Welcome to NorCal

After deciding to skip the High Sierra (for now -we’ll be back for it someday!) we were very happy to spend about a week in Sacramento with friends (thank you Virginia, Matt, Emmitt,and Fiona for hosting and letting us turn a 2 night stay into six days!). While there we determined our next starting point in Northern California would be at Donner Summit, just outside if Truckee and almost exactly 500 trail miles north of where we got off trail. Donner had the benefit of being an easy bus ride from Sacramento and would give us a taste of the snow we missed in the Sierra without the majority of the risk.

Snow! Just north of Donner Summit

While in Sacramento we made a few gear updates and repairs, and I tie-dyed my sun shirt to cover up some of the dirt and sweat stains. It was great to have a minor reset now that we had 650 miles of experience to learn from.

Now we’re about a week into our Northern California leg and loving it. The snow has been a bit more than we expected but an adventure in navigation (Jeremy has been our lead navigator and is doing an excellent job), a lesson in the best and fastest ways to put on or remove microspikes, and a great conversation starter for anyone we meet on trail.

We have started meeting a handful of hikers who made it through the High Sierra as well. Most started about a month earlier than we did in Campo so many of the snow bridges over treacherous water crossings were still in place. Even so, all have some harrowing stories. I’ve been so impressed by each of them!

While California is in the middle of a heatwave we’ve been lucky to be walking on snow and in the shade of evergreen trees so have been fairing well. Our pace did drop significantly as I’ve been battling a head cold which has me a bit fatigued and Jeremy has started finding more mushrooms 😂. This has been a good practice in both presence and self-compassion as we let go of the idea of mileage goals for each day and just enjoy the trail.

As the days get hotter and we move deeper into summer our thoughts are quickly turning from snow to wildfire, knowing that the question is not whether but when & where fire will impact our path. We are hopeful to miss the worst if it but also a little nervous every time we get a weather update. We spent the last two days walking through a burn scar from a 2020 wildfire and know we have many more miles of terrain like this ahead.

As I type we have walked 770 miles and just hit the two-month anniversary of our start date. It’s hard to believe we made it this far and I also can’t wait to see what the coming months will hold (until October 1 when I plan to be back on my couch petting my cats 😻😻).

Pro Membership

Get the data serious foragers use to find more mushrooms

Free members get soil temps, precipitation, and ecoregion data. Pro unlocks the layers that help you narrow down exactly where to look.

  • Historical burn perimeters — find morel habitat fast
  • Timber harvest boundaries across OR & WA
  • Detailed foraging area summaries with conditions
  • Offline maps in the Forayz iOS app

Similar Posts

  • PCT Blues

    The past 68 days since we started the Pacific Coast Trail have, on the whole, been fantastic. Every day I experience joy, calm, love, and wonder. However, there are moments, sometimes hours, that are just plain hard. This past week I’ve had a few rough times and have also heard from many other hikers who…

  • Hikertown

    At mile 517 along the Pacific Crest Trail there is a quirky hiker oasis known as Hikertown. Up to 40(?) PCT hikers may pass through daily descending out of the San Gabriel Mountains NE of Los Angeles, heading north across a narrow stretch of the Mojave Desert, and into the Tehachapi Mountains. Pro Membership Get…

  • Jeremy’s Desert Highlights

    7 minutes covering many of our favorite parts of the desert including the trail, campsites, water, plants, small animals, and people-sized animals Pro Membership Get the data serious foragers use to find more mushrooms Free members get soil temps, precipitation, and ecoregion data. Pro unlocks the layers that help you narrow down exactly where to…

  • The Oregon Trail: smoke, rain, mushrooms, and kindness

    When researching the PCT there wasn’t much said online about the section in Oregon. Once we started getting within a couple hundred miles of the state, most of the talk was that Oregon is “flat & fast” – almost like a brief buffer between the spectacular scenery of Northern California and Washington. There’s even an…

  • Truckee to Chester

    Background The first part of the PCT is primarily a desert starting at the Mexico border at Campo, Ca. The trail continues north for 250 miles to Big Bear Lake, where it turns directly west towards LA. About 30mi North of LA the trail again heads North, then Northeast another 300 miles to the southern…

  • California Section A Complete!

    California Section A (Mexico Border to Warner Springs, 109.5 miles) complete! As we complete the first section of the PCT I am so excited to have now done my longest ever hiking stint of 109.5 miles (previously the longest was the Wonderland trail which circumnavigates Mt. Rainier at 93 miles). Jeremy reminded me though that…