Monday, July 1, 2013

Section Hiking the AT: Springer Mtn to Neel Gap - June 2013

I'm not sure what got into me last fall, but I decided that I'm young enough to hike a couple of sections on the AT before I reach age 72. My first hike on the AT was when I was 12 years old in 1957 when I hiked from Newfound Gap to Charlie's Bunion and then went back down to where the  Boulevard Trail intersects with the AT and goes across to Mt. LeConte. Since then I've hiked on the AT at several points, mostly in the Smokies, but never just a section hike in the traditional since. Last summer on my annual walkabout, when I was day-hiking around Roan Mountain, I decided to pick a section of the AT and go at it. The most logical section, of course, is the first 32-mile section from Springer Mountain to Neel Gap (referred to on maps as "Neel's Gap," but the locals say "Neel Gap"). This section of the AT is probably the most hiked section of the AT since hundreds and hundreds of people set out on this part intending to thru hike and then drop off after a few weeks. I had day-hiked up to the summit of Springer before, checking out the plaques and first White Blaze for northbound hikers, and I was inspired (or something) and decided, heck, yeah: I can do this ...
Sign inside the hostel

Throughout the winter I kept telling people that I was planning to do this, hoping that if I told enough people I wouldn't be able to back out. I trained a little bit in the six weeks or so before I scheduled to hike; and the smartest thing I did was train in the shoes in which I planned to walk the 32 miles. Of all of the stuff I've read and vidclips I've watched, a lot of warnings are given about the feet. I've been told that a person's feet eventually get used to the daily grind, but maybe that's for most people. Of course, on this section hike I really didn't hike long enough to get my trail legs and feet under me, so I can't say for sure that it would have happened ... but, anyway, no blisters. I bought my shoes a half-size up and trained in them. It seemed to work for me.
Walasiyi-Inn Dining Room

On Tuesday, 18 June, I drove from Mississippi to Neels Gap, Georgia, to check in to the Mountain Crossings - Walasi-yi hostel ($16.05) for the night. The folks there at the outfitters are very, very helpful, and, through them, I had arranged a shuttle with Lumpy (who lives at Neel Gap) from there to the Springer Mountain parking lot. Because I was not positive that I could keep the 8+ miles-a-day pace and, thus, confirm the day/time back to Neel Gap, I had decided to leave my vehicle at the Byron Reece Trail parking area, get a shuttle to Spring Mtn, and hike back to my car. That way, if I took an extra day or two, I wouldn't have a shuttle trying to hook up with me. It turned out to be a very good plan. Wednesday afternoon, after throwing my gear on a bunk at the hostel, I hunted up Lumpy and confirmed our start at 7:30 the next morning. Lumpy and Pirate had just returned from a two-day R&R trip to the Gatlinburg area and he looked like he could use a good night's rest.
At the Springer parking lot

I met Lumpy in the parking lot at 7:30 AM and began the 33 mile--hour and a half trip to the Springer Mtn parking area. I tried to keep up with all of the turns and road forks, but soon found that being able to find my own way to Springer via Lumpy's way would only result in my getting hopelessly lost in the hills. During the hour-and-a-half trip, Lumpy entertained with down-home stories of mountain life ... some of which I actually believed. When we finally arrived at the Springer Mountain parking area, Lumpy pointed the way north and told me to "follow the white blazes." Evidently, he shuttles a lot of people who get out of the car and don't know the difference between a white blaze and a blue blaze, and don't know whether they are heading north or south. And I did meet a woman later on on the trail who was really confused ...




