Re: [Philmont]: Trail down the tooth

From: John LeBlanc <philmontjohn@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue Dec 06 2005 - 18:27:50 CST

Two thoughts on the Tooth Trail.
   
  First, it's long...really long for what it gets you. If you just don't wanna go home and you wanna stay on the trail for a little while longer, it obliges that.
   
  Secondly, along the rough boulder or rather mini boulder hopping part, it's loaded with rattlesnakes.
   
  The reason being is that type topography is home for many rodents as it provides security for them. So...the rattlesnakes follow looking for an easy meal.
   
  Philmont doesn't advertize this or deny it, but it's one of the reasons they don't allow night hiking. Even so, that is a popular place to "get an early start" before daylight, but it's fool hardy.
   
  I am not afraid of snakes by any means and catch then for educational purposes all the time, but I'm here to tell you that hiking the tooth trail before daylight is asking for trouble. A snake bite on your last day on the trail is a good way to really screw up a kids Philmont experience.
   
  In 2002 we found three Prarie Rattlesnakes within striking distance of the tooth trail.
   
  My daughter and I hike snake country every summer and have had some close encounters, but we DO NOT push the edge of the envelope by hiking trails at night. We find enough of them in parking lots and wide paved trails returning from the showers or campfire programs to get all the excitement we want.
   
  As to the length of the tooth trail, the story from a very reliable source is that the trail surveyor and the trail crew chief had a running feud. So, to even things out, the survey crew gave the trail crew a little extra work to do and surveyed out a little extra long trail. I don't doubt that one bit as the trail makes some really subtle elevation gains when it could just as easily continued downhill.
   
  One positive thought is this.
   
  On our trek in 2002, we had an advisor that was a little should we say "overbearing" on the trail to the kids. On the way down the tooth, he developed some pretty nasty blisters. Well, youthful games being what they are and paybacks being what they are, everytime he was about to "doctor his wounds", the crew leader would give the command "saddle up" and off they'd go with him hurrying to catch up. He hobbled around gingerly for the next two days on the trip home.
   
  The lesson here to adults is always be respectful to the kids because they just might be in a position to help you or hurt you.
   
  Forewarned is forewarned.
   
  John LeBlanc

                
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Received on Tue Dec 6 18:42:54 2005

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