Wednesday, November 30, 2011

The View from the Other Side

I guess we know what it's like to be trail angels, now. I know some of you have been following along with our doggy drama on Facebook today, and we really appreciate the support. For those who don't know, we had puppies today. The hound we rescued yesterday went into labor this morning. To be more accurate, Pancho looked down and saw a puppy on the floor and it was on. From about 8 AM until around 2 PM, she was delivering, ending up with 10 adorable little babies. Yes, 10. We hit double figures. Yikes. Fortunately, all 10 seem healthy. Mama seems (understandably) tired, but otherwise OK. She looks super thin now, though apparently, aside from being undernourished, she is in good health.

We've taken lots of pictures, but we don't have the camera download cord. We'll post them all later, so stay tuned--they are ridiculously cute. Pancho took this one with the phone when there were only 7 pups. I've been told it looks like either a soccer ball or a stuffed cow. It's really just a pile of cuteness.



Tomorrow afternoon, a local rescue shelter will be picking up mom and babies and taking them to a foster home. We'll end up missing 2 days of hiking this week. We still plan to summit Springer on Saturday, though we'll have to make up about 30 miles after the fact. An unexpected complication, which happens all too often on the trail, but worth it to know that mom and babies are safe.

If you or anyone you know would like to adopt either a puppy or mom, please contact Castaway Critters in Blairsville, GA. Their website is www.castaway-critters.org and phone number is (706) 781-3992.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Every day is an adventure


Today was definitely one of those days that happen on the trail, when you realize that you just have to roll with it. Since Monday, we’ve been based in Young Harris, GA, in a cute little cabin, as we slackpack the final miles of the trail. Yesterday was miserable, with pouring rain and temperatures dropping throughout the day. We actually had to move a fallen tree off the forest service road we took to get to the trailhead. Then we had a lot of high water and a few sketchy stream crossings. All told, a great day to come back to a cozy cabin with a hot shower and dryer. An even better day today—high around freezing, with snow all day. Despite the cold, it was a beautiful, snowy hike.

I kept thinking about all of the thru-hikers who walked along the trail we covered today. The majority of thru-hikers head northbound, so they have only covered 50-60 miles at this point. Many of those never finish and a significant number never get out of Georgia. It’s strange to think how close we are now and to remember how those first days were for us. For those of you who have followed since the beginning, you may remember we only made 5 miles on the first day. And it was a long, painful day. Now, we’re down to the final few days and I find myself wanting to both speed up and slow down.

Unfortunately, we won’t be able to hike tomorrow. When we got back to the car at the trailhead, we found a dog huddled in a pile of wet, snowy leaves, shivering uncontrollably. When she stood up, we realized she was pregnant. We bundled her into the car and took her to the local vet. They checked her out and said she’s in generally good health, aside from being undernourished, and ready to deliver at any moment. The vet wasn’t able to keep her, but put us in touch with a no-kill shelter in nearby Blairsville. The problem is that they can’t take her until noon tomorrow. Instead of hiking, we’ll be driving her to the shelter. So, here we are in our little cabin, on the couch with a glass of wine, hoping we don’t end up in a 101 Dalmatians situation tonight. She is so sweet and well-behaved and it enrages me that someone seems to have abandoned her.

We’ll be finishing up at Springer on Saturday, though we may have to come back and make up a day after the fact. Since a small, hearty band will be joining us for a bit of tailgating and hiking the final mile, we don’t want to change our schedule, but we do need to get the puppy settled somewhere.
Stay tuned—we’re almost there!

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

It’s been brought to my attention that the last few posts have sounded a touch “trail-weary.”  An accurate assessment, I must admit.  After over 2000 miles and more than 6 months, it happens to everyone.  No matter how gung-ho you may be at the start, no matter how much you prepare, there will come a time in everyone’s hike when you just want to be done and you wonder what the hell you’re still doing out in the woods.  There have definitely been days like that lately.

I’ve really struggled with the cold weather, especially through the Smokies (or, as we took to calling them, the Great Sucky Mountains).  A couple of nights last week, it was down in the teens, with highs barely clearing freezing.  It makes it incredibly difficult to drag yourself out of the sleeping bag in the morning, the only place you’re actually warm, knowing that you’ll be cold all day long.  This just confirms my belief that I have no interest whatsoever in any sort of alpine or arctic travel.
The Smokies are one of the coldest sections of the AT,
 with much of the trail above 5000 ft. We had some pretty cold
temperatures, heavy frost, and snow and ice.

We came upon this little guy near the top of Mt. Guyot.
He had fallen and couldn't get up, so we lent a hand.