The first 8 miles of the AT heading north is mis-leading in its level of difficulty--it is deceptively easy. From the top of Springer, at about 3800 ft of elevation, to the stream crossing at Three Forks, at 2500 ft, the trail is easy and down hill most of the way. Even climbing out of Three Forks up and over Hawk Mtn is not exceedingly steep and difficult. I was thinking to myself, "Hey, I can do this without too much of a sweat." Day two would be a jolt of reality. But I got to the Hawk Mtn shelter with some energy to spare. A few hundred yards before I got to Three Forks I spotted a bear cub in the trail at the same time he spotted me. He ran--I froze! I stood there banging my poles together and talking out loud so the sow would know where I was and hopefully that I was not a threat to her cub. I stopped on a log just over the bridge at Three Forks to have a snack and refill water bottles, and, while I was sitting there, a woman hiker came by and we chatted a moment about our hike so far. She had started before me but had gotten on the wrong trail (Benton MacKaye, maybe?), hiking an extra three miles, she said. She said she was trying to make it to the Gooch Mtn shelter that night, but had a tent if she didn't make it all the way, so she set off on a pretty fast pace.


When I got to the sign pointing off the AT to the Hawk Mtn shelter, the woman  that had passed me at Three Forks was sitting against the post eating a snack. She stood up as I approached and, looking at her watch, said she'd have plenty of time to make it to the Gooch Mtn shelter before dark. She loaded on her pack and headed off at a fast pace ... the wrong way right back up the trail we had just come down--obviously confused again. I started to say something to her, but thought she might have changed her mind, and hoped that, if she was again confused, it wouldn't be too long before she realized that she had just hiked down the same trail. Later I asked some people who had come down the trail if they had passed her. They said they had not, so I figured that she had discovered her error and turned around.


One thing I've always tried to do when I've gotten to a blue blaze trail to a shelter/water/etc. is to make sure I know which way to turn when I come back out of the blue blaze trail. And while the trail there made a 90 degree turn and was somewhat confusing, I don't think I would have headed back up the same trail I had just come down a few minutes before. I never did run into the woman again ...

Arriving at the Hawk Mtn Shelter at 8.1 miles, I was disappointed to see so much trash around the fire ring. Obviously, some worthless backpackers had not worried about carrying out their own trash and just thrown it in the fire ring. "Hey, dummies! Tin cans don't burn and somebody will have to carry your trash out!" I just cannot understand how backpackers can be so self-centered that they don't care about the environment or other backpackers. Members of the millennium generation, I guess ... pisses me off! If I hadn't been on the first day of my 4.5-day trip I probably would have carried some of the trash out.

At the Hawk Mtn shelter I quickly hung up my pack and threw down my sleeping gear in the corner of the shelter to claim my spot. I could see one tent about 75 yds away in the tenting area, but only caught a glimpse of a spectre of a person who might/might not have belonged to that tent. For some reason my sightings of the guy walking back and forth through the woods reminded me of those supposed sightings of Sasquach ... a little spooky. Anyway, I grabbed my water bottles and bags and headed down to the spring to get enough water for the evening's meal and breakfast oatmeal and coffee. Just after I got back to the shelter, three more hikers walked in. One of them said he was staying the night, the other two said they were refilling water bottles and heading to Hightower Gap for the night. They all three headed down to the spring for water.


Hawk Mtn shelter
The hiker staying the night was named "Wilbur J" or something and he and I immediately started talking about gear. Do hikers talk about anything else? He was an Ewok with a Hennessy zip and said he was going to hang it back behind the shelter. Of course, when he said it was a Hennessy zip, I asked why he hadn't gotten the classic, and if he'd gotten the snake skins. He said he hadn't gotten the classic because he was afraid he'd fall out during the night, and he thought he would save $20 by not getting the snake skins, but he realized that he'd make a bad decision on that. I paid attention to our conversations, because I'm contemplating a bug-free hammock and like to talk to users. He hung his hammock and came back to the shelter to eat dinner and talk. Wilbur J was a friendly guy from Woodstock, GA and claimed to be a high school choral music teacher. He and I were to hook back up the next two nights, too, although he hiked faster than me. He also had an Esbit cook kit that boiled about 900 ml at a time. I've never used Esbit--I'm an alcohol stove or canister man myself--but I was interested in what he thought about it. I've read some scary stuff about Esbit fumes when it gets wet, but it is light and efficient, so a lot of hikers use it regularly. I have an Esbit stove, but have never used it. I used a Whitebox alcohol stove on this trip with an MSR Ti 1.5L pot inside a Caldera Cone made for the pot. I love it and it boils the large amounts of water I need for my meals and drinks.


