The short-cut was nice because I encountered only three other hikes on the trail. The main path had 100's of hikers. It was also more scenic, with ponds, ducks and small groves of trees.
Small grove of tress. Taking this path also added more elevation gain. Because you have to hike over a ridge at 2400 feet and then down to the junction at 2000 feet, the total elevation gain is about 1500 feet instead of 1000 feet. The end result is a big blister on my left big toe. And more calories burned.
Ducks. The path I took added 1.5 miles to the hike, making the hike about 7.5 miles. It took about 2 1/2 hours total.
Me at the top of Iron Mountain. Only a few other people at the top by the time I summited. Most of the families with kids must have started hiking earlier and were off the mountain by 3 PM.
Clear but hazy day. Good view of San Diego none-the-less. Plus, the air was cool and refreshing.
2 comments:
Today I was wondering what would happen if someone illegally brought in cobras and then set them loose? Then we'd have to deal with a cobra population in addition to the rattlesnake population.
Don't know why this crossed my mind.
When I got back to my car, there was a man changing a flat tire on his bicycle. After talking to him for a few minutes I realized he was "not quite right". He was telling me a story about last time he hiked Iron Mt. he saw huge 6 foot snakes and later saw on the news that some "???" was invaded that days with dozens of huge snakes. I think he imaged all this. I then quickly got in my car and drove away from him. Yes, he was another bearded-man and probably had a chainsaw hidden somewhere on his bike.
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