SUBSCRIBE | NEWSLETTERS | MAPS | VIDEOS | BLOGS | MARKETPLACE | CONTESTS
Full Name:
City:
Address 1:
State:
Zip Code:
Address 2:
Email: (required)

If I like it and decide to continue, I'll pay just $12.00, and receive a full one-year subscription (9 issues in all), a 73% savings off the newsstand price! If for any reason I decide not to continue, I'll write "cancel" on the invoice and owe nothing.


Offer valid in US only.
Canadian Subscriptions | International Subscriptions

CLOSE WINDOW

Also on Backpacker.com


Enter Zip Code
Editors Choice

EDITORS' CHOICE AWARDS 2011: THE BEST NEW GEAR




Flash Map

OVER 3,000 GPS-ENABLED TRIPS!



Daily Dirt

DAILY DIRT BLOG: THE LATEST OUTDOOR NEWS



Ask Kristin

GEAR PRO: YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED



Ask Buck

MEDICINE MAN: ESSENTIAL SKILLS REVEALED



Backpacking 101

BACKPACKING 101: GET STARTED NOW!



Videos

VIDEOS: FEND OFF A BEAR, PACK RIGHT, AND MORE.



Photos

PHOTOS: FEAST YOUR EYES WITH THESE SHOTS



Share your tales of travel & adventure with our step-by-step guide. Upload trail descriptions, photos, video, and more. Get Started

Backpacker Magazine – Online Exclusive

Ridge Runner

Undeterred by injuries that would cripple most men, a Colorado hiker nears the halfway point in a pioneering attempt to thru-hike the true crest of the Continental Divide. In this extended online interview, Dunmire talks about his gear essentials, near misses, and the challenges that lay ahead as he continues to trace North America's spine.

by: Steve Howe

PAGE 1 2
Dunmire on the Lizard Head Trail, Colorado. Photo by Scott DW Smith.
Dunmire on the Lizard Head Trail, Colorado. Photo by Scott DW Smith.

Glenn Dunmire was born to the mountains. Raised a backpacker by park naturalist parents, the 48-year-old climbed Katahdin’s Knife Edge at age 6 and summitted Yellowstone’s Mt. Sheridan (a 22-mile, 3,300-vertical-foot round trip) at 7. As a teen, he turned to mountaineering, jumpstarting two decades of cutting-edge alpine ascents. But the peaks took their toll, wrecking Dunmire’s left knee and hand. Lesser men would have hung it up, but the lanky, 6’5” Coloradoan found a new goal: an unprecedented 3,100-mile hike-and-scramble along the crest of the Continental Divide. He wouldn’t follow the well-known Continental Divide Trail, but instead traverse the very spine of the Rockies, where the waters literally part.

We caught up with Dunmire halfway through his journey, which he’s tackling in chunks. What we discovered was a man too humble to admit that his trek—one that was sitting there right under our noses, just waiting for a Messner-like visionary to discover it—could rank as one of the greatest of all time.

Fairly audacious project, Glenn. What inspired it?

My dad worked for the National Park Service, so I grew up in places like Yellowstone, Rocky Mountain, and Isle Royale. He put up the first route on El Cap [the Tree Route], and was on the first attempt on Makalu [the world’s fifth highest peak at 27,765 feet]. I just thought that lifestyle was normal. After college, my brother Pete and I bicycled around Colorado and climbed all of the 14ers in 54 days. There wasn’t much route info in those days, and it was often more efficient for us to just look at the peak from roadside and go straight up, so I learned you don’t always have to stick to a formal route. Later, climbing in Patagonia and Alaska with guys like Jim Bridwell and Carlos Buhler, people with a higher talent and intensity level, it makes you up your game and dream big.

When did you actually begin the Divide?

The early ’90s. I thought that with a few food drops I could do hundreds of miles in short order, but this proved unrealistic. Almost all of the terrain is off-trail, the boulder hopping is slow, and you can be striding along for miles until you come to a cliff band—and the next hundred feet takes two hours. You get forced off the ridgelines for water, or to avoid lightning, and the season is pretty short. So the project stayed on the back burner.

But then, three years ago, you got serious about it. What happened?