While we were fixing our suppers, a woman and her young son came in. The kid was about 12 and had been a scout, so this was not his first experience. They were planning to hike to Gooch Mtn shelter the next day, although the mom said her son started complaining about two miles from Springer. They pitched a tent about 40 yds behind the shelter. At the table we had a good time talking to the kid about his experiences--that's always fun. Just before dark a 20-something male/female couple came in and, after fixing something to eat, pitched their tent in the loft of the shelter saying they wanted some protection from the bugs and mice. Pitching a tent in the shelter seems like overkill to me, but if a person doesn't like bugs and mice, or if it's pouring rain and the shelter roof leaks, it's probably a good idea. Since there were no other hikers arriving, there was plenty of room in the shelter for them to pitch their tent. I slept pretty well that first night, falling asleep to thoughts about how lucky I was to be in a shelter on the AT.


Flaming azaleas
The next morning while everyone was eating breakfast and packing up, we all chatted about our plans and Wilbur J, the mom/son, and I said we would see each other that evening at Gooch Mtn shelter. The young couple had just come out for the night and were heading back to Springer that day. I was the first to set off, because I figured I was the slowest hiker and the others would catch up and pass me ... a lot of women hike faster than me, but I was going to be embarrassed when a slightly overweight 12-yr old passed me.

The second day was not particularly fun for an out-of-shape old man. From the Hawk Mtn shelter (8.1) I hiked down to Hightower Gap; then up and down, up and down, up and down, and up and way down in the next few miles, finally bottoming at Horse Gap. Then I hiked way up and back down to Cooper Gap at 12.2 miles. Honestly, I wouldn't even remember passing Cooper, except for the explosions, but the maps said I did. Then I went back up and over another mountain down into the Justus Creek bottom where I refilled my water bottles. Up a little from Justus Creek is a camping area called Devil's Kitchen where a couple of guys were setting up for the night. The only thing I remember about the day's journey (in addition to the constant ups and downs) were the combat soldiers--seriously! There is an Army training camp somewhere up in the woods above Dahlonaga--I know for sure because I drove up on it last year by mistake ... signs all over the place saying that if you got any closer you would disappear and never be heard from again. So, anyway, while I was hiking I could hear gunfire and explosions all over the woods. I could see trails where the troops had come straight down the mountain across the AT, 40 troops at a time tearing up the ferns and azaleas. I was hiking along thinking about how my feet hurt and looked up and the troops were all deployed in perimeter security on both sides of the trail--full camo uniforms, paint, and 60 lb packs. I passed through quietly and spoke only to the platoon sergeant at the end of the line saying, "What up, Sarge?" to which he returned a grunt. I thought about one of my friends who will be a junior at USMA-West Point and how he has to play in the woods sometimes. Later at Cooper Gap, as I was resting my feet, some more troops came out of the woods with a lot of gunshots, explosions, and shouts, to set up a perimeter around the gap. Maybe that all happened at Horse Gap ... I really don't remember. I just mostly remember that my feet hurt. I crossed Blackwell Creek at 15.5 and climbed a little to the blue blaze leading to the Gooch Mtn shelter at 15.7. Fortunately, the total mileage was a little shorter because the pretty severe ups and downs got to me. The second day of a trip is generally tough and I was mentally prepared for things to hurt the second day--and I wasn't disappointed. I knew I had enough food for five days and Lumpy's phone number, so I wasn't greatly concerned. When you know it's going to be painful, and it is ... well, maybe it doesn't hurt so much. I was certainly relieved when I got my boots off and my Crocs on at the shelter.


