“Help!”
How did this happen? Here I was wedged up against a wall of
boulders, one arm around a dead, waterlogged tree. At the end of my other arm,
I gripped one of Meghan’s pack’s shoulder straps with such force that an F5
tornado wouldn’t separate us. And worst of all, we were both being buffeted by
the intense current of the chilly North St. Vrain Creek.
We were at the tail end of a fourteen-mile hike to Lion Lake
No. 1, a longer walk than we have taken in maybe ten years, but we had worked
up to it with shorter hikes earlier in the week, a nine-miler to Sandbeach Lake
on Wednesday, and an off day on Thursday. We had certainly challenged ourselves
with this hike, which rose about 2300 feet from trailhead to destination (and
most of that altitude gained over the last two miles of the hike). Honestly, with a mile or less to go, our legs
were pretty spent. At least mine were. As we made our way toward the trail
head, the trail as level as a parking lot, we got that spring in our step that
only the end of a long trail can give you. It had been a rough start to our
hike, and some worry during our ascent, but we felt pretty good here at the
end.
We’d left the trailhead at about 5:45. A bit later than we
wanted, but we decided to eat some cereal before we left the cabin, figuring a
few extra minutes at 5 am was not a big deal.
We were on vacation, we had plenty of day ahead of us, and we knew we
had some time to play with. We would be up and down the trail well before any bad
weather would come in. In addition, I underestimated how long the drive to the
trailhead would be, which set us back a few more minutes. Again, no big deal.
As we got out of the car, I realized I had forgotten my ball
cap. I was annoyed for having forgotten it. Sure, it was only a ball cap, but
forgetting anything showed a lack of proper preparation. I didn’t like being
poorly prepared, even a little bit. But Meghan had a spare hat in the car that
fit me, so I wore that and thought little more of the missing hat.
About six minutes into the hike, Meghan realized she had
forgotten her sunglasses at the car. We hesitated for a second, but decided to
turn around and go get them. It was still early morning dim, but she would
eventually need them. As we walked back, I thought to myself, the superstitious
part of my mind rising up, “That’s two screw ups, today. What will the third
be?” I contemplated suggesting we forget the whole hike. I was getting a bad
feeling. I laughed it off, the rational
part of my brain beating the superstitions into submission.
We passed a quartet of older hikers setting out as we made
it back to the car. We got what we needed, made one last double check that we
had not forgotten something else, and started back out. It was about 6 am.
At a trail junction about three miles into our hike, after
watching a cloudy and windy sunrise break into a cool and beautiful blue
morning, we caught up to the four hikers ahead of us. They were considerably
older than we, but they were all in excellent shape. Their apparent leader seemed
knowledgeable, as, every time we had been in ear shot of them to this point, he
was pointing out some sort of lore or information about something along the
trail. We speculated that he was an off-duty or retired ranger. As we met and
passed them at the junction, they asked our destination. They were headed to
the same place—Lion Lake. The leader
said, “They spotted a mountain lion up there last week. Maybe we’ll get lucky.”
That was all I needed to hear.
There are three words that make me antsy on the trail. One
of them is “bear.” I respect bears. I love them, as much as one can love any
abstract concept of a wild creature. Yet, I do not want to encounter one on the
trail. No, thank you. I have a similar attitude toward the other two words:
“mountain lion.” Honestly, if I had to pick my animal encounter on the trail, I
would pick bear over mountain lion every time.
There is a stealthy ferocity to a mountain lion that a bear just doesn’t
have. Plus, for whatever reason (probably a general lack of interest in cats),
I don’t feel the same way about mountain lions as I do about bears.
So, as we proceeded up the trail, knowing we were about to
encounter what one trail guide refers to as an “unforgiving gradient,” now all
I could think about was the impending mountain lion attack. Every rock hid a
lion. Every chickaree scurrying through the underbrush was a catamount stalking
us through the trees. Just as we reached the turn off for the worst of the
vertical hike, I saw something large cross the trail behind us and move through
the downslope trees. It was colored like a mountain lion, but I only saw
glimpses of its hindquarters. Surely it was an elk. Mountain lions aren’t that
tall. It was moving down the slope;
surely a mountain lion would attack from uphill. I was rationalizing in a big
way. Most likely, at any rate, it was an elk, and, obviously, we were not
attacked by a mountain lion.
We reached our destination, a beautiful alpine tarn,
surrounded by snow banks, wildflowers, mountain peaks, waterfalls, rocky
slopes, and mosquitoes. Truly, it is one of the most beautiful places I have
ever been. I mentioned to Meghan as we approached the lake that it reminded me
of some mythical Bavarian place I had in my mind, something right out of Heidi. We took a few photos, ate our
usual trail meal, PB and J, relaxed for a few minutes (not easy with all the
skeeters), and made our way back down the trail. It was about 10:30. We had
plenty of time to make our way back to the car.
On the way back down, I didn’t worry quite so much about the
lion attack, or bears, for that matter. I was wary, but not to the extent that
I was on the way up. After all, I had seen the whole trail. There was no more
mystery, no more surprises. We were just retracing our footsteps. What could happen?
So, as we walked that last mile, approaching Copeland Falls
and the gaggle of walkers making their way up and down the trails near the
trailhead and ranger’s station, tragedy and misadventure were the farthest
thing from my mind. The trail bent close to the creek, with a gentle rocky
slope leading down to the cool rushing water.
My general “safety-first” mentality left me momentarily, and I said to
Meghan, “You want to stick your head in there and cool off?” She said she did. And I walked over toward
the creek side. I took off my hat and sunglasses, and crouched down by the
creek. It was a bit slippery.
