Pacific Crest Trail
Mexico to Canada April – Oct 2012
Through California, Oregon, and Washington !!!
There are a dozen separate moments that brought this Project together. In time I’ll share with you each and every aspect involved in the creation of ’26′.
The A-HAAA’s to the sadness of loosing a friend…
What do you get when you take the guy out of the city, remove the socialite from the scene, yank the stage from the entertainer, then stick him in a blue collar job and suppress his creativity? Well, if he’s the mustached Mr. 26, you end up with an explosion of the unimaginable (and utterly undefinable) trekking of the west documented via odd photographs across your computer screen. This is the story of hiking26. The plan: to hike the Pacific Crest Trail, from April through October, 2012. 26 weeks, hiking 2600 miles, while wearing 26 wedding gowns. Performance Art Insanity, defined.
Ron moved from Saint Louis, Missouri six years ago with a mission to live the simpler small town life and enjoy the great outdoors of the inland northwest. With a goal to explore, he dubbed himself the Northwestern Adventurer. While life guided him to places he couldn’t have anticipated, he settled into a job as an industrial painter and sandblaster. On his time off, however, he would hit the back roads photographing nature to share with those who cared to watch life through his eyes. For years, people would refer to his online photo albums as “living vicariously through Ron’s adventures.” To one-up the enjoyment factor, he began throwing in the unexpected. Let’s just say that Mattel surely never expected Bridal Barbie to be tucked in the depths of a 30 pound pack in the backwoods of a northeast Washington county.
After subtle prodding by many (and mom) to do more with his eye for photography, Ron played it safe, made excuses, and blocked any attempts to motivate the thought stirring in his brain. This changed, however, when a series of events led him to a concept-turned-project that would come to be known as hiking26. It began in Canada with a dumpster full of vintage clothes and “garish” worn-only-once wedding gowns that he felt the need to rescue, and the subsequent trouble he encountered crossing the border with them. Then, while backpacking into Hells Canyon on a hot July 4th afternoon, the irresistible idea came to him to pull one of those gowns out of his pack, and pose on a precipice. Suddenly things started to come together. The urge to move to Portland to reconnect with art and his creative side – and to hike from the Mojave Desert Flats to the snowy peaks of the Sierra Nevadas along the 2650 miles of the Pacific Crest Trail – surfaced. It was time to abandon this small town life, job, and insurance, for something bigger.
While the crazy idea for this gowned journey felt right for Ron, there were logistics to consider. The first challenge? Money. The cost of hiking the PCT would ring in at a minimum of $5,000 for 6 months of food and replacement gear on the trail. In looking for solutions, someone suggested he get a sponsor. But who would sponsor the idea of “The Gowned Guy/Man with Mustache Goes for Hike?” A friend and growing mentor pushed for more thoughts on this. Why the gowns? Why that particular hike? How could the dresses, the hiking, and the photography be tied together in a way that made raising money for this “out there” project make sense? Three weeks of solid research into the essentials of the PCT, and countless hours lost in thought on how to tie these concepts together, brought on the answers. 6 months = 26 Weeks. The PCT is just over 2600 Miles. Find 25 more dresses to make 26, and there was the name.
There were other challenges too, however. The collecting of gowns would be more difficult than anticipated, as would raising even more funds to cover shipping costs. And introducing the concept of hiking26 in a way that was able to grab attention would be difficult as well. But Ron continued to brainstorm, and the pieces started to come together. The collection of gowns did as well.
Thusfar, the assortment of “rescued” wedding gowns ranges from vintage to strange to incredibly, unhikably heavy (although excellent for portrait fun!). And what does Ron think of wearing these previously abandoned dresses? “I admit I’ve always found myself enthralled by the beauty of wedding gowns. They’re so fluid in motion, whether down the aisle or down the runway. Even on a dress form adorning a shop’s front window, a gown emanates fantasy and illuminates dreams. The often-detailed construction of such a masterpiece, combined with the selection process of the bride, her family and bridesmaids, and the intense amount of time that is sunk into this the one garment – it leaves me feeling that it’s a great shame for it to be packed away in the back of a closet somewhere.”
With plans for the big hike falling into place, Ron doesn’t go anywhere without a wedding gown stuffed in his backpack or tossed in the back of his truck. (He says he never knows when a photo opp might turn up!). On a trip to Portland one damp afternoon, he stopped to photograph railroad tracks in the Columbia River Gorge. The signature photo that resulted from this – entitled ‘Momentum’ – brought upon the realization that there was even more to this project than a gowned border-to-border hike. From goofy to dramatic, the photo collection, like the dresses, is growing into a hodge-podge of strangeness that has allowed him to finally feel like he’s found his (bizarre) niche in life.
