Day 8: A house is not a home
The night before was a little depressing. The cabin was fine – clean, dry but cold – but I felt more alone inside than I had come close to feeling on the trail. Something about being inside a well lighted place looking out on the dark makes a hiker feel cut off. Being in a cabin also suddenly made me miss my family more – no one to share it with. It didn’t help that I also couldn’t talk to my wife thanks to bad cell phone coverage: after an hour of holding the phone above my head on a hill above the camp in the gathering darkness we had given up. Frustrating.
The next morning was different. The day was warm and sky clear. The sun streamed into the cabin. I heated water on the old hot plate in the kitchen and showered (i.e. poured it over my head). outside behind the outhouse. I had coffee and breakfast, sketched on the porch. Noticed all the quirks of the cabin – down to the penny embedded in the floor boards under the threshold to the bunk room.
The hike out of Kentucky Camp was a blast. Within the first mile I passed three coyotes that scattered from the trail, every hour or two a covey of quail would break before me. I passed the 100 miles from Mexico mark sometime that day and was making good time. I passed other thru hikers (what they call people hiking the whole 800 mile trail) a few times during the day: Adrian from Prescott who wants to be a forest ranger; Pete, Esther and Judy from Alaska who laughed that the water doesn’t need filtering up there. Sometimes I walk a few miles with these folks, sometimes just take a few minutes to trade stories. Always a common bond, everyone content to be living in whatever moment is happening right now.





or us at the Stage Stop Hotel in town. The trail ended 3 1/2 miles outside of town, but as we walked down the two lane highway, we were as happy as two kids walking home from an afternoon of fishing.
We traded stories with a Canadian couple also hiking the trail, who told us among other things that they had run into Mexican refugees above Bathtub Spring the night after we had camped there. At 2am in the morning they heard steps and whispers, and when they poked their heads out of their tents three figures stopped and a voice tentatively asked in English, “No problem?”. “No problem,” they said, and the figures went on their way.







Dad never takes pickup directions loosely. We grabbed coffee while driving out of Tucson in the darkness.