Gooch Mtn shelter (from White Blaze.com)
The Gooch Mtn shelter was in better shape than Hawk Mtn. Although I had passed a guy who was south bound and he had said that Gooch was trashed, it was much cleaner than Hawk toward which he was headed. I warned him that Hawk had been really trashed. There was trash at Gooch, but not nearly as much as at Hawk. Another reason that Gooch was better was that the roof/canopy came down over the table and had a cooking shelf on which to keep the stoves off of the table. Wilbur J was already at Gooch when I arrived but hadn't hung his hammock because he was considering staying in the shelter. He lay down on his pad in the loft and I lay down on my pad on the bottom and we both went sound asleep for about 45 minutes. When Wilbur J woke up, since it was late in the day and no one else had come in, he decided to pitch his hammock in the loft of the shelter. Even if a whole group came in, there were still a number of spaces down with me and plenty of room to throw down under his hammock. Of course, just as soon as he got his hammock up several more people arrived--four in all--plus one thru-hiker trail dog. They all decided that WJ might step on them in the night, so they decided to set up on the lower floor with me.
Mountain Primrose

Two of the women were from New Hampshire and had started their thru-hike in April 2012 on Mt Katahdin. However, when they got to New Jersey, Hurricane Sandy hit and since they were both travel nurses, they stopped their hike to work in the Northeast after the storm. They had resumed their trek this 2013 spring and were about to finish at Springer the following Saturday. They planned to hike the 13 or so miles to the Stover Creek shelter the next night where some friends would meet them with a huge bag of Chick-fil-A nuggets and several boxes of wine. Saturday morning they would get up and hike the two miles to the top of Springer where their family and friends would be waiting on them. These two women had the best trail dog I have ever met or heard of. His name was Georgy--trail name "Bear"--and was the easiest going big dog. He didn't say a word the whole time, slept at the foot of the women in the shelter, and got up several times during the night to circle the perimeter, then return to their foot. I heard him drink water once, but other than that, he was silent as a big dog could be. Georgy had been with them the entire thru hike except for a short time he had an encounter with a porcupine and spent some time with a vet. What a great trail dog!

A friend of theirs had met them somewhere back up the trail and hiked in with them. I think he said he had met them somewhere along the trail in 2012 and had already finished his thru hike--or maybe I made that up. Anyway, he knew them pretty well and they had invited him to finish their thru hike and celebrate--plus he hiked in with a box of merlot that one of the women particularly enjoyed. Another woman had hiked in from the south and decided to stay in the shelter that night, also, so there was a lot of chatting and story-telling that night. It was one of those fun experiences one gets on the trail when people that will probably never meet again talk and tell stories as if they were old friends--it's trail magic. So we were going to be a pretty full shelter that night; however, not nearly as full as the shelters get in March and April when the NoBos come through. Everyone in the shelter snored and participated in the shelter shuffle, even WJ in his hammock up in the loft. I seemed to be the only one who didn't have ear plugs ... well, actually, I had a pair, but didn't want to dig them out of my pack when I realized that I would need them. It was kind of fun sleeping with a shelter full of experienced hikers. I had fun that night and the next morning listening to stories about the nurses' thru hike and about the trail angels they had met when Georgy had the encounter with a porcupine. I also enjoyed the other woman's stories about being somewhat of a newbie on the trail. It was fun to hear the contrast of experiences of one so new to the trail and a couple who were finishing the 2181 in two days. There is much to learn about oneself on an AT experience.

Friday morning I ate and packed up early, but not so fast that I didn't savor my camp coffee and oatmeal. Gracious! Do I love coffee in the woods! Everyone seemed to struggle to get moving that morning, or maybe it was a reluctance to part ways with new friends each knew they'd probably never see again. I was heading to the Lance Creek Restoration area to tent camp for the night. I knew WJ would pass me somewhere along the way and said that perhaps we could meet at Woody Gap (21.0) for lunch. We met for lunch at Woody, a big area where a paved road comes through, and then set out for Lance Creek. I knew WJ would arrive before me, so I told him to save me a space if the tent sites started to fill up.

