Today's Desert Sun paper reported on a rescue of some extremely foolish hikers who took the tram up and then attempted to hike DOWN Skyline. They experienced heat exhaustion and dehydration at 2500 feet and had to be airlifted off the mountain. (if somebody can post the link to the article, please do?) Idiotic and irresponsible though their actions were, it is useful in illustrating one hard, basic fact: you can't hike back down Skyline right now. If you start C2C/Skyline, you are going to finish it, or you are going to die. All attempts to do the hike now are COMMITTED hikes. That means you can't turn back. Let's do the math: Temps this week and last have been 102 to a 106, with nightly LOWS at seventy nine. Even if you start out at 4 am (a late start) the temps will ALREADY be eighty degrees. Let's say you hike up four hours--with temps rising every hour--then at 8 a.m., when you're at five thousand feet (despite the superfast people who post on here, the average time up Skyline is closer to seven to eight hours) you twist your ankle, have food poisoning from last night's Thai food, or simply feel too dizzy, exhausted and nauseated to continue up--a real possibility when you are exercising at maximum capacity and your overworked CVS has to expend much of its energy to keep your core temps at 98.5. There are still four thousand feet and five miles ahead of you and you simply can't continue up. Guess what? It's now too late to turn back. So what are you going to do?? Hello, there's no Plan B! Not only can you not go up: you can't go down. Daily highs this week are 106. If you descend, by ten or eleven it will be close to a hundred degrees, yet you'll still have two hours of hiking ahead of you, getting ever hotter. No matter how much water you have, and despite the fact that you are hiking downhill, you WILL get heat stroke. I am a local, trust me on this. You can't walk around in a park for an hour at noon here and not get heat stroke, let alone descend Skyline.
Even worse, we are having a horrific May in which the average daily temps have been ten to fifteen degrees above our normal low nineties. Every day this week has been well over a hundred. It's only going to get hotter. IMHO (and those of all rescue personnel) no one should do C2C/Skyline anymore this season (unless, maybe, you are a highly experienced and superfit local like Bluerail, who does Skyline virtually every week and understands its risks.) I realize some have planned out a late May C2C, thinking it would still be safe, but IMHO conditions are ripe right now for a heat death tragedy like the one that occurred a few years ago, in which a twenty eight year old man set out to do C2C in mid May and was dead less than twelve hours later. Are you totally, one hundred percent sure you can make it up Skyline? If you have never done it before, don't even think about doing until temps have cooled down. If you did it once or twice before, but during cooler temps, don't even think about it. And if you have done it during high temps, do you understand that you were simply lucky to make it, that you dodged a bullet, and that something as simple as a blown bunion would have resulted in you needing a rescue helicopter? The general rule of thumb is that Skyline should never be attempted when daily high temps are over 92 and lows are over sixty five. We're now fifteen degrees over that and yet many appear to still be planning C2C's, not understanding that while it's springtime in San Diego or Seattle or wherever they are, it's full on Hell Summer here. Don't do it folks, wait until late October or early November. And always, always, always: check the weather forecast.
