Met up with Ferlino, Justin and Tessa to check out a spur ridge this weekend.
Are we hiking or visiting a petting zoo?
Views for sale, starting at $895,000. This must be the affordable area of the island.
Who let the dogs out? The hunters. Age old question finally answered.
Crossing the demo trail as we gained the Windward ridge.
Making our way up the ridge that was pioneered by legendary HTMC hiker Silver Piliwale, hence the name of the ridge.
Photo shoot at the notch.
The ridge became progressively steeper as we advanced on the ridge.
The ridge was laced with black webbing up to what was deemed the steepest parts by the people that installed them.
Rolling clouds soon saturated the area and soaked the grounds and screened out the views.
We met two other hikers who were deciding if they were going to continue down the slippery slope, we suggested going down the other slippery slope that we had just come up from.
Going down the mud wall whose bottom anchor tree has since been uprooted.
Ferlino contouring around the rock that was blocking the ridge.
Dropping elevation where we soon left the clouds behind us.
Descending down a short and steep hill as we branched off from the main ridge line.
Tessa taking the slack out of the webbing for the rest of the group.
The dense patch of woody climbers masked the razor thin ridge below us with sheer drops on both sides.
It was exhausting having to push, pull, climb and contort our way through the densely packed branches.
Struggling through the dense and tangled woody climbers seemed like hours but was actually mere minutes.
Out of the frying pan and into the fire. The entire ridge underfoot seemed none too solid as we slowly climbed our way down.
Our forward progress was halted by the assessment that further down climbing on this unstable ridge would be foolhardy.
Tessa dislodging rocks with every movement as she climbed her way down.
Looking at the Chimney from a different angle.
Justin looking for a second opinion. I don’t get scared, but this scared me.
Climbing back up the rotten ridge.
We made slightly better time through the woody climbers by following the “path” that we had made coming down.
Ferllino back on the relatively stable saddle.
Justin charging down the crumbly ridge line.
Looking back at the crumbly, steep and exposed ridge. The best option would be to come back and do it from the bottom. Another hike for another day.
Trying a more direct route.
Justin contouring the contour.
Climbing down the rockface on frayed webbing and core-shot ropes. When 50′ is not 100′.
Bugs eye view.
Watching other hikers in the distance on the notches.
The group on the spire shaped rockface.
Climbing up the bigger notch.
No leaning back for the gram.
Race to the top. Winner winner Thai dinner.
Making my way to the smaller notch.
Our lookout is better than your lookout.
Our exhilarating hike clocked in at only two miles? We lived to hike another day. Great exploratory hike with new and old faces. Mahalo to Aida and Quan for picking us up at the Pali Lookout and bringing frozen carbonated beverages with them. Post hike meal at Chao Phya Thai restaurant where the food was not hot enough for the Thai boy. At least half of him.
Photos taken by Justin Nambounmy, Tessa Bugay and yours truly. Not necessarily in order.
Note: I have been made aware that some hikers have been using my blog as a hiking guide and getting lost on the trails. Please note that this blog was made to document the hike for the crew(s) that did it. That is why some of my comments will seem to have no relevance or meaning to anybody outside of the crew(s) that hiked that trail. My blog was never meant as a hiking guide, so please do not treat it as such. If you find inspiration and entertainment from these hikes, that is more than enough. If you plan on replicating these hikes, do so in the knowledge that you should do your own research accordingly as trail conditions, access, legalities and so forth are constantly in flux. What was current today is most likely yesterdays news. Please be prepared to accept any risks and responsibilities on your own as you should know your own limitations, experience and abilities before you even set foot on a trail, as even the “simplest” or “easiest” of trails can present potential pitfalls for even the most “experienced” hikers.
{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }
That’s the scariest thing you got me into.
Aloha Ferlino,
You’re welcome. LOL.
Mahalo
Ohhhh, never again this rotten ridge!! Lol
Soooo, exhausting and scary! I was literally praying out loud every step of the way. Lol
Aloha Tessa,
Yup that was def a memorable hike.
Mahalo