After 2 miles, I came to the shelter. It’s an old but cozy wooden structure in need of repair. Normally when visiting shelters, I find groups huddled around a wood stove, warming hands and feet. Not this time. The small group I encountered was busy snacking and chatting, quite warm already. A few in the group were walking along the trails without snowshoes, opting to use shoe traction attachments, like Yaktrax, instead. The snow was so sturdy, they were able to walk along the surface without the extra weight of the snowshoes. Smart, I thought.
Not far from the shelter I came to an expansive clearing. I turned around and caught a glimpse of Mount Bachelor, but a few trees blocked what I thought would be a spectacular scene. Determined to get a great photo, I decided to tramp across the open field, to where I was certain to get a perfect shot: open, snowy field, trees perfectly framing Bachelor. I trudged across the expanse and quickly remembered why walking on soft snow is not fun. Each step, my foot sank about 10 inches. After about only 50 yards, I was huffing air, my hip flexor muscles hurt and, as for my spectacular view? It wasn’t so great. So back across the plain I went, puffing. This turned out to be a fortuitous exercise, a warm-up, if you will, for what lay ahead.
Telemark Butte
I snowshoed this loop before. But it was many years ago and the details were fuzzy in my mind. I remembered some sort of hill, but not its intensity.
Disclaimer: I know Central Oregon is filled with ultramarathoners, triathletes and people who sprint up mountains. I am not one of those people (I am pretty much equidistant between couch potato and mountain sprinter). The following description of difficulty is based on my view only, as I am sure there are plenty of people out there who could effortlessly jog to the top.