Saturday, April 21, 2012
Well, it is now April 21. I Hiked from Hot Springs, NC through Erwin, TN and I am now in Damascus, VA. It was an eventful 11 days of hiking. When I left Hot Springs it got very cold for the next 4 days with temps down into the low 20's at night. I stayed in shelters rather than my tent so I wouldn't have to pack up my tent in the freezing cold at 6:00 in the morning. I hiked over some spectacular mountains with views that went on forever. I stopped in Erwin, TN about a third of the way through my hike from Hot Springs to Damascus and got cleaned up, re supplied, and ate a hot meal which was at Kentucky Fried Chicken all you can eat buffet. Let me tell you, that when you get to a town you are so hungry that you will eat massive quantities of food, especially meat. I'm now in Damascus. VA and am taking a zero day to rest, clean up, re-supply, and eat. Damascus is a hiker town. Right now there are a lot of hikers that have come off the trail and are staying in town. So, many that there are no vacancy's in town. It will rain today and the next two days. I don't mind the rain so much, especially since we haven't had that much (one day of rain in the last 3 weeks). Although, the temps are suppose to get into the 20's again and I'm concerned about crossing Mt. Rogers (over 5,000 ft) and getting hit by snow. Getting to Damascus, VA is a big mile stone on the trail, it is about a 100 miles short of the 25% completion mark. The next big mile stone is Harper's Ferry which is about 600 miles from here. Harper's Ferry is the half way point on the trail. I plan on being in Harper's Ferry some time between May 21 and May 25. My average daily hike has been 15.5 miles. I've had some plus 20 mile days and some near 20 mile days over some mountainous terrain. 2 days ago on April 19th, I had my first marathon day where I hiked 27 miles. Once I get over Mt Rogers, there isn't as much elevation gain and loss as I've had in the previous 460 miles and I expect my daily miles hiked average to increase. My biggest concern is carrying enough food. I've lost a good amount of weight and don't have as much fat reserves to burn and in the past couple of days I have found myself snacking more every couple of hours to gain energy. So, I will need to carry more food to keep eating, and will need to stop more to re-supply. All is well, no injuries or illness, spirits are good, and I can't wait to see Denise in a few weeks in Harper's Ferry.
Monday, April 9, 2012
Hi everyone. Today is Monday, April 9. I made it into Hot Springs, NC yesterday, Easter Sunday, at 1:40 in the afternoon. As soon as I came into town the first thing that I passed was the diner. I stopped in and ordered a HUGE hamburger, fries, onion rings and about 6 litres of coke (no exaggeration). Well, when I left Gatlingburg, Beth and Bernie gave a bunch of us a ride back to the trail. I hike for the day with "fleetwood" who is from North Carolina. We planned on hiking 15 miles and since thunderstorms were predicted we had a fallback plan to hike ten miles to the first shelter/camping area. We were making good time and had spectacular views; we were on the ridge line of the Smokies all morning. Around 1:00 a thunderstorm was creeping in upon us. At 1:45 it was really close and we were at the shelter so we decided to stay put. After we hiked the half mile down the side trail to the shelter and settled in, the sky turned blue and cleared up. I made up my mind (after trying to outrun a storm on the ridge line and getting caught in it 2 days ago) that it would be wise to stay put and make up the mileage tomorrow. This proved to be the wise choice because the storm did come in about 2 hours later, (we spoke to some hikers the next day who left the shelter we held up in, and they did get caught in the storm) and we would have been caught in it. We did a 22 mile day the next day and came out of the Smokey Mountains. We were only going to do 20 miles, but when we got to the shelter area we didn't like the looks of it and moved on a couple of miles to a good camping site. I hiked with "fleetwood" and "blue eyes" that day. It was a good thing we moved on to the camp site, because we met up with some hikers a couple of days later who stayed at the Davenport shelter the same night we would have (stayed at our camp site instead) and they said the bear activity was heavy all night. We hiked on another 15 miles on Saturday the 7th. "fleetwood" (age 56) and "blue eyes" (age 61) cruise uphill, I on the other hand have to stop and catch my breath every now and then, so they move ahead of me. However, going down hill and on open terrain, I cruise ( I average between 2 and 2.2 miles per hour). I caught up with them on this gravel road in the middle of nowhere. There was this guy from Cincinnati, Ohio (trail name "Apple") set up with lawn chairs providing trail magic- coke, oreos, cheeto's, chips- IT WAS GREAT!!! We sat there and fueled up for the rest of the afternoon. Went across this grass covered mountain called Max Bald, which was filled with a lot of local day hikers. It was beautiful. If I could figure out how to upload pictures, you could see it. I hiked on the next few miles to the shelter for the night (took a wrong turn and hiked a lovely half mile down the wrong path until I realized I was not on the AT anymore, and hike on back - how the blind guy hiked the trail, I have no clue). I put in at Roaring Brook Shelter for the night because my stove broke yesterday and I needed to break it down and fix it so I could have a hot supper. If the stove wasn't broken, I would have hiked on another 5 miles to the next shelter so I would only have a 13-14 mile hike to Hot Springs. Good thing I stopped, got the stove fixed and made supper. Went to re-start the stove to cook my