tops and a pair of shorts as long as our breaks weren’t too long. But the dogs started shivering within minutes every time we stopped. Poor Charlie….even if I stopped for a few seconds to look at the map, he’d start rearranging the leaves around him into a bed. He was hunkering down.

Halfway through the day’s hike, I admitted to myself that this rain was here to stay and if we continued on the trail it was going to be a long, cold, wet night. So we took the last bail-out trail available and headed back to the car. On the way, the dogs were even shivering while they were hiking so I set up the tent and got us all inside and under the sleeping bag. After they quit shivering and I woke up from a nap, we packed up and finished the hike to the car.

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Ackey sports her new back pack

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Charlie’s personal water bowl in a rock

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Duncan struts his stuff in Ackey’s old pack

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Duncan doesn’t like going into the tent so he sleeps half-way in

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Duncan can sleep anywhere, at any time, and in any position. Notice his legs draped over my feet.

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Charlie’s tired and snuggles in.

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Ackey stretches out and sleeps where she wants!

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What? It’s morning already???

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Just before Charlie tries to bury the entire bag of food

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Duncan decided he wasn’t going to listen so he was put on the leash 24/7

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Ackey chews on a BIG chunk of backbone she found…I hope it wasn’t a past hiker.

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Charlie sunbathes in the 22 seconds of sunshine we had on the trip

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All three dogs and I are under my sleeping bag!

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Duncan’s a little tired when we stop at McDonald’s on the way home

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Two peas in a pod…but 7 years apart

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Dedraggled and ready to go home

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Home sweet home the first night. Camped just to the left of the waterfall

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Good ole PA rocks. Someone sharpened these extra carefully

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One of the many beautiful views along the way. And one of the rare moments it wasn’t raining.

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Notice the vivid green of the trees in the foreground. Everything was like that.

8,100 miles through 19 states in 15 days. Yeah, I’m crazy. :-)

It was a great trip. I saw everything I wanted to see:

  • Rocky Mountains
  • Cascade Mountains
  • General landscape of the western states
  • National Music Museum in Vermillion, SD
  • Microsoft Campus in Washington
  • Did I mention the mountains?

got everywhere I needed to get on time, and accomplished everything I wanted to accomplish:

  • recorded enough clinics to be able to add streaming videos to PROBIRT at regular intervals for the next year
  • took a break from the daily grind and did something different while still doing something productive

No tickets, no accidents, and no need for the AAA Plus membership I signed up for a few months ago. Ol’ Bessie (1997 Saturn) did a fine job as long as I fed her a quart of 5W-30 every 3rd or 4th fuel-up. She hit 100,000 miles in Washington.

Weather was great for most of the trip. Other than driving through a storm in the Midwest with tornados that killed nine people the first day of the trip and a few short snow squawls, weather was extremely tame.

Most Memorable Moments
Hilarious:
Stopped for gas in Salina, KS. An SUV full of teenagers/early twenties at the next pump tried to drive off with the pump handle still sticking out of their tank. They got about 5 feet before their memory was “jarred”…literally. The driver bounded out red-faced, finished the fueling and left. Duh.

Disappointments:
1. The Pacific Crest Trail (a long distance hiking trail that runs from Canada to Mexico through WA, OR, and CA) was under 6 to 10 ft of snow in the OR and WA passes so I didn’t get to even set foot on the trail. :-(

2. Stopped at Mt. Rushmore on the way through South Dakota. The weather was pretty clear until I got near the top of the mountain where the air became thick with fog. This was all I could see of Mt. Rushmore…nothing.

Some Statistics
Highest price paid for gas – $2.61
Lowest price paid for gas – $2.27
Total number of Famous Dave’s (a BBQ rib restaurant) in the USA – 140. Number I saw – 7. Number I stopped and ate at – 4.
Number of places I wouldn’t mind settling down in – 6
Number of mountains I saw and would like to hike – ∞

Visited some neat people:

  • Stopped at the Votaw Tool Company for an hour on the way to Texas. It’s always a treat to visit their efficient operation and chat with John and Carl.
  • Although I still didn’t get to meet his wife (starting to wonder if Cynthia really exists!), it was great to see Larry Mueller again. Larry covered another three topics on video tape despite still waiting on me to edit the other 10 hours or so of clinics we recorded in September.
  • Met Bob Baier and his wife Monica in a quaint little Texas town (now THIS was how I had pictured Texas!) for breakfast and a half day of video taping some excellent info on care and maintenance of band instruments. Bob sent me off with his copy of “The Devil’s Horn”, a history of the saxophone. I, of course, devoured the book in the spare minutes at the hotels and had it read by the time I reached the National Museum of Music in Vermillion, South Dakota. Perfect timing – I got to see examples of some of Adolph Sax’s horns mentioned in the book.
  • Met Rich Feldman and his wife, Diane for the first time. On my way through Oregon, I stopped at his shop where he showed me some cool tools and tips. Couldn’t get him to do a video clinic this time around. But I got him for the next video tour…if he resists, I’ll just threaten to divulge his boroscope antics. :-D Went to breakfast with Rich and Diane and laughed my head off. They’ve got a twisted sense of humor…just my type.
  • In Bellingham, Washington David Laws picked me up from the hotel and took me to a cute cafe with live, acoustic guitar music. With David being a fellow avid hiker, we exchanged some trail stories over omelets and French toast. When our trekking appetite was satisfied, we headed to his home and shop where he did a very comprehensive clinic on fitting and silencing rotary valves. Afterwards, we took a hike with Lucky the Wonderdog on the trails behind his house past waterfalls and a fish hatchery. Absolutely beautiful area! Came back to some Quiznos subs (my favorite!) his wife Judith had picked up. Afterwards, I reluctantly left to head east away from this beautiful part of the USA, but not without first trying to coax Lucky into going with me. :-)
  • Made a quick stop in Cedar Rapids, Iowa at West Music for Peter Hart and Ben Schildgen to do a “Time Saving Shop Tips” clinic in between their hectic schedule and a pile of horns.
  • Met Ed Strege at Badger State Repair in Elkhorn, Wisconsin for a tips and tricks marathon. I had seen him give his clinic at a NAPBIRT convention and knew it would be a fast-paced, content-rich clinic. Little did I know that the 1.5 hour clinic was only a small portion of what he had prepared. We split the taping into two sessions with lunch in between for a break where I got to know “the man of many talents” better. Did you know Ed played drums in a combo band up until a few years ago? And that he had once been a locksmith and had had a t-shirt business in addition to being a repair tech? Ya just never know.

