cellphone

Setting up camp. I camped here in 2020. It’s a good spot on a ridge above the trail.

Trail-side pretties. Unfortunately, my cell phone camera couldn’t do it justice.

Gary crossing Floyd Tower Road. Now it really feels like I’m on the last lap. I arrived at Floyd Tower Road just before three p.m. only a couple of hours of daylight left, and I have still got to get to my campsite and set up camp.

Trail conditions on the East Segment of the Berryman Trail. 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.

A trail marker for the original Berryman Trail — when the trail was considerably shorter.

Trail conditions on the East Segment of the Berryman Trail.

The things people leave behind — a hillbilly hunting hide.

Seventeen miles down, another ten or so to go.

Brazil Creek. I arrived at Brazil Creek at twelve-fifteen. 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. x2

Packing up camp. 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.

A tiny bit of sunshine.

Day Three — Planning the day’s hike. It was a wet and misty morning. Last night, six hours of rain fell, which bodes well for water availability on the trail.

Tree down across Little Brazil Creek. The top of this tree landed right where I had been thinking about setting up camp. That ain’t going to work. Plenty of water to top up my supplies though.

Stopped for lunch at Little Brazil Creek. 2

Witness trees and survey marker.

The trail is well-maintained and skirts around the hollows. And lots of cyclists! Two-minute read.

Day Two, breaking camp. Do I return to the trailhead or carry on? Two-minute read.

Trail Signs — The Berryman Trail forms part of the Ozark Trail, and the entire loop is looked after by the Ozark Trail Association, and a very good job they do too. -2 min | x3

Berryman Trail Mile Marker. There’s a couple of problems with the trail markers and blazes. First the wildlife likes to chew on them, and second, they curl up when they get heated by prescribed burns/wildfires.

Gary at the start of the Berryman Trail — Berryman Campground, Missouri. This will be my last backpacking trip of 2024. I’m nowhere near my goal of hiking 240 miles in 2024, but I’ll be spending the next four days hiking the twenty-seven-mile Berryman Trail. Three-minute read, +4

Camp Five Pond, Irish Wilderness. From the western side looking towards the trailhead and parking lot. Once more, ours is the only vehicle present.

Whites Creek Trail, loop complete. +1

The Whites Creek Trail South Loop is much easier going — As I’ve mentioned this before. If you don’t like hiking through oak woodland, this is not the trail for you.

Whites Creek — there was water running where I camped, but I’d filled up at Fiddler Spring.

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