I got to the Lance Creek area (24.4) about 4:30 and set up my tent quickly as it began look like rain. Much of the area that had once been camping sites along Lance Creek has been roped off for restoration purposes. Up on kind of an old road bed there were four pads for tents but no bear cables. I had enough time to go down to the creek and get enough water for supper and breakfast and soak my tired feet before the thunder, wind, and rain descended in the creek bottom. I have a Tarptent Rainbow which has to be nursed a little around the edges so that the drip-off doesn't run down the netting and into the tent. With a little work I was able to keep my gear inside the tent pretty dry. When I got to Lance Creek, WJ had already strung up his hammock and was talking with two women camped there who had hiked in from Springer ... well, they kind of hiked in from Springer. It seems that when they got to Cooper Gap, they broke down and talked someone into giving them a ride to Woody Gap from where they hiked to Lance Creek. One of the women lamented that even though they had done a lot of online research about the first section of the AT, they had not realized that it would be as tiring as it had been. They believed that they had pretty good equipment, but their packs were heavy and they were really tired. They were really down about being so tired. Then just before the rains descended a young man and woman came in and quickly pitched their tent on one of the four pads. They were from Boston and had started at Springer, hiked 20 days north, turned around and were hiking 20 days back to Springer. This was day 38, so they had two more days to get there. I'm not sure what the deal was about 40 days (Biblical, maybe?), but that's how long they were planning to be on the trail.


It rained for about an hour while I dozed and thought about my hike thus far. The pitiful part was that I'd only done 24+ miles in three days and I was tired--but obviously not as tired as those two women. Most of those dudes can do 16-20 in a day and not be as tired as I was. There is something to be said for getting this done when you're young--or at least young-er. When I had commented to a hiker along the way that I had gotten out of shape and was determined to get in shape, he told me that I'd need about a month on the trail before I would be in shape to hike longer distances and not hurt so much. Even though my feet had hurt--as I knew they would--each morning when I put on my shoes, my feet felt pretty good. I was happy about that.

When it stopped raining, I fixed supper and looked for a limb over which to hang my bear bag. I found one that would keep my stuff up about 12 feet, and figured that unless a tall bear came along, I was okay. Of course, throwing a bear line over a tree limb after a hard rain brings its own shower, so I was a little bit wet when I brushed my teeth and climbed into my tent. I didn't sleep well that night and the two women woke and decided to have a conversation in their tent at 4:00 AM. They were obviously so new to the trail that they didn't know how sounds carry in the woods at night. They must have awakened everyone because WJ and I talked about it the next morning. The rain had brought a lot of humidity to the forest and I slept fitfully and woke in the morning with a stopped up nose. When it's warm and humid in the woods, you can't sleep covered because it's too warm--but you can't sleep uncovered because it's too cool with the humidity. It generally brings a night of cover-uncover all night long.

Saturday morning I talked a lot with WJ a lot before we set out. He told me that while he was hiking the day before he had changed his trail name to Gilligan. I thought that was a much more fitting name for him because for some reason he kept falling off of stuff and sliding down hills. The first day he slid down the trail to the Long Hollow Falls and slid some more on the rocks of the falls. The second day he had slid down a rock twice while trying to sit on top to eat some lunch. The third day he had fallen and slid down to the creek at Lance Creek. Each time he had fallen/slid he popped back up with a smile, saying something like, "I'm good! I'm good!" Gilligan was a much better name for him and I congratulated him on a good change. 

The two women packed up and left before me, and, although I didn't see which way they went, I thought later that they must have headed back toward Woody Gap to get a ride out. Gilligan left the site before I did because he wanted to get over Blood Mountain and out to the hostel at Neel Gap to wash some clothes. (His clothes were pretty muddy from all of the sliding down!) It was a little sad to see Gilligan leave. He seemed to be a super guy, a school teacher (choral music) in Georgia, who was hiking all the way to Clingman's Dome where his parents would meet him. We had not hiked together, but had stayed at the same location three nights at the various stops along the way. It's curious as to how quickly one gets attached to fellow hikers and then never sees them again. I hope to connect with him some time after he finishes his hike--and I hope he makes it all the way. He seemed to be a great guy.


