聽has led the pacific southwest region of the Environmental Protection Agency鈥攁 district that includes California, Nevada, Arizona, and Hawaii鈥攕ince 2010. In that time, he鈥檚 worked to clean up 150-year-old mines 聽into the Sierras, ,聽and pollution across the West.聽
Earlier this year, Blumenfeld announced he鈥檚 quitting the agency鈥攈is term was scheduled to end when the new president is sworn in鈥攁nd hiking the Pacific Crest Trail this summer. 国产吃瓜黑料 caught up with Blumenfeld to talk about聽environmental degradation, Reese Witherspoon, and pescatarianism聽on the trail.
OUTSIDE: How did the PCT become your exit strategy from the EPA?
BLUMENFELD: There鈥檚 a woman I worked for in the city of San Francisco,聽Melissa, and she hiked it and did a presentation about it 15 years ago. I was like, “Oh my god, I want to do this. So badly.”
It wasn鈥檛 always going to be an exit strategy, but the biggest issue with the PCT is time. My wife told me, 鈥淵ou can actually do it now.鈥 Six months ago, saying I wanted to do the PCT was a romantic vision and exciting. Now I leave on the ninth of May.
How much time are you taking off before you leave?
Three days.
Have you done anything like this before?
I鈥檝e mainly done a lot of long distance bicycling, both off- and road biking. I鈥檝e biked to work everyday for the last six years. But for the last six months I鈥檝e been walking. I walk five miles to work and five miles back now.聽
How鈥檚 that going?
I feel good, but sweaty.聽
I don鈥檛 want the first three hundred miles of the hike to be incredibly unpleasant. This is my training. People keep asking if I鈥檓 doing enough training. I don鈥檛 know. Probably not? Since I鈥檝e never done it?
Hold on, look at this.聽

That鈥檚 what 120 days looks like before it goes into my bag.
Logistically, this seemed like this very care-free endeavor. It鈥檒l be so romantic out on the trail. Someone just said to me, 鈥極h, you think you鈥檙e in search of peace?鈥 I thought, 鈥榊eah, OK.鈥 Then they said, 鈥楴o, you鈥檙e in search of Reese.鈥櫬營t鈥檚 a little sad when everyone鈥檚 reference point to the thing you鈥檙e doing is a .
Are you worried about the crowds? We鈥檝e seen reports of post-Wild crowding聽and trash.
I鈥檓 not sure. I had breakfast with a woman who runs a PCT organization, she said there鈥檚 a lot more interest. But according to them, fewer people have 聽than have reached the summit of Everest.聽A lot of people start and not a lot finish.聽
Are you willing to call it quits?
You鈥檝e got to be, right? The tension with the PCT is: if your only goal is to finish it, you probably wont. But if you don鈥檛 have enough of a motivation to finish it, you definitely won't.聽
You鈥檝e worked all across the West for the EPA. Does the trail intersect with any of your work on the environment?
Well, it starts at Campo, California, and an amazing tribe, the Campo, battled for years there against a big landfill in San Diego county. They turned a [legal] decision around and we worked with the tribe on that. Now they have the largest utility-scale wind farm of any tribe in the U.S.
That鈥檚 amazing.
I鈥檝e visited 135 tribes now鈥攅very tribe in the region they have relationship with. That was a big part of the job, really.聽I鈥檒l pass the Owens Valley tribal lands when I go Mount Whitney. Owens was once a very vibrant lake. Then the water was all taken to help L.A. become the city it is now. The dry lake聽bed聽the biggest source of dust pollution in the U.S.聽
I was talking to the PCT people and thinking I should do a map.
Of EPA work near the trail?
Yeah. But a lot of people have said, “The towns you鈥檙e going through鈥攊t鈥檚 a fairly conservative part of the state. Whatever you do, don鈥檛 wear an EPA hat.”聽
Do you have any regrets after six-plus years at the EPA?
We achieved a lot of big things. But here鈥檚 one: the EPA gets to decide the recycled content of the paper it uses. You guys in the magazine industry have all switched to 100 percent聽recycled paper. But the federal government has not switched.
The biggest issue I鈥檓 going to come across [on the hike] that I wish we could have done more on is the fact that there are a million Californians that still don鈥檛 access to safe drinking water. Mostly from naturally occurring arsenic. [To put in an arsenic treatment facility for a small community of 200 farm workers costs $1 million.]
Drought鈥檚 been a big focus of mine, too. Another reason I chose this year [for the hike] was you start with 700 miles of desert. The minute I knew this would be an El Nino year, I said, “This is the year to go.”
What are you going to do when you finish?聽
One of the reasons I鈥檓 doing it is I really have absolutely no frigging聽clue what I want to do next. When people say, “What are you doing next?” I tell them that聽the next thing I鈥檓 doing is hiking the PCT.
Nothing? You have nothing planned after you reach Manning Park and the Canadian border?
No!