Dear family and friends,
After three busy weeks back in Connecticut, I leave in about an hour
for Maine and Mt. Katahdin where I will
begin again my walk on the Appalachian Trail heading south this time.
I ended my north-bound trip in
Harpers Ferry, West Virginia on July 5th having covered just over 1000
miles.
Many of the final miles from Waynesboro to Harpers Ferry were in Shenandoah
Nat. Park which I traversed
in 4 days averaging just under 24 miles a day. This was in hot and humid
Virginia weather. But the pull of Harpers Ferry had me up early and
walking till well into the afternoon. The park is rich in wildlife that
are habituated to close contact with humans. Deer met on the trail would
watch you approach and step aside
only in the last few yards, retreating a to a safe distance of perhaps
20 feet to let you pass. I had one deer resting about 10 or 15 feet
off the trail just lie there and watch me as I went by. There should
be at least a few good deer photos from these very tame animals.
And there were also lots of Bear [image].
After walking all the way from Georgia to Virginia with only a fleeting
glimps of 2 bear in the first 900 miles, I finally found bear heaven
in Shenandoah. In 2 and 1/2 days I
met 14 bear on the trail, including a moma with three cubs. She was
positioned behind a large boulder
slightly down hill and about 60 feet to my right. Two of the cubs were
in trees on her side of the trail and
scrambled down when she poked her head out from behind the rock. The
third cub was in a tree just to the
left side of the trail and literally 10 feet over my head. My first
thought was "photo op" but I'd need to do some digging in
my camera bag and was just a little too unsure of mama's intentions
so dicided to forgo the "bear cub in tree" picture.
The other great thing about Shenandoah has to do with a favorite hiker
pastime - food. On each of the four
days in the park I managed to get at least one meal at either a "wayside"
(one of the tourist areas along the
highway that runs the length of the park and parallels the trail), a
campground store, or, in one case, a rather elegant, sit-down restaurant.
This was at Big Meadow Lodge in the middle of the park. I needed to
walk 8 miles before breakfast, and, even in the slightly cooler morning
air arrived at the lodge more than a little damp from the effort. But
I'd saved a clean dry tee shirt and after a quick rince off in a restroom,
was escorted to my dining table by one of the hosts. I ordered a big
plate of pancakes with a poached egg on the side and enjoyed hot coffee
and great service. My waitress was a young lady from Washington State
named Deanna and we talked a little about my walk and Washington, a
state I lived in for a while in the late 60's.
After a great breakfast, I went back to the trail and walked another
19 miles before ending the day camped
high on a rocky summit. I found a small sandy spot tucked down just
to the east of the rocky ridge crest
that had geodesic survey markers placed at the highest points. My AT
guide book said that these exposed
rocks were estimated to be over 1 billion years old. I watched the sun
set from a pearch on the highest point of rock where I found a little
depression for my backside and a convenient split it the rock that allowed
me to use the facing boulder for a foot rest. As the evening darkened,
the distant lights of the small towns and farms in the valleys to the
east and west began to glow through the haze that is always present
in this part of Virginia. I crawled down off the rocks and spent my
last night in the park watching the stars wheel slowly across the sky
overhead. The final couple of days to Harpers Ferry included the infamous
"roller coaster". A stretch of trail that includes about 5000
feet of rolling ups and downs in about 15 miles. None of the climbs
are that long or
hard in themself, but they keep coming one after the other. By now the
daytime temperatures were in the 90's with high humidity and little
wind - so it was a long hot slog. The reward at the end was a night
in Bear's Den Hostel. Part of the American Hosteling System, Bear's
Den is in an 1930's mansion built by a wealty DC resident. The grounds
are beautiful and it's just a short walk to a westward facing rock outcrop
from which there are great sunsets. There was also an "all you
can eat" 4th of July picnic open to any hikers who happend to be
in the area. So instead of leaving in the morning, I took a lazy day
and had a great meal finally hitting the trail at about 4 PM to walk
another 10 miles to a facility run by the Potomic Appalachian Trail
Club. The PATC maintains the AT through Shenandoah Nat. Park and north
to Harpers Ferry and beyond. They have a fantastic "camp"
just off the trail about 10 miles south of Harpers Ferry. I arrived
just in time to have a second meal and then watch fireworks in the valley
below on the night of the 4th.
My last day on the trail began before dawn. Since I didn't know the
train schedule out of Harpers Ferry I
had decided to leave early and try to be in HF by 9:30 in the morning
- figuring this would also give me time
for yet another sit down breakfast in one of the local restaurants and
also have a stop at the Appalachian
Trail Headquarters to get my photo taken for the annual hiker scrapbook.
So I rose at about 4:30 and took to the trail just before 5 with my
headlamp lighting the way.
I took a train back to CT and have spent the last weeks finishing the
Peace Pilgrim 2003 calendar, making a 1 week trip to California, and
trying to reorganize my life for this second time on the trail.
I'm not sure how far I will go on the southward leg. Certainly it would
be great to get all the way back to Harpers Ferry and complet the trail
in one season. But this walk has always been more about the "journey"
itself than the destination and however far I go, I'm sure it will be
a wonderful and enlightening
adventure.
Peace and Blessings to All,
Bruce
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