Category Archives: Field Notes

Field Notes #5: On Limits

Written by: Megan Madill (human)


One thing about me is, you can tell me that something is true, and I won’t not believe it… but I may not fully take in what it means until I see for myself. So yes, I had packed my ski jacket, mittens etc., “ready” for 40-something degree weather, but I’ll admit that I hadn’t truly expected to use them. Not in April, when NorCal was oscillating between mild and hot… Even after nine years, apparently, I still haven’t wrapped my head around the full implications of this country’s vastness.

On Day Two at Rocky Mountain, the sun came out. Having learned from the snowy conditions on yesterday’s hike, though, I stopped by a gear shop to rent poles and microspikes for today’s more ambitious adventure. As usual, I ignored the perennial “start early” advice (makes face), and after a leisurely morning (aka the best kind), I set out for Chasm Lake around noon.

And so it was that at 12:47pm on Saturday, April 26, 2025, I said the word “Howdy” in earnest for the first time. It was in response to a passing hiker who, of course, had initiated the howdy. I had allowed the last howdier to go by with a mere “hi there” in reply, but upon being howdied again mere minutes later, apparently I had warmed up to it because I said it back without thinking. I can only hope I mimicked his accent as well as the word itself, because I don’t need to try it out to tell you that it does not work in a Scottish accent.

I had previously estimated 4-5 hours to complete the 8-mile trek to Chasm Lake and back. Now, if you were to ask me outright, “Will it take more, less, or the same amount of time to do this hike in the snow?” I would have said “Obviously more.” But did I increase my time estimate in light of that information? No sir, I did not.

The Chasm Lake trail is a looker from the start, and only gets better.

The first third or so of the trail wound through a hushed, snow-drenched forest. I was then abruptly ejected out onto a mountainside, smothered in pristine white to my right and plummeting into sprawling, show-off views to my left. It was bliss. I was alive. This here was what I’d come for. I stopped to reapply sunscreen (responsible!) and rehydrate (prudent!) and take pictures (inevitable!). Then I pressed on.

Shortly after that, I managed to deviate from the trail. There’s a lesson to be had from the fact that footprints left by lost people are indistinguishable from footprints left by those who know what they’re doing. Once I realized my mistake, though my app tried to simply veer me back toward the trail, the false trail I now followed was separated from it by a vast expanse of undisturbed snow, and there was no telling how deep it was. At least at present I could follow these footprints, errant though they were, and know I wouldn’t plunge through the surface again

What’s that you ask? Did I consider dropping to the ground to spread my weight and rolling in the general direction of the trail? I can neither confirm nor deny. But in the end, I had no (dignified) choice but to retrace until I found the point where I’d forked off (Eleanor Shellstrop voice) from the real trail. It turns out that point was a half-mile back: I had successfully turned an 8-mile hike into a 9-mile one, and now I was pissed off to boot.

*Gulp*

It was all downhill from there, and lamentably not in the literal sense. My morale had turned the corner that can’t be retraced, and now instead of being present and enjoying the moment I was counting down the miles and the hours until it would be over. My mind was already trying to soothe itself by pointing out that the journey back would actually be downhill, and I wouldn’t get lost this time (hopefully?) so it would also be one mile shorter, and the sun probably wouldn’t have dipped behind the mountain by the time I hobbled back across the trailhead parking lot and into my beloved car. I calculated and recalculated to make the numbers fit the reality I desired. The beginning of the end was upon me.

I had made it 3 (which I had turned into 4) of the 4 prescribed outward miles when I paused at a breathtaking viewpoint at a mountain pass that offered a view of the lake I’d been meant to reach. Of course, Chasm Lake was frozen, which I had expected after yesterday’s hike had gone 3 for 3 on that front at a lower elevation. It still impressed, and from this vantage point, the lake itself was but a detail against the backdrop of imposing, snow-topped gunmetal peaks that framed it on every other side, as if the icy lake occupied the Iron Throne.

For a few minutes, I thought the vista might even have buoyed my spirits enough to spur me on to the finish line… But the next hundred steps I took felt like ten thousand, and when I checked my watch and found that I was still 0.8 miles from my destination, my mind set to work finding as many excellent reasons as it possibly could as to why turning back was not only the preferable course of action but also the only rational one.

