Next, you will want to make sure you own a pedometer or have one downloaded on your phone. The number of steps you take in the next two days will be enough to justify an entire ice-cream cake, all to yourself. You must also take a photo of said number of steps as it is likely your machine will never see such high figures there again.
Though the official website is rather detailed in the nuances of the hike, they do leave out a few key facts.
Namely the following:
The mattresses you will sleep on in the Pinnacles Hut are rather crinkly and loud (thusly the need for the earplugs).
They fail to mention the 926 steps that are involved in the 2ish hour hike up to the hut...as well as the plethora of steps that follow in the jaunt up to the Pinnacle.
There is a bit of "bouldering" involved...right when you are near the top and your body is sore and you can see for miles. So if you...ahem, not so fond of heights, this part may feel a bit terrifying.
There *are* in fact pots and pans up at the cabin, so go wild on bringing goods to fill them.
Toms are *probably* not the best shoes in which to do this tramp (as my husband informed me a dozen times over.)
There will be a moment, or three, in the middle of this hike (or at the end as you are valiantly attempting to hoist yourself up the rocks without plunging to your death), when you wonder, why, why you insisted on this cornerstone of the trip.
Why indeed.
But finish it you will (and if you've been smart about it you'll have left some beers in the cooler back in the car), so when you make those last, stumbling steps back to your ride, you will find happiness to match the victorious feelings already rising in your heart.
This trek, these days, will have made you a stronger, better person. And you will never go back to what you once were.