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"A HIKE FOR MIKE"
Jeff Alt convinced his wife (Beth), a woman raised with the belief that vacations include hot showers, beaches, and warm beds, to chuck her domesticated amenities and “Take a Hike” to help her overcome the loss of her brother.

Jeff had to spend quite a bit of time convincing Beth that the hike would be romantic, skillfully leaving out some minor details about the journey.

They walked the 218-mile John Muir Trail across California’s Sierra Nevada mountain range as a depression awareness campaign, carrying all their supplies on their backs and sleeping on the ground for weeks on end.

Several times along the way, Beth realized that she had been taken for “a ride” or rather “a hike.”

Jeff and Beth’s trail adventures, detailed in the award-winning A Hike For Mike, will entertain and inspire anyone through Jeff’s witty humor and inspirational stories.

ForeWord Magazine's "Book of the Year"
Award-Winning Finalist

USA Book News "Best Books 2005"
Award-Winning Finalist
A Hike For Mike

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EXCERPTS FROM A HIKE FOR MIKE
Chapter 1

The Sunny Side

Yosemite National Park near Half Dome, along the John Muir Trail

July 29, 2003
I had been married nearly four years, and I was about to embark on my first long-distance backpacking adventure with my wife, Beth. We planned to trek across the spine of the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California on the John Muir Trail. It was no easy feat convincing Beth—a woman raised with the belief that vacation means flush toilets, sleeping in a bed, soaking up the rays on a beach, and eating out—to throw on a pack and live in the woods for the better part of a month. This was our first visit to California. After months of planning, we had crammed our backpacks full of gear, food, and supplies. After flying into Los Angeles from our home in Cincinnati, Ohio, we had visited a few much-talked-about California wineries before arriving by shuttle bus in Yosemite National Park. Beth and I had positioned ourselves in Yosemite National Park’s Yosemite Valley, near Happy Isles, the northern terminus of the John Muir Trail. We planned to walk the trail’s entire 221-mile length.

The John Muir Trail, also known as the JMT, is named after one of the world’s most noted naturalists. You have to do something on a grand scale to have an entire trail named after you. Muir’s advocacy and appreciation for the wild earned him the distinction of being named the father of our national parks. One of his favorite areas was the present-day Yosemite National Park. Muir once hosted President Theodore Roosevelt on a camping trip in the park, which seemed to convince the president to save the Sierra from development. Not long after Roosevelt camped out with Muir, Yosemite was protected as a national park.

I had walked the Appalachian Trail five years earlier and had been itching to take another long-distance hike. Although the JMT is only a tenth of my original journey on the Appalachian Trail, it is considered a world-class hiking path. The trail stretches from its northern terminus in Yosemite Valley to its southern terminus high atop Mount Whitney, the highest peak in the contiguous United States. It passes through three national parks, two national forests, and a string of mountain peaks with rocky surfaces as jagged as saw blades. It winds far above the timberline, scaling peaks as high as 14,491 feet. By comparison, the Appalachian Mountains on the east coast top out at 6,643 feet. The John Muir Trail is speckled with glacial lakes and wilderness that are untouched by roads and most other civilized amenities. It’s hard to find trails unblemished by roads in today’s world. The trail wanders through deep canyons, around cold blue lakes, and under sunny skies. It joins with the Pacific Crest Trail for much of its length, and it is the most rugged and arguably some of the prettiest terrain of the entire Pacific Crest Trail.

We were scheduled, according to our wilderness permit, to begin our expedition of the John Muir Trail on Tuesday, July 29, 2003. Our trek was expected to last two to three weeks. We spent a last night of civilized comfort in Yosemite National Park. We bunked in a canvas tent cabin built on a wooden platform. Our abode was anonymous among 628 identical bungalows in Curry Village, a cozy little camping area with no vacancies. People were everywhere. It was the height of summer. A massive, rustic wooden commissary located in the center of the tent village provided showers, a buffet-style cafeteria, an outfitter, a convenience store, a food stand, and even an outdoor bar with a featured beer¾Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, of course. Adjacent to the main building stood an old log structure that served as a sitting room and game room and that even had a U.S. post office. It was the most disparate combination of modern amenities and rugged outdoors I had ever seen.

Along the parking lot next to the commissary, tourists were gathered around trunk-size steel containers. They were stuffing food, snacks, and toiletries into these bear-proof chests under strict direction from the park service. Warnings were posted everywhere advising against consuming food in the tent cabins or keeping any scented toiletries.

Stunning views beckoned from every direction. With the commissary to our backs, our left field of vision was filled with the famous Yosemite Falls cascading off an immense sheer cliff, taller than most city skyscrapers. To our right was Half Dome, a mountain sliced in half during the Ice Age which has become the park’s symbol. Beth and I wandered out to the field just in time to see the stunning sunset. A woman standing nearby looked dazed and dreamy and exclaimed, “This is what the Garden of Eden must have been like.”

John Muir, a Scottish immigrant, came to America, fell in love with Yosemite and its surrounding wild lands, and he advocated for its preservation. We were smack-dab in the middle of the valley where Muir had spent quite a bit of time. While most early settlers to California were busy tending farms, searching for gold, or building cities, Muir was taking in the natural beauty of the wild lands. He had the foresight to realize that the land was in jeopardy of succumbing to the loggers’ axes and the developers’ shovels. He had lived for some time in the valley not far from where we stood. None of the coffee-table books could replicate the raw beauty we were witnessing. It really brought home Muir’s passion about preserving the park.

We weren’t the only ones awed by the view. Each year, millions of tourists flock to the park Muir loved. According to Yosemite National Park records, in 2002 alone, more than 3 million people visited the park by foot, car, and horseback. As we watched the sunset, the mountains were changing colors almost as if a slide projector was clicking to the next frame every few seconds. Various shades of orange, red, purple, and blue emerged and faded almost as quickly as they appeared, with a darkening sky creeping over the mountain. The tops of the mountains looked glowing hot, a phenomenon known as alpenglow.

Later that night, Beth and I tucked ourselves into bed with the false sense of security one feels after zipping shut the door of a thin-walled tent. As we were fading off to sleep, terrified shrieks and the loud, metallic banging of pots and pans shattered the night. Someone apparently had ignored the warnings of keeping food out of the tents and now was trying to scare away a bear using the recommended procedure of making lots of noise and hurling objects at the animal. We both lay awake, excited about the adventure we would begin the next morning and thankful the bear was bothering someone else.

My wife’s courage ran too deep for a bear to scare her. Beth was embarking on a journey completely outside of her comfort zone for a cause greater than herself. This was more than an adventurous vacation. We were walking with a purpose.
© 2006 Jeff Alt | All Rights Reserved | Site by Devo