Wood's Hole shelter
I left the Lance Creek area about 30 minutes after Gilligan and began the ascent up the south side of Blood Mountain. Actually, I was hiking over Burnett Field Mtn, Gaddis Mtn, and Turkey Stamp, but at each of them I gained a good bit of elevation and didn't lose much down the back sides. I had heard so many horror stories about hiking up the north side of Blood, I was glad to be hiking up the "easier" side. Even though I was gradually gaining more elevation, the trail was not too bad. My original plan was to stay in the old CCC shelter up on Blood that night, but while I was hiking and checking my AT Hiker app to make sure I didn't start up the last section of Blood without getting enough water for the night, I started thinking about delaying my push over Blood until the following day. By early afternoon I arrived at Wood's Hole Gap at the bottom of the final ascent up Blood. I stood at the gap and pondered my three options: I could hike to the top of Blood and camp, I could camp there at the gap, or I could go .4 of a mile down the blue blaze trail to the Wood's Hole shelter. I decided to hike the .4 mile down to the Wood's Hole shelter and stay the night there. I was in no hurry to hike out the next day; I didn't have anyone waiting on me to hike out; and I would lose and regain only 50 feet of elevation by going down to the shelter. But probably the deciding factor was that I needed a half-day to just chill. It turned out to be one of the best Plan B decisions I made the whole trip.

The Wood's Hole shelter was very clean and well-kept. Because it is almost a half a mile off of the AT, not a lot of folks make the trip down to the area. The shelter is out on a beautiful little knob that drops off fairly steeply down three sides. The roof covers the table and the trees are open enough to let in enough sunshine to dry my gear from the rain the night before. Rain in the mountains doesn't have to soak gear, but after a rain, almost everything is damp. I dried my tent and the foot print. I dried my bandanas on top of the shelter. I dried some plastic tarps over a log; and I dried some clothes over some blackberry bushes beside the shelter. I chased the moving sun all around the knoll to get my stuff dry. I also watched a couple of bird parents--some sort of wood sparrows, I think--feed their three babies in a nest on one of the rafters near the roof of the shelter (see photo above the "Wood's Hole" sign). I even had a chance to read some of Keith Foskett's book while I was chilling. And while I was chasing the sun with my clothes I boiled some water and made a wonderfully tasting tomato pasta--a small extra meal I had thrown in in case I broke down on the trail and had to stay an extra night. It was really good to eat an extra meal and relax for the afternoon. I agreed with myself that I had made a great decision to hike down to Wood's Hole and stay for the night. It would have been difficult to find a better spot for an old introvert to chill for the afternoon.

About 6:00-ish, a young couple came in saying they had hiked over Blood Mtn to practice for their hike in the Indian Peaks Wilderness up above Boulder, Colorado. I shared with them that my son and I camped up there several times while we lived in Denver. This was the young woman's first camping experience and she wasn't yet convinced that she was having fun. The couple--mainly the guy--and I talked about equipment and the guy showed me a pot his father had camped with 30 years earlier. That was pretty neat that he was camping with his father's old pot. I showed him a couple of aluminum boxes that I have camped with for forty years--back in the Paul Baird era. The couple had brought their tent and decided to set it up right outside the shelter and not over by the bear cables where the tent sites were. Although I'm certainly not an expert on backpacking, it's always fun to talk gear and experiences with fairly new backpackers, and I enjoyed telling my equipment and camping stories. I have had a lot of experiences in several different settings and I can share some of the things I've learned along the way. 


Just before dark--I was already stretched out on my mat--a single hiker came down to the shelter, looked around, and sat down on the log outside and began typing on his phone. It was barely light enough to see--already dark in the shelter--and I couldn't really tell what he was doing. I invited him to throw down inside the shelter with me, and he grunted something unintelligible. In a few minutes, he hiked away. I figured he was a kid hired to survey the shelters to see how many people were staying. I wondered where he was camping for the night ... and would find out later. I actually didn't see or hear him hike away because I had already fallen asleep.


