
At ~2:00 pm in the
afternoon I left my dropoff point along the Highway and headed
south on gravel agricultural roads for about 28 miles until
dusk and my first campsite for the evening. The handcart was
a bit unwieldy at times --- tough to stop, and tough to muscle
up hills as it was loaded down with 4 days of food, 17 gallons
of water, and basic equipment. The wind was also blowing pretty
steady, so the umbrella was not utilized much for shade. Dry
air, dry wind, dry landscape.
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Towards the end of
the first day, the gravel roads were reduced to a basic two-track.
Thus far only a few wildlife sightings...1 bloated dead cow,
and the skeletal remains of a coyote. Nice to have a companion
for a few miles.
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I finally managed
to manuever through the rabbit brush and sage and dropped off
of the two track and onto the dry mud flats. The surface was
relatively firm, so the handcart was easy to negotiate although
the increased resistance was quite noticeable compared to the
gravel roads. The bombing range is SE from my location, but
a number of fighter jets circled overhead throughout the afternoon.
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After carefully crossing
the raised railroad grade, forcing down a meal, and taking a
3 hour nap I headed out onto the Salt Flats. I typically only
take self-portraits when I am feeling really bad...no doubt
borderline heat stroke as the temps were 110+ degrees. It was
very difficult to eat in the hot weather, and forcing myself
to drink semi-boiling water was not terribly refreshing.
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Good walking. Horizon
is the Silver Island Mountain Range...same damned horizon for
3 days! Easy navigation, just not any intermediate goals to
gage effort or distant. Complete treadmill feeling, and no sense
of forward progress.
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Begininning of a great
sunset. Cloud cover helped to bring the temperatures down. Surprisingly
the vegetation did not provide much shade.
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Tough to beat a desert
sunset. The salt underfoot was surprisingly soft and each step
was a slippery, gooey affair. The handcart was sinking a good
2-3 inches into the surface. The increased resistance was unwelcome
but it was something that I hoped would change the further south
I hiked. I ended up walking till nearly midnight --- 31 miles
for the day and a minor sense of concern. If the conditions
did not change, I would need to consider my options.
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Awoke early and got
moving. The salt conditions improved and it was smooth sailing!
Good, firm salt crust made the going easy. Supposedly the Salt
Flats are one of the few places on land where the curvature
of the earth can be seen with the naked eye.
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Not too bad tasting
--- just a little alkaline.
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Martha Stewart Patio
Umbrella deployed. In the heart of the Salt Flats soaking up
the scenery. I keep walking south through the 'good salt' and
eventually ran into the fence of the Bombing Range along its
western edge. Strangely the north boundary of the bombing range
is not fenced, allowing frightenly easy access to a less than
ideal spot...ate some dinner at the fence, and then continued
south along the fenceline another few miles before calling it
a night. 26 miles remained to the Interstate and my scheduled
pick-up point for the next day. Most of that mileage was spent
on a raised road that paralleled the Interstate. According to
the BLM office in Salt Lake City, this was the first N to S
crossing of the Salt Flats.
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