We’re also both struggling a little physically at this point.  Pancho has tendonitis in both Achilles tendons, which has prompted us to cut our miles back dramatically.  He starts strong every morning, then after we break for lunch, his heels tighten up and he ends up hobbling for the rest of the day.  I’ve also had some sub-par hiking days, feeling generally fatigued and out of energy.  The cold compounds the problem, since I don’t feel like eating, drinking, or stopping to rest.  Hiking lower miles and getting to camp and going to sleep earlier, I get easily frustrated, since there’s no good reason that I should feel so exhausted.  But, then Pancho points out that we’ve walked 2000 miles.  There might naturally be a bit of fatigue setting in right about now.

We took an extended break in Gatlinburg, hoping to rest Pancho’s heels and ease the tendonitis (not successfully), and also to celebrate our 12th anniversary.  We bypassed the heart-shaped hot-tub honeymoon suites in favor of the Hilton Garden Inn.  Many thanks to all the great folks there who took such good care of us!
On the tower at Clingman's Dome, the highest point on the AT.
The photo was taken by an Amish teenager--not bad for his
first experience with a camera.

I love these national park structures from the 60s, like the
visitor's center on Mt. Washington. It's like a
Jetsons spaceship landed on the mountain.















I have to say, we were not thrilled with our Smokies experience (see pejorative nickname above).  First of all, you’re theoretically required to stay in the shelters.  Prior to hitting the Smokies, we had only stayed in 2 shelters.  Sleeping in a rodent-infested hut with a bunch of strangers is not what I had in mind when I wanted to do this.  Fortunately, thru-hikers are allowed to camp, if the shelters are full, which they were on our first two nights in the park.  After that, we just tented anyway, assuming that no ranger was going to head up the mountain in sub-20 degree temps to issue tickets to wayward thru-hikers.  A second weirdness about the Smokies: the shelters used to have chain-link fencing and gates across the front.  The park is notorious for bears, and apparently, fencing in the hikers was originally deemed a good way to keep them safe.  As opposed to say, teaching people the proper protocol for camping in bear territory.  There is something perversely hilarious about hikers peering out at the bears, like they’re the ones in the zoo.  If only bears had a sense of irony…. (only one of the shelters we saw still has the fencing in place—the others have been remodeled)  Perhaps my biggest issue with the Smokies is the park’s ridiculous approach to poop.  Historically, there have been no privies at the shelters in the park, though, now many have been added.  Instead, the shelters had a “toilet area,” where you’re supposed to do your business, digging your hole and burying your stuff.  Well, let me tell you, the toilet area is basically a sanitary minefield, with little blobs of TP everywhere.  And, I certainly don’t want to dig beneath the surface, as it were.  What moron thought this was a good plan?  The argument is that privies are expensive to install and maintain.  In the most visited park in the national system, does it really provide a satisfying outdoor experience to have people dodging surface turds?  Rant on park management officially ends here.
A snowy Smokies trail.

Pancho at the Fontana Hilton, the shelter at Fontana Dam.
One of the largest shelters on the trail, it also boasts
a bathroom with hot showers and a great view of the lake.
We had the whole place to ourselves.



















At the moment, we are waiting out a nasty, rainy day at Nantahala Outdoor Center.  Since we hit Fontana, on the TN/NC line, I feel like I’m back on home turf.  I’ve been coming up here my whole life, rafting, paddling, and hiking, and it’s like NOC is the first taste of home.  This will be our final post from the field. Friday afternoon, my folks are picking us up on the side of the highway outside Franklin, NC, to head home for Thanksgiving.  We could finish by the 24th (it’s about 135 miles from here), but since we host, we need a few days to pull it all together.  So we’ll have an opportunity to indulge the hiker hunger on Thanksgiving (we may have to have a turkey of our own), then hike it off.  After all of the family leaves, we’ll be back on the trail for the last miles.  There will be more posts after we get back, for the last section and the re-entry to civilization. It may be a week early, but we are both thankful for all of our family, friends and the new friends met along the way—hope y’all have a safe and happy Thanksgiving!

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Sunday morning, my parents dropped us off under a bridge along a twisty state highway, to head out into the cold. There was definitely a part of me that wanted to just stay in the nice, warm car and drive back to Atlanta and our cats and our house. But the stubborn, driven part thought that we were over 1800 miles into the trek, and no way in HELL are we stopping now. Now, we’re 250 miles from home. It seems like every day goes a bit faster now, as we’re on the downhill slide back to Georgia. If only it were really downhill…
Pancho's pirate alter ego, Captain Sea Cucumber, and his one good eye.
This is what a cold morning in the tent looks like....

We’ve been in Hot Springs, NC for the last two nights, at the Iron Horse Station Inn and Tavern, a cool little joint with lots of good live tunes and Highland Brewery taps. Today, we did a great 20 mile hike down from Max Patch in perfect weather with Sage and Meander. We’re all heading back out tomorrow. Pancho and I will take a break in a few days, to soak up the tackiness and celebrate our 12th anniversary in Gatlinburg. I think there is a heart-shaped hot-tub calling our name…. J
View from Max Patch, NC.

Hiking with Sage and Meander.