After an hour and a half we got to what we thought was the top (because it was too foggy to see 30 feet in front of us). Looking at the time, we would get back to the RV just after 7PM, and we would have done a nice little 3 hour hike to work up an appetite.
As I said, we could all take credit for the good idea that was going for a hike but I can wholeheartedly blame one person and one person alone for what happened next. Senetchko said, I think it goes up a little higher that way, and he pointed to the north and west, and sure as shit he was right. I was having a steady conversation with my torn meniscus during the last 45 minutes and I thought, I should probably put some ice on this... or at the very least have some whiskey. But without a second thought Jay was off, followed shortly after by Paul. Jay is 6'5" tall and his gazelle like gait negotiated the rocks and elevation with ease. I am 5'10" and built like a shoebox, and my Marvin the Martian legs were not as effective. To make it even more humiliating, Jay was collecting rocks as he climbed. You read that right... fuckin rocks. Not pebbles. Baseball sized rocks. The hike wasn't bad enough for him, so he decided to fill his backpack with about 50 pounds of rocks. No granola bars, but all kinds of rocks.
Up we went and right when it seemed it was going to flatten out, we went up some more. It was at that time I remembered the year before going for a hike here and seeing an older Italian man in jeans and boat shoes, drenched in sweat and in a state of confusion, begging to know if he was close to the campground. I pointed him down a path and thought, "amateur... being that unprepared is just dumb". I wondered how he could be so tired on such a short hike. As we continued climbing I checked my GPS to see where we were and was astounded to find out that we were now about 15 km away from our camp and at least three hours away. Oh and it was also at that time that we realized that none of us had brought water or food. A little demoralized we trekked on, the distance between each other growing until we could no longer hear my muttering, or the rocks in Jay's backpack banging into each other. But right when I was at my darkest, no longer sweaty because I was completely dehydrated, the clouds parted and we found ourselves in a Lord of the Rings-like valley with a glacial stream running through it. Jay opened his pack, moved a bunch of rocks out of the way and found an empty water bottle which we filled at least seven times and tried our best to rehydrate.