Meghan approached the bank, and, as she did, I warned her
that it was slippery. The words left my mouth just as her toe hit a wet part of
the rock. Her foot went out from under her, and she lost her balance. I reached
out to grab her and in an instant, we were both being carried by the force of
the current, like mere grains of sand.
In one’s life, the people you love experience difficulties,
tragedies, sadness. We see things in other’s eyes that we hope never to see. As
Meghan went into the creek, I saw in her eyes such fear and helplessness, that
I know I will never forget it. Of all the things that happened in and around
that creek in those minutes, that is the thing I wish I could forget. I don’t know what I looked like, but I know
how I felt and what I was thinking. One of my first thoughts was, “Is this
really happening?” These things don’t
happen to Meghan and I, they happen to other people. We are relatively experienced hikers; we do
okay in the woods. We are careful. We
don’t put ourselves in these situations. Of course, given time to consider, we
did put ourselves in that situation. We didn’t belong on that creek bank; we
belonged on the trail. We had made a mistake, and we were paying for it. While being propelled through the water,
however, my only thought was, “This is not really happening.”
But it was.
After that initial question, I was focused on one objective:
saving Meghan. I had no idea what to do as far as an exit strategy, but I was
sure that if I could just grab ahold of her, I could get us out. This is really
absurd when you think about it. We were both at the mercy of the water, a
ripping current of white water that bounded over boulders and rocks, fell a few
feet in several places, and, just a half mile along the current, descended
precipitously at Copeland Falls. We were
in a pretty desperate situation. I wasn’t thinking of any of that. All I needed
to do was grab Meghan.
We went over one small drop. Meghan went under. I swallowed
some water, but did not completely submerge. As a matter of fact, and don’t ask
me how, I managed to eventually get back on dry land with dry hair. Weird, at
any rate. After that first drop off, I managed to grab ahold of Meghan’s pack.
We had tumbled down river about a hundred feet, but it felt like forever. We
missed a few limbs that might have stopped us, but we were moving really fast.
We eventually, by sheer luck, I am sure, managed to get pushed up against
several rocks, where I grabbed a tree that seemed relatively stable. I told Meghan I wasn’t going to let her go.
“Okay,” she said. We looked around for a few seconds to see if we could
extricate ourselves from our position and get into some slow moving water. Even
though we had stopped moving, the power of the river was amazing, and we could
both feel the rocks we were wedged against roiling and shifting slightly as the
water pounded into them. We knew we were not in anything close to a stable
situation. It was clear that if we tried to get out ourselves, the water would
simply carry us farther down stream, bouncing us off of more rocks and scraping
us up against more limbs, so we did the only thing we could think of. The trail
was only feet away. People were passing, but had no idea we were there, so, I
yelled for help as loudly as possible. In a moment, Meghan started yelling,
too.
A young man, maybe fourteen, poked his head through the
trees. He had long brown hair under a
ball cap. He looked at us with surprise,
a “what-are-you-doing-there?” kind of look. “We need some help down here,” I
said. He nodded and turned back toward the trail.
An older guy showed up then, with the young man. He was
short, but muscular, and all I can really remember was that he was wearing
these wild green and yellow shoes. He looked around on the bank and grabbed a
limb. “Did somebody go for the ranger?” I asked. He nodded and sent the kid up
to send somebody to the ranger.
The older guy, the long-haired kid, and one or two other
guys made a daisy chain, linking arms, and the older guy waded carefully out
and extended the limb out into the creek. I grabbed it, and we just sort of
stayed that way for a few beats, the four guys on the bank at one end of the limb,
and Meghan and I at the other end. The rushing water was so loud that
communicating was not easy. We could barely hear each other, and, I think,
everybody was sort of wondering what was going to happen next. Was Meghan supposed to make her way along the
limb? That was not going to happen, because I was not going to let go of
her. Were we both supposed to crawl
along the limb? I wasn’t sure that limb
was strong enough to handle our weight and the force of the water. I looked
back at the older man, he looked at me, and he started to pull on the
limb. Within seconds, we were out of the
torrent and belly down in an eddy of slack water.
We were safe. Cold, soaked, bruised, and scratched--maybe a
bit in shock--but we were safe. We thanked the people that pulled us out, and
were surrounded by another crowd of people asking how we’d gotten in the creek,
whether we needed clothes, help, etc. Two women gave us emergency blankets to
keep us warm. It was warm enough that hypothermia was probably not a risk, but
let me tell you, brothers and sisters, those mountain streams are cold.
Our packs were soaked; our phones and cameras were ruined.
Meghan lost her damn sunglasses in the creek, and I lost a shirt that was
cinched on my pack and my Zip-loc bag of homemade beef jerky. I felt pretty
stupid for needing to be pulled out of the creek. However, considering what had happened and
what could have happened, wet and bruised and standing on the trail was about
the best way that whole situation could have ended.
The ranger met us on the trail as we hiked out. Meghan and I
had two Samaritans with us, Sally and Granger (I think was his name…maybe
Garret). The ranger asked us some questions about what happened and how severely
we were injured (not too bad, really). He
mentioned that we were the fifth and sixth persons to be pulled out of the
creek that week. That didn’t make me
feel any better, but he also mentioned that some of them were far more
seriously injured than Meghan or I, so I at least felt even more fortunate than
I already did.
At the trailhead, we stripped off as much of our wet gear as
decorum allowed, got in our vehicle, and headed home. It felt like a weird sort of anti-climax
(maybe that’s not the right word). We had been in this desperate situation;
this moment in my life had just occurred that was far from ordinary, and now I
was going to do something as banal as go home and take a shower?
Never in my life have I been happier to do a boring, mundane
thing.
*****************
For Meghan's perspective on this story, please visit Life Refocused.
*****************
For Meghan's perspective on this story, please visit Life Refocused.