Saturday, March 12, 2011

Intro... February 25,2011

Hello…my name is Jay Bigelow.  I have recently decided to hike the Appalachian Trail (AT), a 2,181-mile path connecting Springer Mountain in northern Georgia to Mount Katahdin in central Maine.  I plan to begin heading north from Springer Mountain on April 7, 2011 and to finish sometime in late September. 

Sarah and Jay Bigelow by the Muir Hut
on the John Muir Trail - July, 2009
My sister-in-law, Helen, has offered to set up and maintain a blog for me.  I plan to keep a journal on the trail, and send portions of it to my wife, Sarah, whenever I can reach a post office.  Sarah will enter the entries into her computer and email them to Helen.  Pictures will follow at longer intervals.

Thousands of people have hiked the AT, and hundreds of published accounts and blogs are available.  The purpose of this blog will be to keep in touch with friends and relatives, and to perhaps inspire them to send me treats.  I imagine everyone who hikes the trail has a unique perspective; maybe mine will help other people who know me, or those of similar age and/or state of mind to decide if such an undertaking would be worthwhile for them. 

Why Hike the AT?

Backpacking has appealed to me ever since my first trip with my father when I was 16 years old.  We took a 4-day hike around Mount Hood.  It was an intensely rewarding experience, combining physical challenges, quality time with my father, adventure, and unbelievably beautiful and dramatic scenery.  At the trip’s end, when my body was just beginning to get used to the hardships imposed by the trail, I wondered how it would feel to just keep going.  I continued to hike or backpack throughout the western states during my career with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 
Unfortunately, backpacking grew harder as I got older.  When I was 48, Sarah and I hiked the Tahoe Rim Trail (TRT), a two week, 165-mile journey around the perimeter of the Tahoe Lake Basin.  We were in the process of deciding that backpacking had become too painful to enjoy, when we began meeting through-hikers (ultra-long-distance hikers) on the part of the route that coincided with the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT).  We were astounded to see that most of them carried base weights (total pack weight minus food and water) of around 12 pounds.  We begin to feel foolish as we carried 50+ pounds while people of all ages were breezing by on their way from Mexico to Canada with only 20 pounds.  After some research (i.e. Beyond Backpacking by Ray Jardine), we hiked the TRT the next summer employing “ultra-light” techniques.  The experience was so enjoyable, we decided backpacking would be rewarding for many years to come.  The next summer, we tested the ultra-light method on the John Muir Trail, a 250-mile route through the highest section of the Sierras, after which I was totally hooked.  I began to think the Pacific Crest Trail was not an impossible dream.
This year, at age 51, it seemed like a switch flipped in my brain.  I had this urgent feeling that it was now or never, that if I continued my career for the standard 30 years, I would be too old to through-hike.  So I quit on February 12, 2011 after 23.5 years of service.  Sarah, bless her heart, encouraged me, insisting she was content to continue teaching until we could start collecting our pensions.  The idea was that I would through-hike generally from April through September and she would join me during her spring and summer vacations.  With April fast approaching, I decided the AT was the best choice for our first through-hike because it is easier to plan for than the PCT.  Hiking the PCT would entail mailing about 25 packages of food to various post offices along the route in order to re-supply.  The AT, on the other hand, passes near enough towns, that pre-mailing packages is not necessary if one is willing to risk subsisting on whatever is on the grocery store shelves.  The AT is also a bit shorter than the PCT, and has a longer weather window.  In other words, I won’t be as much of a “mile slave” when Sarah joins me during the summer.   I must point out, however, that the AT is reputed to be more difficult than the PCT in some aspects: it is generally more rugged in terms of the trail surface (tread) and in elevation changes.  The AT is also very rainy.

The Plan

My general strategy will be to obtain food at 4-day intervals, more or less, from grocery stores on or near the trail.  I will not carry a stove, fuel, cookware, or eating utensils; therefore, the food must be pre-cooked.  Typically, I will eat Carnation instant breakfast, Ramen noodles, peanut butter, and other foods with high calorie per gram ratios.  I plan to minimize expenses by avoiding hotels and restaurants as much as possible (at least when I am not with Sarah).  Although there are shelters available on the trail, I will be hiking with the wave of some 2,000 others, so competition for the shelters will be fierce.  I plan to hike at a slow pace, but for longer hours than most of the others.  Because the shelters are first come first serve, I will be prepared to rely on my tent.  I intend to average 13 miles per day.  I will earn a day off whenever I get 13 miles ahead of schedule.  At this point, my biggest uncertainties are the rain and the food selection.  I have little experience backpacking in wet climates.  l will be starting just after the peak of the stampede, so I am not sure how much food will be left on the shelves by the time I reach the stores. 

View my itinerary on the next page on this blog.  When a P.O. is included with a town’s name, it means I will be checking the mail there.  If you want to send me something, please use the following address format:
John Bigelow (Name has to match my ID)
General Delivery
Town name and zip code
Expected pick-up date

If I get ahead of the itinerary, I will let Sarah know, so Helen can update it.

That’s all for now, I probably won’t write again until I hit the trail.