r/Ultralight is the largest online Ultralight Backcountry Backpacking community! This sub is about overnight backcountry backpacking, with a focus...
r/ultralight was a relatively niche community until it hit an inflection point in summer 2020 when COVID caused a deluge of new subscribers who subsequently complained about over moderation. The mods backed down and the sub became less focused and more generalized. In June 2023 the mods shut the sub down as part of wider protests over Reddit enshittification related to an IPO.
Hoping !ultralight can recapture that early community spirit.
Hello and welcome! I’m based on the greater NYC area and enjoy trips to the American west. I’m attempting the Uinta Highline Trail later this summer. How about you?
flying into Vernal, UT, flying out of SLC. hope it works :) awesome state, i walked through CO and NM on the CDT. CO was spectacular. i'm jealous, you've got a lot to choose from in your backyard. where have you been in NM?
🤞hope it works. re: ridgewalks yes! most memorable was bailing out two days in a row near Frisco, first day from a rainstorm on Grays, next day from winter-like conditions near Santa Fe Peak, was getting blown around pretty bad and it was the only time hiking i've been legitimately scared.
i was actually going to ask if you'd done Pecos, i'm interested in some variation of the Pecos Skyline trail, any opinions on it? i'm not familiar with Hondo and Latir, any recommendations on resources? Gila was great, you'll enjoy it :)
Yeah, stuff can get hairy over treeline. I've had a few scares when the weather changed suddenly.
Pecos is cool. There's a high chance of seeing critters (bighorn sheep, elk) and some nice long ridgewalks. A lot of the area has burned at different points. A few years ago a large portion of the eastern side burned. Not sure if it made it over the ridge that makes up that side of the skyline trail. Maybe something to check on.
As far as the other hikes, I'm pretty sure PMags has been to and has write-ups for both.