I have gotten and continue to get all sorts of unsolicited advice and judgement from other hikers on the trail. I find that the more experienced I get, the less it annoys me . . . I know that no matter the reason behind their need to force their judgement on me, most of the time "they" are well intentioned and I just smile and tell them I am fine and quite experienced.
I honestly believe that my being a slightly round, short, huffing and puffing female hiker tends to increase the comments
They can't help that I look like an out of shape couch potato and since they don't know me, their choice to judge a book by it's cover is just a bad one.
I think it has become easier to ignore the comments once I fully realized and accepted that my experience and decisions are not based on what "they" think of me. A lot of times, other people's comments and judgement of me bothers Brian more than it does me. At one point on the AT last year, some guy made a comment to me prefaced by "you know darling" and followed with some crazy comment on my lack of experience and Brian, who was sitting around the corner of the shelter, jumped right in and said well that little darling has climbed the highest mountain in the lower 48, summited a mountain by traversing a couple of glaciers and has currently finished more than 1000 miles since Feb 29 . . . blah, blah, blah. The guy just walked away but Brian was more upset than me, which was so sweet, I just had to smile
I rarely give advice unless I think the person might be in real danger and then, I usually say something to the effect of "oh my gosh, I really need to remember that the winds get so fierce above treeline and put on another layer before my hands freeze, I always forget." or something like that where it is more of a *** at myself while dispensing some advice to the person listening.
Anyway, to each their own but I try to just smile say hello and move on when this happens. I will never look like an "experienced hiker" so I just have to accept the consequences of that.
sli74