I slept pretty well that night and didn't even hear the pig(s) that rooted all around the trail about a couple of hundred yards from the shelter. I did wake up once when I heard the birds fluttering around their nest. I think maybe one of the shelter mice got too close to the nest and the parent birds were attacking. The feedings resumed the next morning so I presumed that the attack had been unsuccessful. The couple reported that they heard what they thought were bears grunting and running around back up the approach trail. It was fun listening to their story about lying awake listening for the bears to get closer to our shelter/campsite--I have known the feeling, and I'll bet the young woman didn't sleep too much on her first night in the woods. I finally suggested that when they heard a lot of grunts and rustling in the leaves, they were probably hearing feral pigs instead of bears. As I was hiking out the that morning I confirmed to myself that it had indeed been pigs that had rooted all around a whole section of the blue blaze trail. Feral pigs are really becoming a nuisance in much of the wooded south.

I must have begun my last leg on the section hike about 9:00 as usual, although I don't remember checking my watch when I left. It was nice to pack up dry equipment and almost no food. I still had too many snacks, but the young couple didn't want any, so I was going to have to pack them out. I had brought too many protein bars--which are heavy--and not enough energy drink powders--which are not heavy ... lesson learned. It was a beautiful morning, though a little too warm. I knew the top of Blood Mtn would be beautiful and I started my ascent.



To add insult to my tired feet, while I was hiking up to the top of the mountain, about 15 men and women trail runners came running by as I stepped aside on the trail. They were running from Woody Gap over Blood Mtn to Neel Gap and back to Woody Gap. Although most of the runners were 30s and 40s, a couple of the guys looked to be about 60. That didn't make me feel any better! I wished them well, and hiked on at my slow, plodding pace as I said to myself, "Slow and steady wins the race." The back (south) side of Blood wasn't too tough. It was steep enough to have switch-backs, but not so steep as to make it really miserable. It's said to be much easier than the front (north) side--and definitely is, as I was later to find out. The top of Blood is very beautiful with it's azaleas, mountain laurel, rhododendron, and rock outcroppings.

On the top of Blood is a stone shelter that was obviously built by the CCC in the '30s. It's an iconic building for the day hikers and is a cold but dry shelter for AT hikers. All of the guidebooks and descriptions for the AT say two things about the stone shelter: use it if you must, but it will be cold and there is no water nearby, so take warm sleeping gear and pack all of your water in. Those factors were a pretty significant influence on why I chose to stop at Wood's Hole and not pack it to the top of Blood the afternoon before.

When I got to the shelter I went inside and discovered three teenaged backpackers who had hung their hammocks inside and slept there overnight. I asked how it was, and they said, "Cold!" As I was asking one of them to come take my picture at the door of the shelter, another one of them said, "Hey, I saw you last night down at Wood's Hole, didn't I?" I agreed that he had and asked him what he'd been doing. He said he was just checking out the shelter while his buddies ate supper up at the junction. (Again, I thought, ah, youth! to be able to run a half a mile down a trail and a half a mile back up just to check out a shelter ... must be nice!) He had sat down on the log to text his two buddies back up the hill to report that they wouldn't be alone in the shelter. He had obviously hiked back up to the junction and the three of them had hiked up to the summit of Blood in the dark. It actually sounded fun ...

