I started my hiking career in the Whites mostly doing weekend outings with friends. Between 1990 and 2007 my project was the AT; that included several 100 mile sections, a 650 mile section, and a final 587 mile section in 2007. Almost all those miles hiking alone, in fact I almost never (except for a few dozen miles on the AT in Virginia) had a regular hiking partner. I've gone days on end without seeing another soul on the trail. It does get lonely.
(Hiking northbound with the "wave" in Georgia, you will not get lonely.)
Winter hiking's something else. That I don't do alone. I never was a peakbagger. My heart's still into long-distance hiking, even if circumstances don't quite favor it.
(Hiking northbound with the "wave" in Georgia, you will not get lonely.)
Winter hiking's something else. That I don't do alone. I never was a peakbagger. My heart's still into long-distance hiking, even if circumstances don't quite favor it.