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mike_kellie's avatar
mike_kellie
Explorer II
Mar 19, 2018

knowledge of campgrounds intersecting PCT

Our twin son and his girlfriend set out from the Mexico border last Wednesday to thru hike the Pacific Crest Trail. We have done some back packing together while in the Boy Scouts but of course nothing remotely close to this on any scale.
I gave him my Garmin Explorer Satellite phone and when he has it on, it pings about every 20 minutes. These waypoints can seen if you're subscribed to his account and expanding the screen on my phone changes from a topical map to Google earth. This brings in much terrain and I've seen some mining roads and other ranch-type roads, intersecting seasonal roads and then main highways. Of course I need to scroll slowly looking to see how these can be traveled.
It's a fluid formula trying to pinpoint where he might be and when I could cross paths with him at this point. He is about 90 miles + into the hike and the main intersection I know of is Highway 10 by Joshua Tree.
So my question to the truck camper crowd is are there other sites you've seen or crossed? I'll be seeing him around Chester and Hat Creek, then the Trinity Alps and then somewhere in Oregon when we do the NATCOA rally.
What makes this even more unpredictable is I'm thinking some campsites, like in the Eastern Sierras could be closed while he has already passed through.
Thanks in advance...I miss the guy already!

11 Replies

  • It is not uncommon for people to hike the PCT with support at junction points, so the data is out there but you have to hunt a bit. I have friends who have done this. Also, there was someone a few years ago who wrote a book about this sort PCT hiking, but I cannot locate the info on that right now.

    The best maps I know of, downloadable, free, and updated often, are HalfMile's maps on the PCTA.org website. Direct link to them: https://www.pctmap.net/ Campgrounds are noted on these maps.

    The Pacific Crest Trail Association website has tons of info, especially under the "Discover the trail" section.

    The book and film, Wild, were crazy popular, but not very informative about the trail itself and the sort of data you need.

    The PCT crosses a dirt road at Bird Spring Pass, roughly between the Jawbone off-road area and Lake Isabella; you can search for this on Google Maps. There is a crossing near the Walker Pass BLM campground on HWY 178 near Lake Isabella. The PCT also crosses Chimney Peak Back Country Bywayand there are some campgrounds along it. The PCT crosses Hwy 108 at the top of Sonora Pass, as well as all of the other trans-Sierra passes. I have personally been to all of these places with my Tiger RV. I'm not sure I would advise taking your much-larger Host Mammoth on either Chimney Peak Byway or Birdspring Pass road.

    When snow is deep in the High Sierra or when parts of the trail are closed by fire damage, hikers often skip sections and come back to finish them later in the season.

    I don't think that the PCT goes anywhere near Joshua Tree, but there was some talk of rerouting 15 years ago when I was active on this subject, so perhaps I should say that it didn't then but it might now.

    Others will hopefully have more info to contribute. I'll follow this thread and answer anything I can.