Date: Wed, 27 May 1998 18:41:37 -1000 From: Gene Robinson (gene@lava.net> Subject: As Dirty Harry said...
"A man's gotta know his limitations."
I learned my limitations on the Silver Piliwale Quest this past weekend,
and now that I've caught my breath, re-hydrated, slathered antibiotic
ointment all over my feet and hands, and showered about fifteen times (my
B.O. was toxic as nerve gas), I'm ready to tell my story. Actually, it
wasn't so bad, just kind of like "Deliverance" without the hillbilly
rapists and banjos. Patrick took lots of notes and will post a detailed
account, should any of you like to
We left Saturday morning, very appreciative of all the aloha and
encouragement from the ohe-l folks. Thanks very much! It was my first trip
up the Laie trail, and I was pleasantly surprised by the beautiful North
Shore views and Norfolk pines. The summit came up quickly, and it was great
to meet Brandon and Tina, and then to have Dayle join us. Then Pat and I
blasted out of there, into the clouds and mud. That section of the KST has
few redeeming qualities. The only highlights are the ruins of the Kawailoa
cabin, the ruins of the Kahuku cabin, and the Castle and Peahinaia trail
termini. These landmarks are notable because they relieve the mud-sucking
tedium and, as you pass them, encourage you to believe that you just might
be getting somewhere. Theoretically, along this section, there are views of
the Sacred Falls and Punaluu area to windward, but all we saw was a lot of
mud. Finally, the Cline memorial (when will the plaque be replaced? I'll
donate) came into view, and we headed down to the Poamoho campsite and
water source.
There was lots of water in the stream, and there were even more bottles of
water stashed around the campsite in the bushes; it was like an Easter egg
hunt! Everywhere I looked there was water, thanks to those of you that came
up the previous weekend. I had my freeze-dried dinner and turned the burner
over to Patrick, who whips out some CANS of stew! This was a little
mind-boggling, since I'd been trying to keep up with Patrick on the trail
all day, and he was carrying CANS of food in his pack? He claims to have
stashed the food there the previous weekend, but I don't know. He may have
been trying to make me feel less wimpy, struggling to keep up with him
while he's got your basic Foodland shopping bag in his pack! Patrick on the
trail is a cross between Michael Jordan and that little bunny that keeps
going and going and going... He has incredible strength, balance, agility,
cool, and he never seems to get tired. Must be something in the grape or
orange tang he drinks.
Saturday night was one of the two coldest nights I've spent in the Ko'olaus
(Sunday night was the other), with intermittent tent-rattling gusts of wind
and rain showers. The Poamoho campsite is a little too exposed for
comfortable camping, at least in the conditions we had. During a calm,
clear, Kona winds night, it's probably fantastic. As I shivered and ate my
breakfast Sunday morning, I heard Pat sharpening his machete, which is
called "foreshadowing" in literary terms, or "trail-savvy" in KST terms. We
got going around 8am, passed the cleared site of the ruins of the Poamoho
cabin (starting to sound familiar? Anybody want to start a campaign to
rebuild these cabins?) and, after a little more of the overgrown leeward
stuff, we burst out onto the glorious windward section of the KST between
Poamoho and Schofield-Waikane. And it was clear! For those of you who
haven't hiked it, you've got to do it! You're walking along a very decent,
usually sidewalk-width trail cut into the side of the pali, a thousand feet
above Kahana valley, and the views are spectacular!
As we neared the Waikane-KST junction, we could see hikers coming up
Waikane, and with amazing precision timing, met them right at the junction.
It was Pete, Don, and their friend Kristen. Kristen, on her first hike with
fearless Pete and Don, agreed that coming up the Waikane trail could be
described as "gnarly." We hiked up to the top of Pu'u Ka'aumakua and had
lunch, with fresh oranges and other goodies courtesy of Pete, Don, and
Kristen. And of course, we toasted Silver Piliwale and his achievement 25
years ago, raising our plastic wine glasses and snapping photos. And then,
guess what? The clouds rolled in and never lifted the rest of the trip.
Honestly, that was the last time we saw the sun. Coincidence?
Pete and Don loaned me some dry shirts, which were what I really needed
most. Future KST hikers take note: nothing ever dries out up there. I wore
representatives of all fabric types, cotton, wool, polypropylene,
everything but hemp (hmmm, that's an idea), and everything was WETTER the
next morning than when I took it off, soaked in sweat, the previous night.
So just bring extra dry clothes in your pack, right? Well, that means more
weight, more bulk, and a heavier pack the next morning, loaded with your
wet, muddy clothes jammed into plastic bags. Maybe when we rebuild those
cabins we can put some solar-powered heaters of the radiator-type in there,
so we can put our wet clothes on them, OK?