Didn’t get to take a whole lot of pictures of the mountains and such…there weren’t many places you could pull off the road at scenic areas. Here are a few:

I was talked into going to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina with some friends. :-\ We left from Annville, PA on Saturday morning, Nov. 12, and returned Monday evening, Nov 14th. The drive took about 10 hours each way.

I snapped a few pics that I thought people would appreciate:

This one is for Dave. No explanation necessary!

For no one specific, but thought “The Love Shack” was hilarious.

This is for Dad, just in case he runs out of ideas for building projects, he can always build a porch on top of Dave’s 5th wheel!

Despite the motorhome/travel trailer stuff, it was a fun trip. Got to go running on the beach a couple times. And took a dip in the ocean the morning we left in 50º air temp! The ocean water was warmer than the hotel pool water!

Just before sunrise and my morning run:


The morning run:

Taking a dip in the ocean after the sunrise run:

And a view of the hotels down the beach:

You know you spend too much time in front of the computer when…..

on your morning run you notice the vibrant colors of the green grass and the blue sky and it reminds you of a website.

Sad.

- Mick

Anyone that knows me knows of my life-long dream of hiking the Appalachian Trail, a 2,100 mile footpath through the Appalachian Mountains stretching from Georgia to Maine. I’ve done about half of the trail through PA but I am trying to save the rest for the “long haul”.

I also have secret hopes (guess it’s not so secret anymore) of doing the Pacific Crest Trail (a 2,655 mile trail running from Mexico to Canada through CA, OR, and WA) and the Continental Divide Trail (another long distance trail measuring 3,100 miles from Mexico to Canada through NM, CO, WY, ID and MT)

These three trails together are known as the “triple crown”.

Today I found out there is yet another trail to add to the list….a coast to coast trail known as the American Discovery Trail. I was sent a link about a couple that just became the first to complete the trail in one continued effort. I did a quick search about the trail and came up with distances ranging from 4,900 to 6,800 miles. Gotta find out more about THIS puppy!


WATCH THE SLIDESHOW OF THE TRIP!!!


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On Sept 21, 2005 Ackey (aka The Bottomless Pit), Charlie (aka The Energizer Bunny) and I, (aka Me) headed out from the northern terminus of the West Rim Trail. This is a 30 mile trail running along the western rim of the Pine Creek Gorge in north central PA.

The trail is pretty tame as far as steep ascents and descents go. The path varies from wide and open along old logging roads and state forestry roads to overgrown patches of fern and mountain laurel. But it’s blazed with orange rectangles so it’s pretty difficult to get lost or lose the path. And of course, the main attraction of the trail are the frequent vistas of the PA Grand Canyon scattered every few miles along its length.

We spent 3 days and 3 nights on the trail. The first two days were picture perfect….sunny and highs in the mid 70′s. Day 3 was rainy but it gave us a good reason to set the tent up at noon and take a nap!
Highlights included seeing 2 porcupines (what was God thinking when He created them???) and hearing a Whippoorwill for the first time. Also saw LOTS of itty-bitty frogs and a ton of mushrooms. Too bad I can’t distiguish between the poisonous and non-poisonous or I may have had a feast!

With Ackey being on allergy medicine (a steroid) she was bottomless. I knew by the end of the first day that the dogs would run out of food before the end of the trip. So I ended up sharing my snacks at lunch and my freeze dried spaghetti and extra cheesy Mac & Cheese with the dogs in the evening. We hit McDonalds ASAP on the way home. I was STARVING!

Water was not overabundant so we always carried some (Ackey carried hers and Charlie’s and I carried my own). The longest stretch between water stops was 10 miles but we always ended up having water where we camped. Glad I took the filter along! Some of the water holes were more mud puddles than streams. :-|

I saw my future home. Two possibilities, actually. One was a log cabin buried deep in the middle of nowhere. Not sure about the view to the southern sky for satellite internet connection though. The other was a house planted smack dab on the top of the mountain in a clearing across the canyon. The view must be beautiful from it! I know THAT house had a view of the southern sky. :-)
Ackey and Charlie were real troopers. I can tell Ackey is getting older. She only runs ahead for the first mile or so and then stays at my side for the rest of the day. Charlie’s a little energizer bunny. He just never quits. Everytime he’d hear the squeal of a chipmunk, he’d take off on a chase, having no idea where it was, of course. The one time we did see a chipmunk in the middle of the trail, he ignored it. Duh.

Had a great time and am planning on doing the Black Forest Trail sometime in October if the workload permits.

DON’T FORGET TO WATCH THE SLIDESHOW OF THE TRIP!!!

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