I first got to know Mike on a five-day backpacking trip through a rugged stretch of the Rubicon River. Somewhere between the granite, the river, and the questionable trail decisions, our annual adventure became known simply as “the float trip,” because there ended up being more floating than hiking. Over the next half-dozen trips, I became a full-fledged Mike fan club member. Mike was the ideal trail companion: equal parts comedian, philosopher, and wilderness dentist.
You could always count on Mike to have a joke ready, usually delivered with that grin that suggested he had been saving it for just the right moment. But even in the middle of the mountains, Mike could never fully turn off the dentist switch. More than once, while we were talking, I realized he was studying my teeth instead of listening to my brilliant outdoor wisdom. Eventually he would say, in that gentle, matter-of-fact way of his, “You know, Scott, we could fix that front tooth and give you a pretty amazing smile.”
For a couple of years I resisted. Then, like many of Mike’s patients, I finally surrendered to the inevitable. Of course he was right. The change was life-changing for me. After that, every time I saw Mike, whether at church, in his office, or out in the mountains, I reminded him that he had not only given me something to smile about, he had actually upgraded the smile itself. Mike had a way of improving lives, sometimes one tooth at a time.
Mike also approached backpacking the same way he approached dentistry: be prepared for absolutely anything. Before one trip, we were doing a pack check, and I proudly announced that my pack weighed less than 20 pounds. Mike looked impressed and then puzzled. “Why does mine weigh 45 pounds? I have all the same stuff.”
So we unpacked his backpack. What emerged was less “ultralight backpacking” and more “mobile wilderness kitchen and emergency room.” There was a frying pan. “Need that for the fish fry.” A full-size metal spatula. “Need that to flip my pancakes.” A surgical staple gun. “Need that to suture your head wound.” Every item came with a reason, and every reason ended with some variation of, “we might need it.” Mike packed for the mountains the way a squirrel prepares for winter, if the squirrel also expected pancakes, trout, and minor surgery.
Mike also loved his swimming pool at home and was devoted to his daily swim routine. Apparently, not even the wilderness could interrupt that streak. On later trips, he started bringing swim goggles and a snorkel. After we set up camp, while the rest of us were trying to recover from the hike and wondering if freeze-dried stroganoff counted as food, Mike would march down to the river, find the fastest current he could, and swim against it like a salmon with a gym membership. Watching a man in swim goggles and a snorkel powering upstream in a mountain river was one of those sights you never forget. It was wonderfully, gloriously Mike.
I was lucky enough to be invited on many adventures with Mike and Gary. There was the snowshoe trip to Carr Lake, where the snow was deep, the air was cold, and somehow Mike still managed to make everyone laugh. Then there was the trip where we got caught in a freak spring blizzard overnight. Most people would remember the storm. I remember Mike, completely unfazed, probably checking everyone’s teeth by flashlight and making sure we still had the spatula, just in case.