14 Sula to Leadore
If during the planning of this journey you had tried to describe to me the beauty that I would see, smell, touch and emotionally connect with, I would have not hesitated in coming to this place. There was at the time of coming to America significant pressure from friends and peers not to come because of the geo political situation.
But where is here?
Here is a place where I realise that religion, politics, and social gossip have no place. They merely serve as a buffer, a distraction between us and who we truly are. This sleight of hand we have created takes away our right of existence. To be. Here in these mountains I am not in a country I am part of the country, an equal to every living thing including those damned mosquitoes that appear when I sit with Sally in the evening to nurse our sores, talk about our day and talk about our tomorrow.
170 miles to new shoes!
The map is not the territory
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were sent by President Jefferson in 1804 to explore the newly acquired land following the Louisiana Territory purchase from Napoleon. (Funds from this purchase were to support the war effort against the British).
The territory purchased for the price of a flat in Chelsea was huge, doubled the size of the US and included the divide that Sally and I are hiking. They knew very little about the area. Their mission’s main goals were to build relations with Native Indians, map, explore, and above all discover the North West Passage. A fabled way to open a trade route to Asia.
The explorers feature heavily on our walk, towns seeking an historical identity embolden their discoveries as the first maps of the area were drafted. No one knew what lay beyond the divide. Such exciting times.
Now we use an app, called Far Out. It has a red line and an arrow that we follow. It’s overlayed on a topographical map and identifies the distances to water, camp spots, roads, stores etc. Users can also add updates - whether they saw a bear etc, in fact below is a selection of comments about a water point that took me half a bloody hour to find one evening.
| Mile 677.6 |
| 9700’ our highest point so far! |
| SAS and Huckleberry |
| ❤️Leadore , Idaho |
| A cool breakfast spot |
| That charcoal gets everywhere! |
Epic! Thanks for sharing. Safe travels John and Sally. Hugs, Onni.
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