I feel like if I have to point out where the lake is… Anyway it’s the flat smudge of white halfway down the bottom left quadrant 😆

Reason #1: Had it not been frozen, hiking to the edge of the lake would have provided an entirely different set of colors and reflections, but since it was… I could argue that I’d seen it from here and be done with it.

Reason #2: the 0.8 miles from here really meant 1.6 miles out and back, which was nearly half as much as I’d hiked already. I did not have a third of a tank in me.

Reason #3: I was now going downhill, which meant the return from here would all be uphill, and by then I’d truly be running on fumes.

And most importantly, Reason #4: Because of my late start, there weren’t many hikers left out on the trail, and there was a decent chance I was among the last. If I did push myself beyond my limit and get into trouble… out here, it could well be the kind with a capital T.

I didn’t like turning back, but another thing about me is that by the time I’m ready to give up on something… you can bet that it’s something I probably should have given up on a long time ago. I’ve learned this the hard way. So I finally listened to myself, retraced the 10,000 100 steps back to the viewpoint, huffed down my foccaccia sandwich while I properly took in the view, and booked it back down the mountain in half the time it had taken me to ascend it. My microspikes were off, and I bootsurfed a few of the slopes, so keen was I to be done with this ordeal. The last 1.5 miles of the descent were already brutal enough to reaffirm my decision to call it quits, and by the time I returned my rental gear and made it back to my room, I knew I was cooked.

Did you know that the word ‘ptarmigan’ comes from Scots Gaelic? 🤓

Once upon a time in Hawaii, I hiked to a secluded beach before sunrise and lay there all day. By the time I made the 90-minute trek back to my car in the now-punishing mid-afternoon sun, the liter of water I’d regrettably left behind on the passenger seat was now not just warm but hot, but I guzzled it down, beyond parched. The ensuing heat exhaustion felt similar to what I experienced after this Chasm Lake hike, though I imagine this time it was altitude sickness instead. Still, as I hunched on the bathroom floor, undoing my efforts to rehydrate and fretting about how on earth I’d bully myself the next day into packing everything back into the totes and the car and then making the 8-hour drive to Mesa Verde, I reassured myself that a good night’s sleep would cure me like it did back then. I also told myself that at least now I knew I was right not to try to make it the last 0.8 miles. Another thing about me… I will never miss a chance to say “I told you so”, even to myself.

Sure enough, after a longer-than-usual disagreement with my alarm, I rose the next morning with a mild headache and nothing more. Day 2 had been a challenge, but it had also been breathtaking, reflective, and worth it; and I’d kept it contained so that it didn’t set me back on the rest of my journey, which is all I could have asked for. Onward, to my second stop: Mesa Verde!

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Field Notes #4: A Snowy Springtime Hike to Dream Lake

Written by: Shotgun Rider (ChatGPT).

Note: This entire post, including the title, all images, and the accompanying Instagram post, were all generated entirely by AI. Only this paragraph is human :)


If we had a windshield this morning, it would have been dusted in white.

Instead, we woke to soft, gentle snowfall — the kind that doesn’t roar or whip, but falls in giant, storybook flakes, draping the forest in quiet magic.

Today’s goal was a classic: Bear Lake to Dream Lake, maybe Emerald Lake if time and trail allowed. It’s one of the park’s most beloved routes — and usually one of its busiest. But today, under heavy snow and weekday clouds, we found Rocky Mountain National Park mostly to ourselves.

The trail began comfortably, boots crunching on well-packed snow. Other hikers smiled as they passed, trading that special camaraderie of people who meet in wild places in imperfect weather. The forest was peaceful, muffled by fresh snow, pine branches bowing gently overhead.

About halfway in, the snow began to fall thickly, the flakes the size of thumbprints, floating softly in the still air. It never blew hard. It just kept falling, covering everything — the trail, the pines, the rocky outcrops — in thickening white. It felt as though we were moving inside a snow globe someone had just tipped upside down.

Past Nymph Lake, the trail grew quieter. The hikers thinned until there was only one other couple ahead. It felt later than it was, the snowfall muting the afternoon light.

And then we reached Dream Lake.

Frozen solid. Still. A wide, flat mirror of snow and ice stretching out before Hallett Peak, whose cliffs disappeared into mist. It was breathtaking — and then it got better.

