No. No. No. BUT, I have watched a couple videos of the experience. I really liked them. A YouTube search will bring up several videos. It seems like quite a trip. A real adventure. Do you plan on hiking the whole trail ( Yikes ), or a part of it? My vote is that you give it try. It will keep the ol' blood pumping.appalachian trail
Enjoyed that book!I've just finished reading 'A walk in the woods' by Bill Bryson in which he relates his attempt to hike the Appalachian trail. It's an amusing tale, although he digresses quite often.
yep i plan to attempt it march of 2025. i just retired dec 2023 so i need to do some planning and training!! i cant wait.No. No. No. BUT, I have watched a couple videos of the experience. I really liked them. A YouTube search will bring up several videos. It seems like quite a trip. A real adventure. Do you plan on hiking the whole trail ( Yikes ), or a part of it? My vote is that you give it try. It will keep the ol' blood pumping.![]()
i loved that book. have a read alot of hiking books. grandma gatewoods walk is another good oneEnjoyed that book!
thank u so much!! my plan is march 2025. have some training to do in the meantime. and some researchAt this stage of life I’d be thrilled to just hike a small portion of the Trail. Not likely to happen.
Hope you get to do it and have a safe, wonderful experience.
funny...thank u.I have hiked the entire width of the trail.. I have done several sections of it. I wish I could go with you, but my hiking days are defiantly over.
If you haven't seen or heard of it, The book and movie , A Walk in the Woods.
the beginning and the end are tough!!!No, but I've "cross-hiked" it a few times......hardest three feet I've ever done...LOL.
Seriously, I've hiked maybe 10 feet of it at the southern end at Amicalola Falls, maybe a little more at Clingmans Dome, walked across the trail at Harper's Ferry, and ....uh....thought seriously about it in Maine, but not *that* seriously.
sure is. but it will also be the adventure of a lifetime.Maine has one of the most difficult portions of the trail.
It takes 5-7 months to complete. That's quite an endeavor.
thank u for that. very interesting. and yes i do know that only 25% actually make the distance. who knows if i will or not. however, i am not doing this on a whim. i have planned this for many years but needed to wait for retirement. i have gone on section hikes with my sister and others. altho, admittedly none longer than a week at a time. i have my gear already but do want to upgrade a bit too. also i have a year to train. so i won't be going from the couch to the trail...i live on the side of a mtn about a mile from the trail. so training is now part of my life. i just couldn't do it while working.Here in California, surprising numbers of seniors are day trail hikers and fair numbers backpackers, that anyone that thru hikes long trails must learn to be. And not a few have been doing so all our adult lives since those turbulent times when much of the rest of society was against us.
A current thread is whether happiness is a choice or not. As a twenty-something after enduring the Vietnam War, I had just a few hundred dollars and just a duffle bag of clothing. By choice I moved to San Jose area where I was alone without any support and began a jr. electronic technician job for $2.83 an hour.
Although I had little, I was confident as a native Californian I could find great happiness in its world class natural world that is free beyond a bit of vehicle driving. One of the first activities I chose to embrace was backpacking that means carrying all one's heavy gear in a large pack in order to stay overnight camping style in what is usually wilderness areas without any roads, infrastructure or machines.
Thus one brings food, cooking gear, clothing, a sleeping bag, tent, and much small survival gear strenuously carrying it all on one's back often up mountain trails. Was very popular during the 1970s for we Counterculture young people.
Now 5 decades later, I've backpacked over 200 times that has been a source of immense happiness and fulfillment in my adult life. Along the way, I became a trout fisherman, natural science enthusiast, and later an accomplished landscape and nature photographer. All related activities that have also brought great happiness to my life despite having nothing to do with money so many others only ever seek.
Although the notion of hiking a long thru trail after reading what others have done, excites many, it is not something to do at a whim without making a serious effort to train one's body to endure its strenuous physical effort. One must also learn a list of skills that are only acquired with actual experience and not just reading some book or watching YouTube.
Accordingly, many try it but quickly find it more effort and difficulty than they are willing to make, so quickly abandon it. That is more the case as a senior given our older, less resilient bodies. Thus will suggest, before one jumps in up to their neck on a long logistically complex thru hike, they first wisely rent some gear from a sporting goods shop and just do a shorter out and back short backpack of 2 or 3 nights.
Even better would be to do so within a group of like others within a guided class or Meetups group. Best of luck!
Great @twinsinpa , you are all ready with gear and experience to start that great adventure. There is quite a list of Appalachian Trail hiking forums and groups on social media one might web search for where one will more likely find others that might join you on that journey. As someone 3000 miles west, I'm not familiar with any of that world. But as someone on this SF forum board a few years now, I will note there does not seem to be many still current outdoor enthusiasts though several were hikers when younger and still love nature....i have gone on section hikes with my sister and others. altho, admittedly none longer than a week at a time. i have my gear already but do want to upgrade a bit too. also i have a year to train...