Saturday, April 27, 2013

"The Appalachian Trail" by Ronald M. Fisher

I've been laid up for the last few days with a "Flu".. I don't know what flu but one that made every muscle and joint ache.  My head and spine throb.  Most of you have probably experienced this at one time or another.   My daughter Sharon, nursed me to health with chicken soup, saltines, flu medicines and cola to sip on.  But even more, she covered my work so I could stay in bed,   Thanks Sharon! 

I decided that it would be a good topic to research in reference to the AT.  It is something good to know if you get hit by the flu or any other illness during the hike.

But I won't research it right now.  I'm starting to feel better and it feels good.  Instead, I picked up and read "The Appalachian Trail" by Ronald M. Fisher.  Published by  National Geographic in 1972. 
        


I do realize that the AT has seen many changes over forty one years but this book was still a pleasure to read.  It's full of history that happened along the AT.  That will never change. It changes the names on the map to places where important events took place.

The photography by Dick Durrance II is fantastic.  I would expect no less from National Geographic.

There are wonderful quotes on hiking that are worth collecting.  I'll make two postings that can be updated.  One to cover the history and another to cover the quotes as I learn more and more.

This hike will be more than just a walk in the woods..

Hummingbird "Nesting and Resting"...

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Why would I want to hike the Appalachian Trail?

It's been a long while now since the thought was put into my head to hike that long trail from Georgia to Maine.  My friend Tom mentioned it and would tell me about a group who are planning to begin the hike in April of 2014.  They would all be over sixty years old.  I thought it was intriguing, but not something that I could do.  I would be sixty by then. hmmm..

It's funny how something will stick in your head and come to mind from time to time.  Actually, this thought has been coming up much more often than from time to time.  I began to read books and look up the Appalachian Trail online to find pages and pages of information sites.  The desire and fire to hike this trail has set in deep!

Why am I going to hike this Appalachian Trail?

Because I want to do something awesome for myself.  Because I will be sixty years old and still able to do it!  Because I hope that the beauty of the mountains will bring me closer to nature and to God.  That I will better understand and appreciate my life I have lived so far and what life has yet to show me.   

I'm going to hike the AT and I am going to be the one in four who makes it all the way from Georgia to Maine!


                        


I have told people that I know, about this plan of mine.  I have had both positive and negative results. The two most positive and encouraging people I share my preparation plans with are my beautiful daughter Sharon Ann and my dear friend Annie Rose from far away in Australia.  Thank you both for believing in me. I love you both!

Rick, my love and companion, has been helping me to stay healthy and get in shape long before I seriously planned to hike the AT.  Our morning exercises and bicycle rides along the coastal path are great!  Though the hike isn't something Rick wants to do, he understands that it is something I need to do.  Thanks for sharing your research, your ideas and suggestions and learning just what the hike is all about!   Your support is important to me.  A valuable part of our relationship.

Others think it is crazy, strange or just something I will get over before the year is done.

Some may find they get caught up in the "spirit" of it as well.

I didn't know of Springer Mountain or Mount Katahdin, never mind the trail that extends between them.  What I did know of the AT as it is called, was that it ran through Berkshire County where my sisters and brothers and I grew up.  As a child no one talked much about it and it was many years later before I knew it wasn't a local trail exclusive to "us".

Appalachian Trail plaque at top of Springer Mountain.
 
Plaque at top of Mount Katadin































Now I have begun to prepare for this new journey.  My body, my mind, my budget and gear all need to come together.  I wasn't going to set up a "blog" but after changing my mind several times, here I am.  Writing down what I am going through during this year of preparation, will  help me keep track of what I need to learn and need to do to get ready.

Maybe it will one day help someone else who catches this dream to  hike the Appalachian Trail.

Already, I have hiked a twelve mile stretch in the woods.. The Temescal Canyon woods.  I didn't expect to do that for another month or so.  My shorter three mile hikes that I have been hiking several times a week this month, made me stronger than expected.   I climbed the three mile loop that rises a thousand feet in elevation and back down, four times.  It did take me seven hours to do that.  There were moments that I had to stop and rest a minute or two.  There were times when a "second wind" would take over and I would quickly hike up a steep stretch, surprising even myself!

In May, I will begin to carry my five pound loaded book bag around with me everywhere On hikes and off hikes. Anytime I am walking.  That will only be the first quarter of the weight I will carry for over 2000 miles.  I will not carry over twenty pounds.   I may have to write that down one hundred times to have it locked in my head.  

My gear collection is growing faster than expected.
GoLite Backpack.
GoLite Single person tent. 
Golite Sleeping bag.
Black Diamond trekking poles arrived today in the mail.

It's time to slow down and pace myself on buying the gear.   I would love to buy it all today and be ready.  That won't happen.  I will enjoy my treasures more if I get them one at a time.  I can write my list and rewrite it many times.  There is so much out there and so many opinions on everything needed.

I see that words flow easily here on these pages.  I'll need to pace myself here as well.  I do want to add pictures to breakup the rambling of my thoughts.  Heaven forbid I bore you!  Ha.
  
Hummingbird.. "Nesting and Resting"...

In the beginning...

 Every hiker chooses a trail name.  Some wait to find theirs on the trail, others like me, choose to choose a meaningful name before they begin.  I have chosen "Hummingbird". 


Legends say that hummingbirds float free of time, carrying our hopes for love, joy and celebration. Hummingbirds open our eyes to the wonder of the world and inspire us to open our hearts to loved ones and friends. Like a hummingbird, we aspire to hover and to savor each moment as it passes, embrace all that life has to offer and to celebrate the joy of everyday. The hummingbird’s delicate grace reminds us that life is rich, beauty is everywhere, every personal connection has meaning and that laughter is life’s sweetest creation.