PaulR
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Thanks for your reply, Paul. Could Mt Si also be a side trip for someone hiking the Pacific Crest Trail?
Possible, but I don't think it is plausible for a bunch of reasons:
- he had no gear for doing PCT with him.
- it's very unlikely that he left his PCT gear somewhere, since he was way unprepared for Mt. Si. Tennis shoes in winter? The only "trail" I'd hike with plain tennis shoes is Burke-Gilman which is paved.
- completely wrong time of year to do PCT if he needed a snow shovel, unless he started from the South late in the year and he died on Si in the fall. Starting early from the Canadian border and he'd have seen a lot more snow on the way and I doubt he would have made it as far as Si.
- PCT is (by what I've heard) a challenging effort, seeing things few others ever get to see deep in the wilderness. Si is one of the most popular hikes in Seattle, during summer it is quite crowded. I haven't done Si but I've done Tiger and Pilchuck, which are also popular and crowded on nice days, it's not uncommon to have to park a distance away from the trailhead because the parking lot is full. I had to do that with Tiger. In short I don't see why someone doing PCT would go out of their way to do a relatively easy hike.
- PCT crosses I-90, and Mt. Si isn't that far from I-90, it looks to be about twenty miles away not counting getting from I-90 to Si. Possible to hitchhike on I-90 of course. I wouldn't walk on I-90 but someone could hike the John Wayne Trail which parallels I-90 for most of the way to North Bend, still if there was snow on Si, there would be snow on the trail and he'd have problems. But then we still have all the other problems.