Pacific Crest Trail Day 13: One of the reasons I used to justify taking months out of my life to hike the Pacific Crest Trail for a second time is that I believed the experience would be completely different than the first time around. My first PCT thru-hike in 2013 was my first time ever overnight backpacking and despite all my hours of research and planning, I had no idea what I was doing when I hit the trail. After 330 miles (how far I’ve come this time), I could in no capacity tell you that I knew what I was doing, but I knew that there were some things I was doing incorrectly (carrying three cameras, carrying a set of sleeping clothes, not carrying wet wipes - you know why). . So is PCT Round 2 any different than PCT Round 1? It could not be more different (unless maybe there were paintball gun-wielding velociraptors out here, that would be different). . I’ve changed a lot since my first time out here, but the trail has changed as well. I don’t think I met more than a few dozen thru-hikers in the entirety of the desert portion (the first 700 mi / 1,100 km) of the Pacific Crest Trail my first time around. This year, it’s not unusual for me to meet a few dozen (hopeful) thru-hikers in a single day. It’s been frustrating at times since I typically hike until dusk and have been finding all of the (halfway decent) campsites occupied as I begin searching for a place to fall on the ground and sleep each night. It was exactly this situation that pushed me to doing my longest day of the trail thus far - a day that took me over 2,000 mi / 3,200 km to match on my first thru-hike (I’m sorry @dylan.h.brown, I promise I’ll bust a 40-mile day for you soon). As in 2013, I’ve been hiking alone for nearly the entirety of the trail until now, but this year I’m isolating myself instead of simply being literally alone out here on the trail. Sometimes I feel like I should be wondering what the hell I’m doing out here again, but I’m too damn tired to spend my energy at the end of the day doing anything other than shoveling food into my mouth. Day: Mile 289.9 to Mile 330.5 Day's distance: 39.22 mi / 63.12 km Day's elevation gain: 3,961 ft / 1,207 m #SilverwoodLake #PCT