Sage
Well-known member
The biggest and most notable for most people would be the seven day trip to the Grand Canyon. A group of 19 of us crossed the canyon, 10 in one group came off the north rim and 9 of us off the south rim. We got our own car keys back at Phantom Ranch and proceeded out the opposite rim we had entered by. We took side trips at Indian Gardens and Cotton Wood camp grounds in the heart of the canyon. Truly a trip of a lifetime. Burnt Timber trail above Lemon Lake east of Durango up to Dollar lake and other places in the San Juan Mountains. Most of our backpacking was local in the BLM lands and forest lands of northwest New Mexico with a compass and topographical maps of the area across country bushwhacking. If a name on the map was interesting or a spring was noted that is were we went to without any trail to follow. We mountain biked in the same area plus east of Navajo Lake and the Carson Forest. We boated and fished a lot on Navajo Lake. We caught mud cat fish, channel cat fish, pike, crappie, blue gill and rainbow trout. Our kids went on to add rock climbing (bouldering I think it is called), technical mountain climbing, & spelunking (caving) to their outdoor adventures. They are both in their 50 and still don't let an opportunity to be out of doors pass them by.Thanks for commenting. What were some of your favorite hikes and what got you into camping/hiking so much??
What got me started? I was born into a family that hunted, fished, camped and loved the outdoors. My maternal grandfather homesteaded in eastern NM at Pep in 1908 and my own father homesteaded during the depression near Corona in NM. I married into a family of pioneers like my own family who hunted, fished and camped. Even though I had not camped enough times to count on one hand by adulthood I had taken to it like a fish to water and my husband, I and our children started camping, fishing, hunting, etc. as soon as we had the means to do so. Maybe I was born to be an outdoors woman. I've a love for animals and plants. Bird watching was a great part of our outdoor adventures and many trips were taken explicitly for birding even though they were by bike, boat on foot with backpacks. We saw many rare birds in different environments most people never go to in their lives. The Grand Canyon, the 12,000' mountains above Silverton, Colorado are just a couple of places we saw very rare birds that live only in those places. Although most of our adventuring was in the Four Corners states we did make it to Georgia, & Florida for some spectacular hiking and bird watching.
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