Welcome to Breakfast in America
I’m a Brit who unexpectedly emigrated to the USA in 2008, and this is my photo journal.
It’s an eclectic mix of things; there’s no guiding theme or topic. It is whatever catches my attention, what I’ve been thinking, doing, or piques my interest. Currently that’s mainly backpacking and clearing some of the backlog on my ‘honey-do’ list.
Popular posts
Trending pictures and short posts.
Popular pages
Trending longer content.
Memories
A dozen pictures, picked at random from my favorite memories. You can see my portfolio here.
Table Rock Lake at Piney Creek Wilderness
View to the East across Gruinard Bay
On the lake trail at Piney Creek Wilderness
Buck Hollow in the evening light
Frozen Stock Pond at Compton Hollow Conservation Area
State Street, Chicago
A screen of trees
Blue Kitty
The end of the hike
Morning run at Grange-over-Sands
Plectranthus ‘Mona Lavender’
Edge – Getting near the glades on the Busiek Red / Yellow Trail
Recent Posts
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Trail conditions on the East Segment of the Berryman Trail

Trail conditions on the East Segment. The Berryman Trail, December 2024. Copyright © 2024 Gary Allman, all rights reserved. The section of trail from the road crossing of State Highway W to Floyd Tower Road (FR2265) is a bit more isolated than the West Segment. Parts of it run along the original trail route.
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A trail marker for the original Berryman Trail
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Trail conditions on the East Segment of the Berryman Trail
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The things people leave behind
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Seventeen miles down, another ten or so to go
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Brazil Creek

Brazil Creek. The Berryman Trail, December 2024. Copyright © 2024 Gary Allman, all rights reserved. I arrived at Brazil Creek at twelve-fifteen. I thought I’d seen the last of yesterday’s ATV/Side-by-side convoy. But no. As I dropped down the hill to Brazil Creek, I watched all twenty-one of them (maybe I miss counted yesterday), cross the Brazil Creek Bridge on State Highway W heading north.
I stopped and ate some trail snacks while I toyed with the idea of not taking on any extra water and relying on the small spring where I’d be camping. I decided that wasn’t a good idea, because if there wasn’t any water, I’d be quite dehydrated by the time I finished the hike. I’d not had a reoccurrence of my AFIB so far, and dehydration equals AFIB, so why risk it?

Lunch and filtering water at Brazil Creek. The Berryman Trail, December 2024. Copyright © 2024 Gary Allman, all rights reserved. -
Packing up camp

Packing up camp. The Berryman Trail, December 2024. Copyright © 2024 Gary Allman, all rights reserved. After a breakfast of biscuits and gravy and a cup of Ginger and Orange tea, I packed up camp and was back on my way just before eleven-thirty. It felt cold, with a brisk wind and damp air, even though it was a balmy 48 degrees. I was wearing shorts yesterday. Not today!
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A tiny bit of sunshine
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Day Three — Planning the day’s hike

Day Three — Planning the day’s hike. There was six hours of rain last night, which bodes well for water being available on the trail. The Berryman Trail, December 2024. Copyright © 2024 Gary Allman, all rights reserved. It was a wet and misty morning. Last night, six hours of rain fell, which bodes well for water availability on the trail.
My plan? Hike to the Brazil Creek Campground, fill up with enough water to last me through the night and the next day, and then stagger along the trail until I reached the place where I camped on the first night of my 2020 hike of the trail. That should be around six and a half miles, with a decent climb out of the Brazil Creek valley.
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Berryman Trail — Day Two stats and the rest of the day’s hike

USGS Map. 20 ft. Contours. Well, at just shy of eight miles, that was a bit further than I thought 🙂 That will teach me not to try and eyeball distances along ‘crinkly bits.’ My Little Brazil Creek lunch stop is at the top left of the above map. From there it’s a 200 ft. climb over around three quarters of a mile to the top of the ridge.
What the above USGS map omits is a newish forest road (they were putting it in when we hiked the original trail in 2011), which runs up the ridge and joins FR 2436. Who knows why, but the forest road is also called Berryman Trail… One thing about the USGS map is that it shows the original route of the Berryman Trail, so you can see how it has been moved and extended.
I keep several different map versions in my Gaia GPS App, including older and newer less detailed maps, private property, and sometimes geological maps for times when I need more information than is provided by USGS.
I started slogging up to the top of the ridge at two-thirty, and the noise of the ATVs/Side-by-sides was increasing. By switching and overlaying maps I was able to find the road they were on and could see that there were four places where the trail crossed the forest road. I sped up so that hopefully I’d get across the first two crossings before they did, and then they’d be in front of me, and I’d have the remainder of the afternoon to myself.
I beat them to the first two crossings, after which the trail runs close to the forest road. As they filed past, I discovered why so much noise had interrupted my lunch. There were twenty of them in a convoy, complete with colored lights and music blaring. Oh boy, but it’s not a wilderness, and they can have their fun too. I just wasn’t prepared for around $400,000 of noisy recreational vehicles to be in the same bit of the Mark Twain National Forest that I happened to be in. The next two road crossings were a fair way ahead so, I was hoping they’d be well on their way by the time I got to them.

Gaia Topo (feet) 40 ft. contours The noise suggested something different. They’d ground to a halt. I thought a downed tree across the road might have temporarily slowed them down. Nope. they were parked two abreast, bumper to bumper blocking the point where the trail crossed the road. I maneuvered my way between the vehicles, in the process making friends with a couple of dogs who were very interested in my hiking poles. Finally, I had to ask someone to stand aside so that I could get through. Once through I hoped they wouldn’t move on before I made it to the final road crossing. They didn’t. I met another south going day hiker and wished him luck getting across the road 🙂
I carried on towards my goal, arriving at the point where I wanted to leave the trail at three forty-five, leaving me about 90 minutes of light to find a spot to camp and then set everything up. There was wind and rain in the forecast, so I’d need some trees that would let me set up my tarp across the wind. By four I’d got to a good spot and was getting everything ready.
As for the ATVs/Side-by-sides? Well, I could still hear them driving through the forest at seven p.m.
















