Archive for the ‘Pacific Crest Trail’ Category

Thru-hiking: What does it really take?

Friday, April 20th, 2012
Everyone has seen videos and photos of hikers trekking on one the three great long-distance trails: the Appalachian Trail, Pacific Crest Trail or Continental Divide Trail. Most of those images highlight the incredible beauty of the trails. But what is it really like to thru-hike a long-distance trail? What does it really take?

Here's a video from Brett, Nate, and Tyler as they discuss their thru-hike of the Pacific Crest Trail. Most importantly, these guys are mere mortals, not uber adventurers like Andrew Skurka, or even Bear Grylls. Prior to their hike, none had a great deal of experience with backpacking. So, from this perspective, they provide their thoughts on what it's really like to thru-hike a long distance trail. This video was produced for The Clymb a few weeks back:




Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com

From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail

Sunday, April 1st, 2012
I found about Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail, a brand new release by Cheryl Strayed, in a book review published in the Wall Street Journal last weekend. Intrigued by the story, I saved the clipping until I could find a little more time to do some research on the book.

The book is about how Cheryl reclaimed her life on the Pacific Crest Trail after the death of her mother, divorce, and a run of reckless behavior. I just ordered the book from Amazon yesterday. While researching additional information on Wild, I found this video she produced for the book:




For more information, and to purchase the book, please click here.



Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com

Trail magic: why complete strangers do such nice things for thru-hikers

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

Magic is the impossible come to life. Thru-hikers along the Appalachian and Pacific Crest trails find it all the time: coolers of Cokes, boxes of Snickers, spare socks in an ammo tin.

Blue Eyes and Socks, Pacific Crest Trail, summer of 2009.

Right on the trail, hundreds of miles from the nearest 7/11, are these treats that should not be there. Trail magic. The magicians are better known as trail angels, folks with an irresistible urge to help out haggard hikers.

It’s a fair guess the hikers are too hungry or tired to wonder why trail angels are so generous. Then again they have thousands of miles to figure it out, so maybe they’ve got it all down.

Yesterday I read a post on Ray Anderson’s blog about a magic moment from his Appalachian Trail thru-hike. And this morning I thought about The Voodoo Chile, the southbound Hendrix fan I met on the AT a couple days ago.

And that’s when it dawned on me why so much magic happens to thru-hikers. Meeting a thru-hiker on the trail is seeing the impossible made real. We can’t quit our jobs, leave our families, drain our bank accounts, to spend six months in the woods. Impossible.

Think about the last time you saw a street magician — we know it’s all sleight of hand, but a well-done magic trick triggers an instinctive urge to applaud. We see one, we want more.

And so we have trail angels, leaving goodies in lieu of applause.

Magic begets magic.

For bloggers, that’s something to think about if you’re floundering through a post. Find the impossible come to life.

Ladder to the sky

This picture from one of my hikes at Grandfather Mountain represents a magic moment. Why? Because climbing this ladder and heading up the trail requires a momentarily harrowing move that requires the hiker to banish fear. Falling here would probably be fatal.

This is where I learned I could do something that should’ve been impossible for me. I’ve always been leery of heights, not particularly brave or prone to risks. But on that ladder I reminded myself: what can happen when you’ve got good footing and a solid hand-hold? The magic was realizing I could manage my fear just like all those famous mountaineers and rock climbers.

So my advice to bloggers: Put a little magic in every post.

Novelty trumps everything on the Web. Sure, people appreciate handy hiking tips, but they crave that moment when the guy waves a wand and the elephant disappears. Cater to their cravings and they’ll keep coming back.


Garmin Introduces SD Cards for Appalachian Trail

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011
Late last month Garmin introduced brand new microSD™/SD™ cards for what they are calling the Trailhead Series.

These are highly detailed 24K topographic maps for both the Appalachian Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail (no word yet on the Continental Divide Trail). The maps feature terrain contours, topo elevations, summits, parks, coastlines, rivers, lakes, geographic points, as well as a fully routable trail.

INCLUDED FEATURES:

* Highly detailed digital topographic maps for the Appalachian Trail, comparable to 1:24,000 scale USGS maps.

* Contains a fully routable trail from beginning to end, plus basic road coverage available as a reference.

* Includes national, state and local parks, forests, recreational and wildlife area boundaries.

* Contains detailed hydrographic features, including coastlines, lake and river shorelines, wetlands and perennial and seasonal streams.

* Includes searchable points of interest, such as geographic place names, campgrounds, scenic lookouts and picnic sites, businesses and more.

* Displays 3-D terrain shading and digital elevation model (DEM) shaded relief on compatible devices to help estimate terrain difficulty.

* Features Bureau of Land Management township, range and section information and USGS quad locations.

* Includes coverage for the Appalachian Trail, plus 10 miles of extended coverage on each side of the trail.


For more info on the Appalachian Trail SD Card, please click here.



Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com

Hiking Through Hyperbole: Tackling the Pacific Crest Trail

Saturday, February 12th, 2011
Most people are familiar with the Appalachian Trail. Indeed, many have probably hiked at least a portion of it. But have you ever considered, or wondered what it would be like to hike the AT's western cousin - the Pacific Crest Trail?

The Backpacking Light website is currently running a series of excellent articles about Ryan Linn's first hand account of his Pacific Crest Trail thru-hike this past summer.

The first installment of the series covers his trek through the deserts of Southern California.

"The next two days were an epic eating binge."

The second segment covers his trek over the Snowy Sierra.

"There are so many comparisons made between the two most popular long-distance trails in America, and after having hiked both of them I find all such comparisons to be in poor taste. I’ve heard so many hikers criticize the Appalachian Trail as too crowded, uninspiring, frequented by people who would rather party than hike. And I’ve heard others say that the PCT is more dangerous, it’s harder to get into towns from the trail, and you’ll be alone on the trail more often than not. During my hike, I found these notions to be flawed, at best, and now that I’ve seen both trails in their entirety I can say they are based on poor stereotypes."

The third installment takes Linn from Lake Tahoe, past the volcanoes of Northern California and Southern Oregon, and onto the Columbia River.

There will be at least one, maybe two more installments in this series, which are being published on Tuesdays.

In addition to the great narratives Linn provides, the articles also include some outstanding photography from the trail.


Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com