For the last five years of my life,
I considered myself a loner. I usually stay away from group activities,
and I rarely attend parties. I’ve had
several internal debates as to whether I should continue reading my book or
socialize. Usually the book would
win. However, when I got a job in Hawaii
onboard a cruise ship packed with 900 crew members and 2,000 guests, I became
rather attached to people——or to one in particular, I should say. Before I made my first step on the Appalachian
Trail, I questioned the direction I was heading: was now really the time to live a Jeremiah
Johnson-like existence?
I try not to think of this question, but it haunts me. Nonetheless, I am determined to hike as far and
as fast as I can. My mind is occupied with
pleasant memories. I feast on happy
thoughts to quiet my inner protests. For
this same reason, parents buy their children sugary cereal so they shut up on
the ride home from the grocery store. This
trick can only last so long, and this is going to be a long ride.
Fortunately I don’t need to come up
with an alternative means of diversion right away because I am too busy
watching my step. The trail is
surprisingly narrow and is sporadically studded with rocks and tree roots. I cannot believe this tiny corridor in the
wilderness stretches across the east coast of the United States.
When I reach the first shelter 0.2
miles beyond the summit of Springer Mountain, I approach the privy uncertain
what I will find. Shitting in the woods
is not a topic that is covered by many authors in great detail. The exception is Cheryl Strayed. In her book Wild, an account of her hike on the
Pacific Crest Trail, Strayed
describes digging a small hole for her number twos. Prior to living without running water in West
Africa, I was hesitant to use public restrooms. Nearly three years of traveling has forced me
to live comfortably outside my comfort zone.
From the outside, the privy
resembles a cross between a tree house and a stall that George Costanza would
disapprove. The structure is partially enclosed
by four walls that don’t reach the floor.
There is no door, but you can tell if the privy is occupied if you see
somebody’s feet. After determining the
space is vacant, I walk up the stairs and turn left past a
half-wall. Beyond this is a toilet
without a tank and flusher. I lift the
lid to discover a horde of flies buzzing around a pile of feces and a
smattering of toilet paper. I never
expected a proper sewage system this far away from civilization, so I show no
signs of disgust.
This party is BYOTP, but the
Georgia Appalachian Trail Club is nice enough to provide reading material. In case you were curious, the Trail Club
illuminates the decomposition process occurring beneath your buttocks. Worms and various insects are nature’s
plumbers. The club even includes a list
of instructions regarding how you can facilitate this process. Rule number one is that you cannot go number
one in the privy because components in urine disrupt the decomposition. After years of mastering potty training, you
must condition yourself to pee in the woods before sitting on the throne. When you’ve performed the ablutions, you toss
in a handful of wood chips to further aid the organic breakdown.
With that conundrum debunked, I
decide to crack the mystery of the bear cables.
Black bears are particularly active in northern Georgia, so the Trail
Club provides these cables so that the bears don’t eat you or your food. I see two steel cables at the base of a thick
tree. They run upward at a forty-five
degree angle toward a horizontal steel line.
This line is suspended about fifteen feet off the ground and fixed
between two trees. Food bags already
dangle from hooks above me, but how the blazes did these people manage to reach
them?
I briefly search for a long, sturdy
pole, but I find none. I deduce the
answer lies in the twin steel cables, so I tug on them without success. (When I later speak to my fellow newbie
hikers, I learn this is a popular mistake).
The hooks aren’t coming any closer to me. I retire to the shelter feeling like a stupid
bear.
The shelters on the trail can vary
in size and construction materials, but this particular one is a two-storied,
three-sided wooden affair. The floor is
raised off the ground so that raccoons or bears can’t easily snuggle with you. The structure is very basic: there are pegs on the wall where you can hang
your backpack, and there is ample floor space for you to sleep. This shelter also has a ladder nailed onto
the wall.
I climb up the planks to the loft,
which is smaller but entirely enclosed. I
blow up my air mattress and roll out my sleeping bag. My pillow is a compression bag full of my
clean clothes. I decide to sleep
upstairs because I have more protection against the wind and fewer mice to
contend with. The varmints are notorious
for pitter-pattering around at night in the shelters. They chew their way through backpacks to feed
on crumbs, and sometimes they crawl across your face and into your sleeping
bag.
