After finishing the Sierra High Route, the Colorado Trail, as well as a section of Canada’s Great Divide Trail, Virginia and I wrapped up our summer of backpacking with this off-trail doozy: ~130 miles, nearly 31,000 elevation gain and loss, from the lowest point in the Western Hemisphere (Badwater Basin, Death Valley, -282 feet) to the highest point in the lower 48 (Mt Whitney, 14,505 feet). What else is there to say? Feast your eyes and ears below.
Excellent video, loved it. Great work team!!Andrew and Sabina
#yiv1107309759 a:hover {color:red;}#yiv1107309759 a {text-decoration:none;color:#0088cc;}#yiv1107309759 a.yiv1107309759primaryactionlink:link, #yiv1107309759 a.yiv1107309759primaryactionlink:visited {background-color:#2585B2;color:#fff;}#yiv1107309759 a.yiv1107309759primaryactionlink:hover, #yiv1107309759 a.yiv1107309759primaryactionlink:active {background-color:#11729E;color:#fff;}#yiv1107309759 WordPress.com | Virginia & David posted: “After finishing the Sierra High Route, the Colorado Trail, as well as a section of Canada’s Great Divide Trail, Virginia and I wrapped up our summer of backpacking with this off-trail doozy: ~130 miles, nearly 31,000 elevation gain and loss, from the lowe” | |
Hey thanks! And thanks again for the lift, it was awesome meeting you two!
Amazing! Did y’all give the coyote that bucket with water? Also was that horns on David’s backpack -Video is outstanding- Wonderful job❤️
Thank you! Some kind folks gave the coyote the water.
Those were antlers that David found 🙂