Went up Skyline on November 17. Snow in patches from 4400 feet, some ice and loose wet snow on the traverse made it quite slippery, but not enough to make spikes necessary. Just my group on the trail.
Having done Skyline three times before, I made elementary errors. I dropped my phone at 2800 feet and noticed it was missing at 4400 feet so had to run back and get it. That taught me that, yes, it does get warm, even on a cool day, to go back down. My group kept on going so I had to run up to 5400 feet before I could catch them. Usually I figure Skyline is doable on a cool day without water, but I used 700 ml water (70% of my supply) in catching my group, plus I was quite tired when I caught them. Fortunately, the remainder of my water supply was Coca Cola. Also, on the plus side, I had worn my lightweight racing shoes, so the run down and up was not so bad, but on the negative side, I had worn my lightweight racing shoes, the non-existent grip of which was no fun in the loose snow on the traverse. I also completely forgot about desert cactus on the way down and it is quite instructive how much easier it is to see something above foot level when going up than to see the same thing below foot level on the way down. Which is to say that I ended up with a carpet of cactus spines in both legs. I discovered too that taking them out is a lot harder than putting them in.
So at least that minor amount of idiocy was easily survivable, though this summary does not quite tell the whole story.
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Tony