With my bed made, I take a seat at
the picnic table just outside the shelter and prepare my dinner. I pour two cups of water into my tinker-tot,
titanium pot and drip an ounce of denatured alcohol into my stove and ignite
the flame with a candle lighter. I
fashion a windscreen out of aluminum foil, and I wrap this around my stove like
a protective fence. During a practice hike
in central Florida, the first time I tested out my cookware in the wilderness I
lit my stove and my hand on fire. My culinary
skills are still inferior to Bobby Flay, but at least I didn’t burn down the
picnic table.
Rice is on the menu tonight and will
be on every night for the foreseeable future.
As I wait for my water to boil, I try not to think of my limited dinner
choices, so I distract myself by reading American
Sniper by Navy SEAL Chris Kyle. Before
setting out for the trail, I strategically composed a reading list. I want my mental journey to coincide with my
physical journey. I chose primarily
American literature, both fiction and nonfiction, that deal with ambition. I want to see the country through the eyes of
a soldier, a news anchor, a stock broker, a drug addict, an outdoorsman who
cuts his arm off to survive, the Great Gatsby, ordinary people, and a young boy
named Huckleberry Finn.
The common thread between these
stories is that they are all journeys of wild dreamers. I am on a journey and have been since I
graduated from college. I decided to
embark on a life of adventure rather than advance my career from a desk in an
office. This hike was designed to be my
pilgrimage to my official adulthood, also known as the time to get serious.
I have this image in my mind of
where I would like to be in the near future.
I imagine a happier me, the five-years-from-now version that guidance
counselors often inquire about. Then I
look down at my feet to see where I stand now.
The destination is apparent, but the path is not clearly marked. I’m reminded of a tactic my professor used to
write his screenplays. He wrote the first
fifteen pages, and then he skipped to the end and finished the script. The toughest job, in both writing and life, is
filling in that gap. Is my story heading
in the right direction? Or is this a
rough draft I’ll have to rewrite?
Before I can ruminate on questions
for which I have no answers, a skinny fellow sits down next to me at the picnic
table and introduces himself. His trail name
is Snickers. Years ago, during his
thru-hike, he earned his moniker by eating a lot of candy bars. He is out for a weekend hike with his buddy,
and tonight they will catch a shuttle at the nearest road crossing.
I am still feeling apprehensive
about taking on such a mammoth project, but I am consoled to meet a real person
who has finished the hike. I fire off
questions, but I start off small. First
I ask him how to properly use the bear cables.
Apparently there is a hook on the tree to unlatch. Once I release the hook, the two steel cables
transform into a simple pulley system that a child could understand. He gives me advice about how much water I
should carry at any given time, and he tells me to take care of my feet.
“What motivated you to hike the
AT?” I ask him.
“When I was in the Boy Scouts, we’d
go out for a weekend hike, and whenever we stopped I noticed that the trail
kept going,” he says. “I always wanted
to see what was around the corner.”
“Did you feel different at all when
you finished?”
He says whenever he was hiking he
didn’t really notice a pronounced change, but when he returned home he experienced
reverse culture shock. He missed the
simplicity of the routine on the trail and the quietness of nature.
“I wish I could have your sense of
freedom,” he tells me. “You have all the
time in the world.”
While I was preparing my dinner, I
overheard Snickers talking to his friend, a squat, thirtyish man with a burly
beard. Based on their conversation, I infer
that Snickers is married and is anticipating a child. Snickers mentions he is cutting his hike
short because he has a family emergency——a positive occasion, he explains. I choose not to dig into his personal life,
but based on his demeanor I can tell he is quite pleased with how everything
turned out. He has a successful career and
will soon start a family, yet he envies my lifestyle devoid of any major
attachments. Conversely, I yearn for his
lifestyle one day. The
grass-is-greener-on-the-other-side theme would soon become prevalent during my conversations
with other hikers.
Even the briefest encounter with
another hiker can produce a meaningful bond.
When you strip yourself down to life’s basic necessities and battle the
elements together, you cut right to the heart of the matter with your fellow hikers. We are all out here for a reason, and that
makes us scrutinize the paths in front of us:
What is important to me? What am
I searching for?
After finishing the chocolate
pudding, a gift from Snickers, I brush my teeth and hang my food bag on the
bear cables with ease. The unknown quickly
dissolves and assimilates into my routine.
One minute I am stumped by a problem, and the next I don’t even have to
think. My actions become automatic, and
before I know it I have adapted to the rules of this new world. Snickers’ advice provides a much-needed
injection of confidence, but once he and his friend leave I realize how much I
don’t want to be alone, especially at night.