OnlyCairns

Trip planning, history, announcements, books, movies, opinions, etc.
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Uncle Rico
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Joined: Thu Mar 20, 2008 7:48 pm

Post by Uncle Rico »

I'm in that 10%.

Not saying which 10%. ?
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Sean
Cucamonga
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Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 12:32 pm

Post by Sean »

Weird, I'm in all three categories, depending on the need for a cairn in a particular spot.
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HikeUp
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Post by HikeUp »

I don't notice the damn things.

So I'm in the 0% category.
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JeffH
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Post by JeffH »

Wilderness Park in Claremont. This is next to the unofficial trail which used to have a marker - find a picture of that in the triangular markers thread. That's the fire road right below this stack.
IMG_1104.JPG
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"Argue for your limitations and sure enough they're yours".
Donald Shimoda
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JeffH
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Post by JeffH »

Somewhere between Tujunga flagpole and Mt Lukens.
IMG_2330.JPG
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"Argue for your limitations and sure enough they're yours".
Donald Shimoda
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jfr
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Joined: Sat Dec 12, 2009 3:01 pm

Post by jfr »

I saw this NACA sticker on the back of the unmaintained Sawmill Pass Trail sign along the John Muir Trail, just south of Pinchot Pass and north of the Woods Creek Suspension Bridge. I was there a couple weeks ago.

This "trail" maintained by NACA

North American Cairn Association

False Sense of Hope

Confounding Competent Hikers Since 1928

All true!

Looks like we're nearing the centennial of the "organization"!
.
NACA JMT 2025 sawmill pass.jpg
NACA JMT 2025.jpg
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My hiking trip reports: https://hikingtales.com/
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wesweswes
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Location: Venice beach

Post by wesweswes »

I'm more of a cairn smasher myself
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AW~
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Joined: Mon Oct 01, 2007 12:00 pm

Post by AW~ »

I dont know about smasher....but I did try to shot-put some stones recently.
https://www.alexstark.com/how-to/blog-p ... efr6-2x97w
So the chakra forms the non-dualist of the zen energy, but " If for any circumstance the cairn were to be abandoned, it is best to disassemble it and return the stones to Nature."..and thats from the highly paid experts.

https://rocksstonesdust.com/essays/hampton.html
"A cairn is a collection of stones, gathered and piled by humans. Cairns are early cartographical tools, acting as sign posts or marking borders, paths, landmarks, or graves. Some are built for the aesthetic or spiritual significance they hold in their own right. A cairn marks a human relationship with a particular landscape at a particular time. They are constituted by stones that are within walking distance of each other, often arriving through the same environmental system (whether tilled by the same glacier, broken from the same mantle or worn by the same river), sitting relatively sedentary until they are guided by human hands into a stack invested with some significance. They typically stay stacked until they are dispersed again by some other environmental factor, such as the rising of the tide. The cairn alluded to by Weiner is purposely disassembled and dispersed again to prevent its migration into a new environmental system. This intentional dispersion cairn may be just as ephemeral as it would have been were it pulled apart by tidal waters, but it leaves a poetic link between the stones intact. "

So yes, it leaves the poetic link in tact. And as a person who has look into this his entire life, he would know. "Hampton holds a Masters in Visual Studies – Curatorial Studies from the University of Toronto. "
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HikeUp
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Post by HikeUp »

Beware the Cairn Terrier!!! Sasquatch's pet dog.

Cairn Terrier.png

The name 'Cairn Terrier' comes from cairns, where the terriers often flushed out vermin. Cairn Terriers are happy, busy little earthdogs originally bred to fearlessly root out foxes and other small, furred prey in the rocky Scottish countryside.
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