Hike
anywhere in Tahoe, especially in areas where you are not in a deep
forest, and you will likely see a cairn, a small pile of rocks
stacked up. They are designed to show you something, usually the
correct path to take. Often on a hike, you will come to a juncture of
sorts. It looks like the path goes two ways. Game trails can confuse,
and natural formations can obscure the trail as well. Often, people
will build a small cairn to mark the correct way to go.
Where did the path go? Oh, it's over here, around this tree. |
In
Tahoe, especially in the Desolation Wilderness, there are many trails
that cross open areas of solid rock. When there is no way to discern
the trail, you will usually find cairns that mark the path.
Just
as cairns can be obvious or hard to find, their meaning can be
obvious or hard to find. And sometimes, their meaning will elude you.
You will think, is this a path? Or is there something else here that
I'm supposed to notice? If you see a cairn that doesn't seem to show
a path, consider that it might mark a hazard of some kind, an unseen
drop-off, a slippery slope, something else that made a previous hiker
think, “I should mark this so that others will notice.”
A cairn can say, "Climb up to this rise and see a great view." |
Cairns
have been around for as long as people. Scientists have dated many
cairns back tens of thousands of years. Many mark burial sites.
Cairns
can also be art. Often, people will make an elaborate cairn simply to
be a beautiful object.
When a large boulder tumbled down onto Meyers Grade, some kind hiker thought to make it into art for all of us to enjoy. |
The
next time you are hiking in Tahoe, keep a lookout for cairns. And if
you come to a place where there should be a cairn and there isn't
one, maybe you should add your mark to the world.
No comments:
Post a Comment