You make the plan. The plan doesn’t care.
Cowboy camped off trail on the run to Tonto Basin, a hike I’d already lived once in my head. Moonlit miles. A mountain view of the town lights below. Chorizo and egg burritos in the morning.
Only, the moon never showed. Clouds hid it. Google said the restaurant was closed. A wrong turn added miles I hadn’t wanted. Thirty-five was enough, and I knew it before I admitted it. I laid down with my phone charging beside me, gear spread wider than it should have been, and was gone before the thought finished.
4am. Rain. First time in 180 miles.
I set up the rainfly in the dark, checked the weather I should’ve checked before sleeping. Rain until at least 8. I laid back down.
At 7 the wind pulled free the stakes I hadn’t set right. The back wall sagged. I hadn’t staked it at all.
Not a catastrophe. Just the part the plan forgot.
A little over a week out. 180 miles behind me.
The rain kept falling. I had nowhere to be.
By the time I walked into Tonto Basin, everything had softened. The edges of the plan. The urgency.
I went to the IGA for a sandwich and found Roadrunner—Justin—someone I’d known from other trails, just there, like it was normal. He gave me a ride to Rosie’s Place.
And it shifted.
Rosie’s isn’t just a stop. It’s what happens when people decide to care. Becky and Scott have built something special for Arizona Trail hikers. Rides, recovery, a place to sit without having to hold it all together.
People showed up carrying more than I was. Injuries. Heat exhaustion. Dehydration. And still, everyone finds their way there.
Strangers, until they’re not.
I took a zero without planning to. Let the day happen. Sat in it. Ate. Listened. Drank milk.
The trail gives you miles.
But every once in a while, it gives you people.
And if you’re paying attention, you start to understand which one actually carries you forward.
#AZT #ArizonaTrail #sobo #trailangels










