

Wilderness Traveler
Leads Adventuresome Life
By
George Medovoy, Editor
The name of her company, Call of the Wild,
seems the perfect metaphor for Carole Latimer's adventurous life.
Latimer
has led wilderness trips for women since 1978.
It was Lartimer's free
spirit — her own "call of the wild" — that took her somewhere
she never expected to go.
Latimer, whose Berkeley, California-based company
offers 25 trips a year for women only, was fired from her job as a secretary.
That was 22 years ago. Behind her was a B.A. degree in Rhetoric from UC Berkeley
and one year of law school.
"I really hated law school," she
remembers. "I just thought it was awful."
So what to do?
Since she had grown up in the hills of Northern California and learned to
love hiking, she decided to go to work for the U.S. Forest Service in Oregon.
That job lasted until she returned to California and joined a San Francisco radio
station.
"I was hoping to go into some sort of news thing,"
Latimer remembers."Basically, I just wasn't fulfilling the boss's idea of
what a secretary ought to be.The first thing I did was I told him that I wouldn't
make coffee, and then there were a number of other things. One day, I went to
lunch...and didn't come back."
Today, Latimer admits, she might
fire someone for doing the same thing, but she also knows that getting fired was
the best thing that ever happened to her.
"It's so corny,"
she says. "Sometimes you think it's the worse thing that can happen -- and
it turns out to not be an awful thing. You don't ever know what life will bring."
Next, Latimer took a friend's advice to teach women how to backpack. It was,
she notes, "the adolescent phase of the women's movement" and leading
women on hikes seemed like a "great metaphor for women at that time -- carrying
everything on your back."
"In many ways," she says, "it
still is a frontier for women."
With her dog Shenka, the adventurous
entrepreneur began a new life leading backpacking trips into the Sierras —
of course, for women only.
"I started showing women this great thing
to do," she says. "It just sort of unfolded for me."
Later
on, there was a dog named Beowulf, and now there's Jody, her new canine friend.
Latimer still leads trips, but these days she also has seven guides who work for
her as independent contractors.
There are day trips, three-day trips,
and weeklong trips, but the most popular hike is the day trip with a spa treatment:
a five-mile hike, "a great lunch," and a spa treatment in Calistoga.
Trips usually accommodate from eight to 16 people and may cover the Sierras,
Alaska, Hawaii, and the Southwest, including the Grand Canyon.
Latimer
also offers private trips, and these accommodate both men and women.
Call of the Wild provides most of the equipment and can help hikers choose the
right clothing and gear. It can also assist with travel arrangements.
Pre-trip classes are included in the price of a trip. During our interview, I
wondered about the reasons women choose to hike exclusively with other women.
"There are as many reasons as women," says Latimer. "We just
have a lot of fun, and women can let go around other women. For example, they
can talk about things they don't talk about in mixed company.
"On
the week-long trips in particular, they really feel an absence of competition
on the hike and a lot of support from other women."
For some professional
women, it's a chance to get out of a "man's world."
And then,
too, Latimer gets a lot of moms on her hikes.
"They think the husbands
should have an opportunity to take care of the kids," she notes.
Latimer's company has a variety of trip ratings, which potential hikers should
know. "Hiking Light" (HL) means hiking with a light daypack only. Your
gear is transported by pack animals, boat or other means.
Hiking Light
trips are generally easier.
"Backpacking" means you're carrying
a pack with your sleeping bag, food, clothes, tent — about 30-35 lbs. of
weight.
Trip ratings are determined by trip length, pace, altitude, elevation
changes and daily mileage. Easy, Easy/Moderate is 2-4 miles a day; Moderate, Moderate/Challenging,
5-9 miles a day; Challenging, Up to 10 (or more) miles a day.
Hiking-Light
adventures are generally easier and include hiking the John Muir Trail with pack
animals carrying your gear, wildlife viewing, and camping in Alaska's Denali National
Park.
Backpacking (BKPK) trips run the gamut from easy beginners' trips
to a weeklong expedition to the summit of Mt. Whitney, the highest peak in the
lower 48 states.
On the hikes, everyone sleeps in tents, but the notion
of roughing it is somewhat tempered by Latimer's really great meals. The creative
guide, it turns out, is also the author of a recipe book called "Wilderness
Cuisine (Wilderness Press, $12.95), and she prides herself on providing "fancy
food" for her guests.
Latimer's "trail blazers" enjoy
fresh-baked coffeecake, Sherried Mushrooms and Sweet Peppers, and other tasty
dishes taken from her cookbook.
"We use high-quality ingredients
and fresh fruits and vegetables, and home-canned goods from the Latimer family
garden and orchard in the California gold country," she says. Main course
specialties include grilled Ahi with papaya salsa in Hawaii,
or fresh-caught
halibut in Alaska.
For more information, call (510) 849-9292, or visit
www.callwild.com. Email to:
trips@callwild.com.