Hotels and hiking the AT
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@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 15:36 last edited by@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
Interesting! I figured your reply to me would've been "you're wrong dood"
I get that there are supply/food places near the trail at times, that's of course ok (need food...) but it's the bed/shower thing that made me basically want to stop reading this blog.
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@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 15:51 last edited by@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
I like that.
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wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 16:10 last edited by
Our National Trails Depend on Federal Support â Which is Now in Doubt
https://appalachiantrail.org/official-blog/national-trails-federal-support/
Do it while you can.
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@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 16:30 last edited bySome smart guy said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
After my nephew did the trail, he ditched his dreams of a fulltime music career, finished his AgEcon master's, married a really pretty and talented young lady with a strong bohemian bent, bought a house and started making babies.
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Some smart guy said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
After my nephew did the trail, he ditched his dreams of a fulltime music career, finished his AgEcon master's, married a really pretty and talented young lady with a strong bohemian bent, bought a house and started making babies.
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 16:32 last edited by@Jolly said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
After my nephew did the trail, he ditched his dreams of a fulltime music career, finished his AgEcon master's, married a really pretty and talented young lady with a strong bohemian bent, bought a house and started making babies.
Yeah, those experiences are likely related.
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wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 16:34 last edited by
I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
Interesting! I figured your reply to me would've been "you're wrong dood"
I get that there are supply/food places near the trail at times, that's of course ok (need food...) but it's the bed/shower thing that made me basically want to stop reading this blog.
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 16:49 last edited by@89th said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
I get that there are supply/food places near the trail at times, that's of course ok (need food...) but it's the bed/shower thing that made me basically want to stop reading this blog.
I would guess that there is less than 5% (and probably significantly less than that) who continual through hike and never use a hotel/hostel. I think that a person can say that they "through hike" if they complete the entire trail in a calendar year.
People typcially start in the south and go north, but because of increased usage and crowding, they trail assc. is encouraging people to start in the middle, go north to complete the first half and then return to the middle and do the bottom half.
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I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 18:29 last edited by@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
Spend much time out in the woods?
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@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
Spend much time out in the woods?
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 18:36 last edited by@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
Spend much time out in the woods?
Significantly more than most people - maybe 100x more.
And no, I will never tell you about it. It is too personal, and magical.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
Spend much time out in the woods?
Significantly more than most people - maybe 100x more.
And no, I will never tell you about it. It is too personal, and magical.
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 18:48 last edited by@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
Spend much time out in the woods?
Significantly more than most people - maybe 100x more.
And no, I will never tell you about it. It is too personal, and magical.
Yeah, it's great talking to you, too.
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wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 19:05 last edited by
A deer stand is good for introspection. Five to six hours per day, thirty feet up in a tree being as quite as the limbs above you.
A week of that is good therapy.
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@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
Spend much time out in the woods?
Significantly more than most people - maybe 100x more.
And no, I will never tell you about it. It is too personal, and magical.
Yeah, it's great talking to you, too.
wrote on 10 Mar 2025, 19:08 last edited by@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Horace said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
I hope those who find their old problems awaiting them after a grueling journey of self-discovery, aren't too hard on themselves that they didn't commit hard enough.
Spend much time out in the woods?
Significantly more than most people - maybe 100x more.
And no, I will never tell you about it. It is too personal, and magical.
Yeah, it's great talking to you, too.
Sorry to not be a productive collaborator in the stories you wish to tell.
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Some smart guy said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
@Mik said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
That's pretty elitist-metaphysical.
It's the freaking AT. I'm not talking about what some day-hiker should do, every time they go out in the woods. I sure as hell look forward to diner food once I get done a day-long walk. I'm talking about a certain kind of through-hike.
I know quite a few through-hikers (and far more would-bes). A great many would-bes feel stuck in their lives, and they have this idea that they'll go hike the AT to find themselves. That's a very common reason you'll come across.
A fine ideaâwe've been doing that sort of thing for tens of thousands of yearsâbut if that's the goal, then you need to take that seriously. You need to keep the phone at home and stay out in the forest. Civilization is what put you in this existential crisis in the first place; freaking commit to the very place you went to find answers.
Fun hikes or doing the thing for the challenge is ay-okay. You're not obligated to have an existential experience when you do the AT. But a lot of folks go there explicitly for that, and either give up or come back finding out nothing about themselves because they didn't take that process seriously.
After my nephew did the trail, he ditched his dreams of a fulltime music career, finished his AgEcon master's, married a really pretty and talented young lady with a strong bohemian bent, bought a house and started making babies.
wrote on 11 Mar 2025, 02:16 last edited by@Jolly said in Hotels and hiking the AT:
bought a house and started making babies.
At first I thought you said "horse" and I thought maybe he spent one too many nights on the AT.
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wrote on 11 Mar 2025, 02:31 last edited by
No projection, please.