In the end, this odd whirlwind of an idea is a tale to tell all. It is a book telling of a strange adventure and a bad idea, of mountains conquered (figuratively and literally), and of a dream. Picture it! A gallery, 26 photos, 26 points on the trail, in 26 Wedding Gowns. Next to each photo: the actual dingy, torn and tattered gown Ron donned along that stretch of trail.
“I’ve never been comfortable being referred to as a photographer. But I was gifted with my grandfather’s eye for photography, I dream larger than life, and view the world a bit differently than most others. It’s my great pleasure to entertain anyone that enjoys a view of the outdoors, life on the back roads, and a little sense of humor on the side. It’s these traits that borne and propelled the concept of hiking26, and I hope, with the MUCH appreciated help of everyone who’s enjoying this with me, that they’ll become a part of ‘team 26′ and help make this a reality.”
Special thanks to Melissa @ bubbyandbean.com for this edit of my story.
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The Fine Print… YES… I’m sorry to break it to you now… there IS fine print…
- There’s always a possibility that it could take an extra week or two, as well as the possibility it could be shorter than 26 weeks, if an early winter hits the Cascades and i need to get moving. This is a long estimate of time. It’s figured that most thru-hikers take six months to complete the journey. If i find myself with extra time, and the weather isn’t turning for the worse, I can take a day off and slow down. But moving forward I can only go SO fast on the trail.
- NO COTTON ! Please. Man Made materials dry faster, Cotton reatins water and cools, possibly resulting in hypothermia or any other number of issues.
- Injury or illness could slow me down, hold me back, or cause for the entire trip to come to an abrupt end. If I were to break my leg a week before I’m off on the treck… Well, I’ll have to hold off a year….
- If necessary, this trip may be pushed forward to 2013. The expense of the hike itself, replacing failed/worn out gear/food/mailing dresses to and from the trail towns is a hefty one. If I am not able to save or raise enough money in time, the hike will have to be pushed forward a year.
- If permanent injury/unforeseen circumstance requires the journey to be canceled all together, Money Raised, and dress donations will be dealt with at that time. Possibly donated to a charity?…
- Any donated dresses WILL be altered for safety/comfort/ease of movement/etc.
- Any donated dresses will not be returned. If an excess of donations exists, a decision will be made as to what plan of action is best. Save for a future hike? Use in Training Exercises? Donate to Charity? At this point, Who knows? I’ve had the great fortune to use a fantastic wedding gown ‘on loan’ that would not be ideal for the hike, but made for fantastic photos… It’s impossible to foresee how this will be handled, until any dress donations appear.
- I intend to do all hiking in a wedding dress, but when not moving forth on the PCT, (i.e. Zero days/rest days/resupply trips into towns) dresses will not be worn for multiple reasons. In addition, if wearing a dress will hamper my ability to safely traverse the trail, it will be removed until hiking in a dress can safely and easily resume.









5 Comments
Well, I have read many of your blog postings and you are an exquisite writer, Ron. Rob told me about your… adventure and the website. I must admit that your 26/26 is a novel concept. I don’t quite understand your reasons, but I applaud your originality. I also expect that you will enjoy it immensely and it will be a memorable experience. You are a nut case, and I mean that in a very nice way. Keep up the good work!
And the site of you coming up the hill in the wedding dress… looking finer than many…
Good luck, enjoy, and keep me posted!
Cheers,
Jim Matteoni
This was so cool! Great talk. Ofcourse I almost didn’t see you walking over the hill. Typical mom. I can’t believe I have sound, and it’s very loud. I heard all of your talk. Love it.
Here comes the bride… I know whose journal I’ll be following during next year’s thru hike season.
Hey Ron this is amazing and I can’t begin to tell you how similar our way of thinking is. i had received your email months ago.. Did as you told and forwarded it…but never looked at it…Fast forward to yesterday and my desire to do something crazy, my obsession with jumpers and hiking…so I started thinking about hiking the PCT in fancy jumpers…LOL…if for WHATEVER reason you decide to do this in 2013…It would be amazing to intersect with you and get ONE amazing shot of you in a wedding dress and me in a Joan Collins Jumper!
xo
See if you can get a carrier (UPS, FedEx, DHL, etc) to ‘sponsor’ you with providing shipping to and from of the dresses. USP was started in the PNW, so maybe they would be the first to contact.
Maybe they could use it as a promotion gimmick. ‘If we can get a wedding dress to a PCT hiker, we can get YOUR wedding dress to you.’
I hope you have the ability to upload updates of your trip from the trail. It will be GREAT to follow your progress and maybe even meet up with you and hike part of the trail here in WA.