lunch for tomorrow and the stove wouldn't work. That made up my mind, the stove is going home and I will purchase a different model at the outfitters in Hot Springs. A lot of people came into the shelter and it was a nice evening. Had a good night sleep, (it was cold, low 30's, good thing I have a liner in my sleeping bag for added warmth when needed) and got up at 5:00 to head out on trail by 6:00. I don't care to hike in the dark, it can be dangerous (in my mind) plus you miss the sights. Hiked for about 45 minutes with a trail lamp, no problems. I wanted to get up early and hike the 18 miles to Hot Springs, NC, so I could get in by the middle of the afternoon and get a hot lunch and just have an extra couple of hours to relax and call home. Well, I got cell service on Bluff Mt. It was great to get every one's Easter texts. Thank you so much. I got to Hot Springs and after lunch settled into Elmer's Sunnyside Inn. This place is cool, is is a 150 year old mansion owned by this guy who hike the trail in 1976 and purchased the inn in 1978. He caters to AT Thruhikers and is an extremely generous host. He also provides vegetarian gourmet meals. The food is GREAT (but not as good as the food the the Lovely Denise makes for me everyday). Let me say, that eating a lot of food when in a town is a must - I've lost 21 pounds in 21 days ( and I expect to lose another 20 by the time I get to Harpers Ferry. VA). OH, that is the only hard part of being on the trail is that I MISS Denise SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO MUCH - it kills me. So, I'm doing my zero day here, getting some rest, taking a hot tub at the mineral springs, getting new stove at the outfitters, sending home old stove and letters in mail, groceries, laundry, email, blog, etc.,. It is now 4:00 in the afternoon and I still haven't done groceries yet. A zero day gets filled up fast. To all of you I need to call, please accept my apologies. Cell service is sketchy at best, and it is Verizon - and if you have another service provider like ATT, Verizon blocks the signal and randomly will or will not allow other service providers use their cell signal. I figured in a town like Hot Springs, that I would have cell service, but NOOOOOOOOOOOOOoooooooooo. So, hopefully when I get to Erwin, TN in 4 days I will have cell service. There is NO payphone in this town, go figure. Anyway, I have completed one eighth of the trail and I am , happy, healthy, homesick for Denise BIG TIME, and ready to move on to the next section of the trail. Damascus, VA ( a couple of hundred miles up the trail) is the next big mile stone. That is all the news for now and I will update the blog in 2 weeks when I get to Damascus, VA.
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
OK, today is Wednesday, April 4. It has been a fun two weeks. I've met a lot of people, some thruhikers and some section hikers. Most people are really neat. There are people college age, a lot in there 20's, a fair amount of us in our 50's and some in there 60's and every where in between. Some people are real characters, most people are pretty cool. The trail is a great equalizer, everyone is a hiker, it doesn't matter who or what you did back home. After the first couple of days, people stop asking what you did before the trail. I have broken out of the pack and am hiking at my own pace. For the most part I've separated from the people I first hike with. Tony-"Crispy" and Corey-"Candyman" have slowed down to nurse some injuries. I've met up with some others for a day or two and we keep criss-crossing paths. The first week I hiked about 8-9 miles a day to get my hiking legs back. The plan for the second week was to keep it to 12 miles per day and then go the 15 miles per day the third week. The second week I was up to 15 miles per day with a 21 mile day over Abbot Mt., and a 23 mile day over Wayah and Wessler Mt's into the Nantahala Outfitter Center. I planned on hiking into Gatlingburg to take a zero day (day off no miles traveled), but found this cool place (Cabin in the Woods) in Stecoah NC. I pulled in there on a rainy day, and took a zero day there. From there I was going to hike 8 straight days through the Smokey's. I got through the first 2 and a half days through the Smokey's and came out at Newfound Gap, around 200 miles onto the trail. Yesterday, I was met with three tremendous rain storms, ducked out of 2 at shelters, and got soaked by the third on the last 1.7 miles into the shelter I was staying for the night (that was yesterday April 3). I decided to hike 10 miles over Clingman's Dome and get off the trail at Newfound Gap, take a half day to come into Gatlingburg, wash and dry cloths, eat a enormous meal (full rack of ribs), and replace some gear. When I came out of woods and into the parking area at Newfound Gap, there where about a 100 cars in the parking lot. I went to ask someone which way to Gatlingburg, and this man Bernie asked if I was a thruhiker, and then brought me to his truck where his wife Beth was waiting with trail magic, coke, pizza, sandwiches, little Debbie's, candy, fruit cups, chips, and more. Five minutes after I got there and started pigging out (no exaggeration), it started pouring buckets. They waited another half hour to see if anyone else was coming off the trail, and then drove me into Gatlingburg. It is there 28th wedding anniversary and they do this for a week every year on their anniversary because they get a big kick out of it. They live near St. Petersburg FLA. By far Beth and Bernie are the coolest people I have met. Tomorrow, back on the trail and I should be in Hot Springs, NC sometime Sunday. I will take a zero day on Monday the 9th and will try to figure out how to upload pictures.
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