After the required picture in the door way of the shelter, I went out on one of the rock outcroppings and ate some snacks before my descent and hike out to my vehicle in the Byron Reece parking area. While I was sitting there the woman I had seen at Gooch Mtn shelter crawled out and sat down to admire the view. We chatted a few minutes about the beauty of the view and surroundings and compared thoughts about backpacking on the AT. I was reluctant to leave such a beautiful setting and end my hike, but I had a couple of steep, downhill miles to go yet, and so I needed to get the old knees moving. The white blazes are painted on the rocks as you descend from the top of the mountain. I'd hate to think of how a person would get down through the rhodo hells without the white blazes leading the way. Without the white blazes it would be a total maze getting off the mountain. The further down one gets off of the top of the mountain the rougher the trail gets. As I descended I met some of the runners that that passed me on the back side of the mountain. They had been to Neel Gap, rested a bit, and were running back over the mountain to Woody Gap. I swear that doesn't sound anything like fun to me! And I must admit, some of the runners didn't look like they were having a lot of fun running back up Blood Mountain.



I finally got to the Freeman Trail (that circles around the east side of Blood Mtn from Wood's Hole Junction, for those who don't want to go over Blood Mountain) Junction and turned left off of the AT down the Byron Reece Trail to the parking lot where I had parked my vehicle. At that junction, the AT travels through Flat Rock Gap to Neel Gap over about half a mile. The Byron Reece Trail went down and down and down, feeling like I was descending into a deep pit. The trail was very steep and rocky and not particularly easy to hike down. My knees were feeling the downward hike, but I was just glad I was not hiking up that trail to get to the AT. I thought to myself that those day hikers who park at that parking lot have a heck of a hike up the BR Trail just to get to the SoBo AT to hike to the summit of Blood Mtn. Now I understood why Gilligan had talked about how he'd much rather park at Woody Gap and hike to the summit of Blood than come up that north side. It was longer, but a much easier hike to the top.




I found my vehicle as I had left it ... with the moon roof slanted open ... which I had not intended to leave it. It had rained there while I was on the trail and although the floor of my vehicle seemed damp, the roof did not show any signs of having been drenched. Confession: I had been so excited to get on the trail Wednesday morning when Lumpy followed me to the Byron Reece parking area, I had paid Lumpy another $5 to go back by my vehicle and check to see if it was locked ... I couldn't remember whether or not I had locked it. Lumpy was glad to accommodate my carelessness and it was probably not the first time he'd done something like that. I had not remembered that I had left the moon roof slanted, but Lumpy wouldn't have been able to do anything about that.

Reflections of an old AT section hiker: Was I glad I had hiked the 32 miles? -- well, duh! Would/Could I do it again? -- yes. Did I learn anything? -- I learned a lot about equipping for a 4-night AT section hike. I carried just the right amount of evening meals. I took one too many oatmeal breakfasts. I carried way too many snacks. I thought I would eat more protein bars than I did--although I probably needed to eat more, I couldn't stop and eat them. I made more GORP than I would eat on the trail, but I snarked it down in the afternoons/evenings when I got to my camping/sheltering spots. It made a good desert for the evening meal. I can't think of any equipment I took that I didn't use except some lint fire-starter, and that didn't weigh anything. I can't think of any equipment I needed and didn't take. In short, the obsessive planning I did the month before the trip paid off. I was amazed to see how much stuff some of the other backpackers carried (jars of peanut butter, boxes of wine, etc.), but they were younger and more trail proof. 


I've read somewhere and heard people say (in fact a ATC ridge-runner guy in the hostel) that the important thing is to hike your own hike. John Muir was supposed to have said that he didn't like the word "hike;" that he more preferred the word "saunter." At 68, I definitely come closer to a saunter than a hike. I saw a T-shirt in Mountain Crossings that said the same thing about hiking ones own hike, and even though I've pretty much always practiced that philosophy, I now believe it to be more true than ever. It's not just about the pace a person hikes, or the gear you have, but the entire experience. From the planning to the drive back home, a person needs to remember that the hike is his/her experience and to plan it accordingly. I know that sounds a little trite, but it's an important value for someone whether on a day hike or a thru hike. Of course, the most important thing is to quit saying some day and get one's rear end out in the woods and soak in as much as possible. It was Teddy Roosevelt (although he wasn't talking about backpacking, per se) who said," Far better is it to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure .... than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much, because they live in a gray twilight that knows not defeat or victory." Get your rear end in the woods!