5btg

5btg OP t1_jdl88r8 wrote

Yes I had a cellphone with me that I used to write a blog most nights in my tent before bed. The east coast is actually very densely populated, and the AT is just a thin ribbon of wilderness, so I had service (at least at some point) pretty much every day. I carried an external battery pack that I would charge at hostels or anywhere I could. Generally the phone stayed on airplane mode. It also had my primary map on it as a PDF

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5btg OP t1_jdl82yc wrote

Yes Roan Mountain is beautiful! We had a wonderful time there.

Funny story about that: while we were in that area we heard rumors about "the best breakfast on the AT". We were 17 miles away and it was to be a full moon that evening, so we layed down around 1PM and slept.

Our plan, which we executed flawlessly, was to wake up at midnight and depart. Our calculations told us that we would arrive at the hostel right as breakfast was being served, something like 7:30 in the morning if I remember correctly. We called ahead and let them know that we would be arriving in the AM, and they skeptically said "okay".

Well, it worked. We woke up at midnight and packed up. Someone played "River of dreams" by Billy Joel on their phone. Morale was through the roof. We hiked mostly under the glow of the full moon, and it was a cool windy night. Those mountains looked magical under the moonlight. We were like zombies when we showed up at breakfast in the morning soon after the sun had come up, and it absolutely was the best breakfast I have ever had in my life. After breakfast we went over to hostel's the bunk house and passed out

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5btg OP t1_jdl7hud wrote

First of all, congratulations! I know backpacking can be intimidating (and expensive) at first, but it can be immensely rewarding in many ways, so its great that you have decided to take the plunge.

For me, I ditched my whole rain "outfit" pretty early on. I had armed myself with a rain jacket and rain pants. But if I tried to walk even a mile in that stuff I would sweat so much that any dryness was negated. I instead used an umbrella and a rain skirt, which I found gave me the same amount of rain protection (which, no matter what you wear, you are probably going to get wet if it rains enough) without any of the uncomfortable heat and sweating. I found this set up to be superior in almost every way. Here is a picture of my (silly by highly functional) outfit: https://imgur.com/a/86NkaW9. I would say the umbrella was more valuable than the skirt. The umbrella was also GREAT in Pennsylvania farm country in July, where it served as a shade-provider for days on end.

In terms of invaluables: Water filter has to be number one. I love the Sawyer filter (can get at any walmart). My luxury item that I would recommend to anyone starting out is an inflatable pillow. It is probably not necessary but I really enjoy it and it is small and light weight. Obviously tent, sleeping bag, and sleeping mat are must-haves as well.

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5btg OP t1_jdl6ka0 wrote

Every single thing that I carried was highly useful, except one fun item, which was a slingshot that I got at walmart (wrist rocket).

Tent, sleeping bag, backpack, stove, water filter, etc.

We resupplied by hitchhiking to grocery stores (or sometimes walking by them, the trail goes directly though a number of towns). Because it was Covid, I always tried to thumb down pickup trucks, so that we could stay in the bed, and I found that they picked us up more (probably for the same reason)

There is an opportunity to purchase food at least about once a week. We would get as many cheap calories as we could (candy, peanut butter, pepperoni, etc). I could do a whole presentation on trail foods.

No foraging except for spring onions as a garnish for fun

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5btg OP t1_jdl4g4i wrote

Well he took us to where we were trying to go. Which was a grocery/beer store. But the plan from the get-go was that he was going there himself, and he would drop us off where he had picked us up on his way home. This guy had a nice car (new 4 runner) and nice cloths and a beautiful english setter in the front seat.

So when we got out of the car we went into the store. He waited in the car. We immedatley were like "yo, what the FUCKKKKK" "were you feeling what i was feeling?" "YES! That dude is sketchy as hell"

"Well what should we do?" We talked it over. We were like 15 miles from the trail (and our friends, campsite, etc) and it did not seem like a place that we could easily hitch back to (many roads around, so not like a lot of people would be going to that random state park 15 miles away)

We decided that despite the fact that he was sketchy and weird as hell, he technically hadnt done anything: I mean, he did what he said he was going to do, he brought us to this store. My friend (a woman) said that she was cool with riding back but we should be alert.

So we decided to ride back with him. I bought him a 6 pack of beer as a "thank you" for the ride. It was tense. I was in the back seat right in the middle, sitting very much forward with my back upright, not touching the back of the seat. Almost leaning up forward into the front section of the car so that my head was pretty much right behind/next to his. Elbows on the two front seats type of thing if that makes sense. The entire time I was just completely fixated on his hands. If he had reached down or made any sketchy movement I was ready to reach up and grab that wheel and yank us into a crash. I made sure that he went back the exact way we had come, if he had turned onto any or we started going down any sketchy dirt road I was ready to crash the car. Again, now, typing this it seems bizzare and insane, but that is what was going through my head at the time. It felt like a survival situation. Plus, he was drunk, so I felt that I could easily take him if it came to that.

The ride back was less sketchy relatively, but was still very off. He seemed supperrrr nervous. He told us about the trees that were native to the area. My friend and I tried to keep the conversation flowing and light. He dropped us back at the state park. The tension easied up as we got closer to the park, but it was just a weird vibe overall. Intuition is valuable though, and I know that there was some weird shit going on there. I think that if I had not been totally proactive and right on top of his shoulder watching him it could have gone bad. On paper he did nothing but do us a favor, but my gut was screaming RED FLAG, and I acted accordingly - alert. Was it the best decision to go back with him? Probably not. But thankfully nothing ended up happening.

edit: changed a couple words after proof reading

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5btg OP t1_jdl081b wrote

Ask away!

Sketchiest experience was getting picked up by a drunk guy when we were hitch hiking in PA. Not only was he drunk, he was acting squirrely and sketchy as hell. Weirdly, immediately made a joke like "hey so dont worry im not going to kill you and leave you in a ditch haha"...

Like dude, what? Why would you bring that up right now? We definitely weren't thinking that but now we kind of are. Then he wanted to take a detour to his house b/c he "forgot his wallet". My hiking partner and I both felt something was off immediately.

Yes I read Bryson's book a couple times! I love it! Such a great window into trail culture and trail life! I had also watched some youtube videos and read blogs.

Next on my hiking bucketlist is just some small weekend trips to Shenandoah. It is only a couple hours from me and is such a lovely place to hike for a night or two. No more super long trails for me in the forseeable future

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5btg OP t1_jdkytku wrote

Its hard for me to identify a favorite spot. In terms of visual beauty probably new hampshire and maine take the cake. The views out there are just out of this world. Example: https://imgur.com/a/eyAGamT

But in terms of enjoyment each place has its own personality and at each point along the trip you are in a different place physically and mentally, so they are all quite different and unique. For example: the first couple weeks are unbeleivably fun because you cant believe you are actually doing this, even though there wasnt the best weather and not many great views. The middle (PA) is ROCKY and HOT in june/july, but it is dead flat. Virgina goes on foreverrrrrrr. New England is a treat at the end. by that point you are like a machine in terms of hiking. Hell, by Virginia you are a machine. Hard to identify a favorite spot

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5btg OP t1_jdkyauf wrote

the whole thing cost me around 7-8 grand. you can definitely do it for less, but my group was the kind that liked to hitchhike into town for beers and wings whenever we could (about once every 7-10 days usually).

It was a 6 month trip so cheap compared to living somewhere (with rent and all) but generally people think it will be cheaper. Food adds up when you are eating ~5k calories a day!

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