This is Sam Haraldson’s ultralight backpacking, wilderness trekking, outdoor adventure resource. Within these pages you will find ultralight backpacking trip reports, journals, photos, ultralight and super ultralight gear lists. Trip reports, photos, and blog posts for everything from long distance thru-hiking on the Superior Hiking Trail, Pacific Northwest Trail, North Country Trail, Porcupine Mountains, Glacier National Park in a number of locations including Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Montana and more are also featured. The site is also a resource for canoeing, rock climbing and snowboarding trips and info.
Early June, 2008. My buddies and I decided to do a couple days on the North Country National Scenic Trail in Northwestern Wisconsin. We planned, we mapped, we discussed. All was going well, a car shuttle was arranged and we were amped. Then one guy hurt his back and the other got very ill. This left me to figure out my plan on the afternoon we were set to leave. I quickly laid out my maps, assessed the situation and decided to go backpacking solo. I rearranged my food stash so as to only carry eats for one and changed out some group gear with solo gear. This put me behind schedule by about an hour but alas the long daylight hours are upon us and I have a trusty headlamp.
I arrived in Solon Springs, WI at a trailhead in the Brule River State Forest around 19:30. I was out of the car and moving fast to stay ahead of the mosquitos. I hiked until approximately 21:00 and arrived at the Jesseth Creek Bluffs campsite just as the sun was setting across the Brule River valley - - gorgeous.
I picked off thirty wood ticks upon arriving at camp and decided to pull my socks up over my pants legs, set up the Dancing Light Gear silnylon tarp I had brought along and have some nuts and chocolate for dinner. After that I strung up my bear bag, built a smokey anti-mosquito fire using my firesteel and relaxed before turning in at 22:00.
Morning came and I awoke around 5:00. Without my buddies there I just wasn't feeling the need to continue on to another campsite. I opted to hike the three miles to the next trailhead and then wandered logging roads and ATV trails that paralleled the NCT back to my car which ended up being another eight or nine miles. It was kind of fun just using my compass and following random trails not really knowing exactly where I was on the map. I spotted lots of deer, moose, bear and turkey tracks and only saw two cars.
Superior Hiking Trail - Dayhike to Bean & Bear Lakes
Having put in my forty hours of I was able to leave work at 11:30 on a beautiful, sunny Friday. I went home, put together my pack with the ten essentials, jumped in my Subaru, stopped at my girlfriend's house to pick up Maya dog and headed up the North Shore to Silver Bay, MN and the Superior Hiking Trail. Below you can watch a video blog I produced of the hike. Also feel free to peruse a photo gallery of some of the sights Maya and I saw.
While hiking I kept my camera handy and put together a short video blog for your enjoyment.
Chad and Sam headed up to the Split Rock Wayside, Sam with his pack and Chad with his pulk sled and hiked the six miles to the Gooseberry State Park headquarters. They arrived around 14:30 with plans to meet Jim, Kat and Todd at 15:00. Food was consumed outside the headquarters in the sun and the rest of the group arrived in a timely fashion. Everyone quickly gathered their gear and hit the trail for the 2.7 mile jaunt to the campsite.
The trail was packed powder having seen dozen of pairs of snowshoes previously in the season and made for easy walking. Chad vocalized he wished he hadn't added the fins to his pulk sled but seemed to maneuver it well regardless. Snowshoes weren't necessary but the crampons on them were handy for the ups and downs.
Arrival in camp was around 16:30-ish and everyone immediately set up their camps. Kat and Todd put up their respective tents, Jim rigged up his tarp and Sam and Chad laid down their bivies. All was set before dark and next, out came the cooksets. Food was warmed and snow melted for the evening and next day's water. Chad and Todd masterfully created a fire around which everyone sat, warmed and conversed for a couple of hours.
Winter camping is synonymous with early bed times and most hit the hay around 20:30. The stars were brilliant and the moon was very, very bright. No headlamp was necessary for potty breaks in the night. But the lack of clouds brought tempertures into the teens.
Eleven hours later the sun was peeking through the trees to the East and bodies climbed from their cocoons into the crisp morning air. Oatmeal, granola and coffee was warmed up, warm clothes were donned and the warmth of the sun put smiles on the campers faces. Everyone had eaten and packed for the trail by around 9:45. A little over an hour later we arrived back at Gooseberry headquarters, did some car shuttling, took a final group photo and were on our way home.
Everyone is very much so into checking the latest RSS feed of all their favorite friends and online heroes so I decided I'd best enter the blogging world for real. Although I've played around with blogs for quite some time now I finally decided to incorporate one into my Web site.
I have unveiled my new ultralight backpacking Web site. A place to house my trip reports, photos, gearlists and more. It is based on an application created by Ben and re-vamped by me with some help from Mark.
Life in the city with its electric lights turning your days into nights and its Internet and telephones extending your neighborhood into a worldwide social network is too rushed and lacks a natural start and finish. Transport yourself now one, ten, 100 or even 1,000 miles into a remote wilderness. Find yourself rising and sleeping with the rhythm of the sun and talking only with your hiking partner or the occasional passerby. This is life reduced to its basic elements. Your day consisting of little more than eating, drinking, moving and sleeping. It is in this way you find yourself. Having time with your thoughts surrounded by the earth as it was before society laid down its grid of concrete and fiber optics. People ask me why I walk and the answer came to me clear as that rising sun I awake with in the morning. I walk not to forget or avoid the ties and binds of society but rather to find the balance between it and basic human need.