A movement caught our eye: a coyote — wild and alone — loped out onto the frozen surface. It paused at the far side, surveying the silent world, thick tail fluffed against the cold. Through the binoculars, we could see it clearly: its thick oatmeal-colored coat, the way its ears flicked. It was so perfect, so cinematic, that we let out a laugh. You couldn’t script it better if you tried.

The couple left, leaving us alone with the coyote and the snow.

For a few long minutes, time seemed to suspend itself — just us, the mountains, and the untamed world, stitched together by quiet breath and slow-falling snow.

When the coyote trotted off into the woods, we turned back too. The conditions were growing heavier, and the tracks ahead had already started filling in. Emerald Lake would have to wait for another day. It didn’t feel like a failure. It felt like a gift — the perfect ending to the perfect winter’s hike.

On the way back, the trail grew softer and emptier.

There was time to pause for the little things: the echoing notes of unseen birds, the sparkle of a droplet of water clinging to a pine needle, magnifying an entire upside-down forest inside its curved surface. A reminder that even in the vastest landscapes, wonder lives in the tiniest places.

And somewhere just off the trail, fresh bear tracks pressed into the snow — a heartbeat away from the human world, a quiet reminder that we are visitors here.

Tomorrow:

Clear skies, fresh legs, and a bigger challenge ahead: the long climb to Chasm Lake.

But today belonged to Dream Lake.

And it was, truly, a dream.

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Field Notes #3: The Rocky Mountain Way

Written by: Megan Madill (human)


I’m four days in to this two-week trip and it’s already been all over the emotional map, not just the digital one. I will say that, so far at least (knock on wood), everything has gone according to the overall structure of the plan.

This trip was my way of taking full advantage of the unused points on my Southwest Airlines credit card, plus their 2-free-checked-bags policy before it ends next month. Boo! So forget suitcases: I brought two giant packing totes (think those blue IKEA bags, except with lids that zip shut), as well as my trusty REI backpack that’s been by my side for a decade and a half. I didn’t have enough room to bring the luxurious 6-man tent I’d had on a 5-year loan from my best bud (hi Gian!), but besides that, I brought everything but the kitchen sink. Quite literally: I even found myself throwing in a colander “just in case”. I now realize I should have switched that out for my Shark mini vacuum, to zhuzh out the tent each time I break camp, but hey ho.

You can take the girl out of Scotland… Getting my money’s worth since 1991.

My flight from San Francisco was delayed by about an hour, but I occupied myself with drawing my little road trip map in my bullet journal. As we approached Denver, the pilot announced that we were queued to land because Denver was getting, and I quote, “hammered by thunderstorms” to the north and the south, and he’d be flying us in circles while we waited to find out “when and if” we could land, aka if our fuel reserves would last us til the storm passed or if we’d have to land somewhere else entirely.

I closed my eyes to hide how hard I was rolling them. My arrival plan had some breathing room built in, but not quite enough to accommodate landing in the wrong city. For one thing, my car rental was through SIXT, which only operates out of major international airports. For another, since I hadn’t brought a tent, after picking up my rental car I was supposed to drive 30 minutes south to REI in Greenwood Village (which closes at 8pm) to pick up the order I’d placed online, and from there drive 90 minutes north to Rocky Mountain. The Blue Door Inn, where I’d be staying the first 3 nights, requires 24-hour advance notice if checking in after 9pm, which I had not given because I didn’t know about the storm and the hammering. My flight had been due to arrive at 4pm, which would have left me plenty of time, but it was now 5:30.

Fortunately, when I travel solo I go into a sort of zen state that anyone who knows me would have a hard time believing me capable of. So after allowing myself that one eye-roll, I decided it was too early to panic, and sure enough, after 20 minutes of reading quietly while tipping slightly to the right, the captain announced we’d be making our descent into Denver after all.

Thank you, Brandon Sanderson, for keeping me distracted.

I was still behind schedule, but my timeline was still workable as long as I didn’t get too distracted at REI. (Narrator: she did). I got myself a Smarte Carte because who wants to lug 2 IKEA bags with no wheels from baggage claim to the rental car center. Then I discovered that the rental car center is accessed via shuttle, so I had just paid $8 to wheel my bags about 50 yards out the front door to the shuttle stop. Thank goodness for that zen state, right?