In 1983, I tore a bunch of ligaments that hold the carpal bones together in my left hand. In 2006, I reinjured it while speed-hiking steep hills with a rock-filled pack, which is how I train for my knee problem. [Dunmire shredded the ACL and most of the cartilage in his left knee in 1978.] That ended my climbing career, but the Divide has been great catharsis.

How is the leg holding up?

It’s tough. Compensating for my knee is wearing out my hip, and I can’t squat or bend it more than 90 degrees, so my scrambling has to be pretty well thought-out. I’m also in extreme pain—but there are people with far worse injuries than me who get up every day and go after it. I try to turn my injuries into an excuse to get out. I tell myself, hiking is the one thing that will keep my legs strong.

Many thru-hikers travel uberlight. What’s your style?

I keep my base weight to 20 pounds or less, but I carry a real tent and a Therm-a-Rest so I get a solid sleep every night. I also want hot food, so I carry a stove. When there’s good fishing, I’ll carry a fly rod, because if I can get two meals out of it, I’ve paid for the weight. But wild mushrooms are a more important secondary food source for me. With my ecology background, I’m comfortable identifying and eating them.

How do you handle navigation on such a long, complex course?

On a treeless ridgeline, it’s no big deal, but when I’m in the trees or a whiteout, I’ll use map, compass, and GPS together. I haven’t gotten lost, aside from a temporary setback in a snowstorm in the San Juans. I was absolutely sure the GPS was wrong, but of course it wasn’t. The maps have been good, too—I’ve only found one error. In southern Yellowstone, I was climbing over piles of fallen lodgepole from the ’88 fires, trying to follow the Divide despite not touching ground for a quarter-mile at a time. In one minor spot, the map showed the Divide going the wrong way.


PAGE 1 2

Subscribe to Backpacker magazine
Sign up for our free weekly e-newsletter
Reader Rating: -

READERS COMMENTS

Glenn - You were probably catching a rusher that got through Tom (or Mark) when you messed up your knee. Happy to see you are still in the mountains and know how to capture the alpin(lime)light. Am ready to join you for a leg of the divide anytime!
Posted: Oct 26, 2009 Russ Whitney

Glenn- Did you blow the knee out during football season on Perry Black's team?
Posted: Aug 07, 2009 Thomas Denning

I have alot of admiration for men like Dunmire. His determination he has for hiking the ridgeline of the Continental Divide, is truly an amazing feat for a solo hiker in such pain, and dangerous surroundings. I hope he completes his dream.
Posted: Apr 19, 2009 George De Atley

I admire the effort. My knees were slowing me down at his age but I pressed on. When forced to give up hiking, climbing, and skiing, I got the knees replaced--good thing since my hips were nearly worn out. Its been a year and a half and about the only thing I avoid is upper fifth class rock and expedition loads. At age 64, I was going to have to give those up any way.
Tell Dunmire to get his knees replaced by a top specialist that does at least 200 cases per year and has a better than 95% success rate. He will be doing the same things for over 20 more years.
Posted: Apr 11, 2009 Jim Key

ADD A COMMENT

Your Name:

Comment:

My Profile Join Now

Most recent threads

The Political Arena
What is Wrong with Arizona?
Posted On: Feb 09, 2012
Submitted By: Montanalonewolf
Trailhead Register
When is Pickle Gulch next year?
Posted On: Feb 09, 2012
Submitted By: Reminiscence
Go
View all Gear
Find a retailer

Special sections - Expert handbooks for key trails, techniques and gear

International Travel
From Nepal to New Zealand, we have stories and tips to help you plan the perfect 'life list' trek abroad.

Navigation Center
Learn how to orient a map, navigate any terrain, and the ins-and-outs of GPS devices.

BACKPACKER's Free Smartphone GPS App
Record and share you adventures with our new, free navigation app. Plus, discover thousands of GPS-enabled hikes in national parks and major cities.

Green Guide
A backpacker's guide to environmental issues and "green" gear.

Follow BackpackerMag on Twitter Follow Backpacker on Facebook
Name:
Address 1:
Address 2:
City:
State:
Zip:
(required) Email:

If I like BACKPACKER, I'll pay just $12.00 and receive a
full one-year subscription (9 issues in all), a 73% savings
off the newsstand price! If for any reason I decide not to continue, I'll write "cancel" on the invoice and owe nothing.

SUBMIT MY ORDER Offer valid in US only.
Canadian subscriptions | International subscriptions

Pay Now