Patrick and I spent the rest of the afternoon after the wine-tasting
flogging along the KST towards Kipapa. Pat's machete and my City Mill
folding saw were put to good use. The good news is that we re-opened the
lost segments of KST; the bad news is that we approached exhaustion doing
so. Pat suggested going over the top of the tougher early ridges, but I
wanted to OPEN that trail UP. This may have caused us to pull into Kipapa
campsite by headlight, but maybe not. It was a lot of work, though, with
Patrick looking like a cross between MJ, that bunny, and Zorro.
There is an other-worldly campsite just before you get to the end of the
KST and the junction with the Kipapa trail, with the ruins of another
cabin, called Uncle Tom's cabin (I don't know why). The site is in a dark,
narrow, perpetually cloudy valley forested with a juniper-type tree. It's
somewhat protected from the wind, very quiet, and very spooky. It's hard to
say what makes it so unique, but it feels like the loneliest, most isolated
place on O'ahu. We didn't camp there, because, ummm... there was no water
source! We got out of there fast and headed down the Kipapa trail, Patrick
in the lead with his headlight, me stumbling along behind, whining, "Are we
there yet?" like the classic kid on vacation in the backseat of the station
wagon.
We reached the Kipapa stream water source, set up our tents in the dark on
a wide spot in the trail, and I crawled into my tent as quickly as
possible, after fixing a snapped tent pole with duct tape. I was feeling
VERY tired, had no appetite (bad sign) and after a cup of hot tea went to
sleep. It was another cold night, but less windy, with scattered showers
and scattered rocks everywhere I tried to put my hips or shoulders. Ko'olau
campers take note: spend the big bucks and buy the lightest weight but most
luxurious mattress you can. Ditto with sleeping bag. You won't regret it.
I woke up sometime during the night (Nathan is waiting for the Kaupe story
right about now) and felt extremely anxious. I lay there in the dark,
listening to Patrick snoring, and tried to remember the last time I had
urinated (sorry if this is getting a little too clinical). I couldn't
remember the last time, and I got even more worried when I realized that I
wasn't thirsty! I became convinced, in my somewhat exhausted/delirious
state, that my kidneys had shut down, and I was going into renal failure. I
wondered if I would need dialysis, and how I would get down the trail to
reach a dialysis center. I decided to drink all the water, over a liter,
that I had with me in the tent, and feeling better, went back to sleep.
Not to be too clinical again, everything was fine the next morning, and my
kidneys were... functioning properly. I even cooked Sunday night's dinner
and had it for breakfast that morning.
We left our foggy campsite Monday morning around 8am, headed back up the
Kipapa trail, and set off along the summit trail that Pat, Dayle, Pete,
Laredo and I had explored last year. We came out of the clouds at the
Waiawa gap, and while we rested before ascending the steepest, hairiest
climb of the trip, I let Patrick know that I missed my nice, soft, warm,
dry bed too much to continue all the way to the end of the Silver Piliwale
trail. Patrick was very understanding of my wimpiness. Perhaps I frightened
him with the story of my delirious/crazed state the previous night? Maybe
he asked himself, what am I doing out here with this crazy guy? Anyway,
Patrick was very gracious when I told him that I wanted to bail out at
Waimano, then he tried to push me off a cliff. Nahhh, joke!
As we climbed up from the Waiawa gap, I got stuck on some loose stuff about
halfway up, took off my pack, tied rope to it, and threw the line up to
Patrick. Then I climbed up another route and we hauled my pack up about
twenty feet. It was a nice diversion. We went up and down, up and down,
along the summit overlooking Waiahole valley, which, of course, we couldn't
see. We reached one point where we lost the (minimal) trail, and had to
figure out which ridge to take. Interestingly, the correct choice was to go
due east by the compass, as the summit curves from its usual north-south
route in that area, just before reaching "The Corner" and heading south
again towards Manana.
Nobody was at the Manana trail terminus, so we set off for Waimano. In my
mind, I had trivialized the Manana-Waimano segment, because I had done it
several times before. Let me tell you, that is NOT a trivial crossing,
especially at the end of the day with a pack on. We crossed the most
knife-edged segments of trail on the trip before and after Eleao. And the
up and down, up and down section before Waimano terminus had me whining,
"Are we there yet?" again. But we finally reached Waimano, took off our
packs, and rested.
I said goodbye to Patrick and set off down slippery Waimano trail, running
into Dayle the Ko'olau Bear, and later on Wing, the Ko'olau Camel, making
his waterless ascent. I had to use my headlight on the way out, but like
the horse heading back to the barn, I was unstoppable on my way back to the
trailhead. I got out about 9:30, and within an hour was soaking in a nice,
hot bath, wondering how my buddies were doing up at Waimano (fighting off
mystery animals, it turns out!).
Thanks again to everyone who dropped off water (like Gary at Aiea...
sorry!) and sent their best wishes for us. I just might try to do the whole
thing again, learning from this attempt, and I bet Patrick will. But I
suppose that the best way to memorialize Silver Piliwale's hike is to do it
at age 72, just like he did, right? Well Patrick, how about it?
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