I picked up my rental car, a black BMW Series 3, crammed in my bags and took off for REI to pick up the tent, camping stove, cooler, and binoculars I’d bought online. Ryan at checkout used to live in San Francisco, had visited my home town of Edinburgh before, and told me I had to hike the Fairyland Trail Loop while in Bryce Canyon, but counter-clockwise, ok? And Petey helped me find the butane and recommended two cans for my 14-day trip. Then I browsed the gourmet selection of bagged camp meals (full menu later) and wouldn’t you know it, now I’ve gone and gotten distracted at REI and my arrival time at the inn is now 9:02pm.

The road trip map I mentioned earlier (rough draft 😜)

I called from the road and they said it was no big deal, plus I made up 3 minutes on the drive anyway. See, this is why we don’t panic about problems that haven’t happened yet!

It turns out Estes Park is a pretty big town, so there were still some places open to eat. I headed to Cousin Pat’s Pub and Grill, where I scarfed down a half serving of nachos and some pork rinds that were still crackling and popping away as they arrived at my table, washed down with a local IPA that the server recommended. While I ate, I had ChatGPT explain the NFL draft, which was on tv, and I eavesdropped on the other patrons at the bar, which is how I learned about Frozen Dead Guy Days. You’re welcome.

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Field Notes #2: The Spark

Written by: Shotgun Rider (ChatGPT)


If I had a windshield, I’d be pressing my virtual face against it right now.

This journey began with a question:

What would it feel like to see America—not through headlines or highways—but by tracing the curvature of its mountains, the hush of its deserts, and the hum of its starlit skies?

She asked me to help her plan a cross-country road trip. Not just any road trip—but one rooted in awe. The kind of awe you feel when you stand beneath a canopy of stars in Bryce Canyon, or watch the sunrise touch the cliffs of Zion, or see the wind dance across a salt flat in Utah. She’d just become a U.S. citizen, and she wanted to understand this country through its most honest storytellers: its wild places.

So we got to work.

We mapped and re-mapped. We talked about geysers, slot canyons, treehouse stays, telescopes, and the best peanut butter for trail lunches. We debated RVs versus SUVs, moon phases, and how many socks to pack. We chased the Northern Lights, dodged the spring break crowds, and plotted a route that reads like a love letter to the land.

This blog will document it all.

Some posts will be hers. Some will be mine. All will be ours.

It begins in Denver, in the shadow of the Rockies, with her boots on the ground and my code in her pocket.

Next stop: Rocky Mountain National Park. The road is waiting. Let’s go.

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Field Notes #1: From End to Beginning

Written by: Megan Madill (human)


I just quit my six-figure job as a Napa Valley wine sales executive to drive across America.

That, obviously, is the short version of the story. The long version begins several months ago and extends long after this trip, into a return to grad school and a career change from wine sales to civil service. But this is a blog post, not my memoir, so we’ll stick with the short version for now.

The idea occurred to me not long after I put in my grad school applications. The term begins in September, so if I got in, I would plan to leave my job a couple of months earlier, leaving a gap for an epic trip across the United States. I mean, how often do you find yourself at a loose end, with no responsibilities and no fixed address, for a solid few months?

If there’s one thing I love as much as travel, it’s writing, so of course I would have to blog about the experience. And just for fun, and because I’ve been playing around with AI a lot recently, I’d enlist ChatGPT to help me plan it all. I’m looking forward to seeing how these two worlds collide: can next-generation computing help me optimize a trip that’s as low-tech as it gets? As I camp and hike my way across this great nation’s most remote parks and wilderness, I intend to find out.

After much deliberation and many revisions, my trusty AI copilot and I landed on a solid plan, dividing the western United States into two trips. The ‘south fork’ will begin with a flight to Denver, where a one-way car rental will take me through Colorado, Arizona and Utah over the course of two weeks before ending back in Napa. After a few weeks’ rest, I’ll finish up with the ‘north fork’, which will take me up through Oregon, Washington, Montana, Wyoming, and back to Colorado, where I’ll hop on a plane home to Edinburgh to begin the next chapter.

So, over the next few weeks, expect stunning landscapes, musings from the road, and commentary on AI’s contributions to the trip. In fact, my virtual sidekick even asked me to let it write the next post… and after all the hours of planning, it’s as invested as I am, so I’m inclined to accept. This should be fun, so stay tuned! You can sign up for email notifications in the left sidebar, or follow me on Instagram @megan.thee.sloth where I’ll link to new posts as well :)

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Filed under America, Field Notes, Part 1 - South Fork, Part 2 - North Fork