৩ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০২৫

"He had thought about hiking the Appalachian Trail since a seventh-grade teacher discussed it in class — it had opened in full in 1937 — and he started planning it..."

"... in quiet moments at his first job, in sales training for a hardware company, which he didn’t like. He bought a used backpack from an Army surplus store, hiking shoes from L.L. Bean, a canvas tent and a rain poncho. He carried a Boy Scout knife, cooking utensils, a miner’s carbide lamp and two canteens, one for water and the other for gasoline to fuel his tiny stove. His meals included dehydrated mashed potatoes and boiled cornmeal with sugar, raisins and powdered milk.... Food and supplies for his hike cost Mr. Espy about $300. When his trek ended, he hitchhiked to Boston, where he spent $100 on new clothes and a bus ticket back to Georgia...."

From "Gene Espy, Pioneering Hiker of the Appalachian Trail, Dies at 98/In 1951, always an adventurer, he was the second person to walk the trail in a 'thru-hike,' from Georgia to Maine, in an arduous 123 days. He later met the first to do so" (NYT).

২৪টি মন্তব্য:

gilbar বলেছেন...

it would have be NEAT, back then..
Nowadays, it's just a crowd of disreputable people

typingtalker বলেছেন...

No earbuds. No iPhone. i can't imagine.

Enigma বলেছেন...

@gilbar: The through-hikers are hardcore outdoors people and rarely disreputable. They are usually fit and disciplined.

Disreputable people jump on the trail for a couple miles near the major attractions, and do stupid stuff just like the National Parks car visitor crowd.

RCOCEAN II বলেছেন...

Espy died on Aug. 22 in Alpharetta, where he and his wife, Eugenia, had gone to live with their daughter, Jane Gilsinger, six years ago. He was 98.

“He kept going right up until the end,’’ Gilsinger said. “He was alert and sitting in a chair the day before he died. When he was in the hospital, he kept talking about getting out into the woods and going camping. He loved the trail.’’

Eugenia Espy said her husband had been in declining health for several years, and had fallen a few weeks ago, but had not been ill.

“He didn’t have an illness,’’ she said. “He didn’t have diabetes, cancer or have a heart attack. At his age, he just wore out.’’

RideSpaceMountain বলেছেন...

Swan song of the ultralighter, this one's for you Gene.

tim maguire বলেছেন...

gilbar said...Nowadays, it's just a crowd of disreputable people

I just did a section of the White Mountains of New Hampshire, which is on the AT. It's not crowded. The through-hikers, even the couple we met from Dallas, were TDS-suffering leftists, but if you avoid politics, they're fine. There were engineers, nurses, a lot of ecology students on gap years. Decent people.

Lincolntf বলেছেন...

I've been on the Trail a few times, never for more than day hikes. A younger me considered doing the whole thing, but at the time I always figured I could do it "later". Now it's "later" and I am way too soft.

n.n বলেছেন...

A child's inspiration.

mccullough বলেছেন...

Awesome obituary. Still impressive to hike the whole trail nowadays. Can’t imagine doing it 74 years ago.

Smilin' Jack বলেছেন...

“A Walk in the Woods”, by Bill Bryson, is a great book about (attempting to) thru-hike the Trail, later made into a movie with Robort Redford and Nick Nolte.

Ampersand বলেছেন...

I'm with Nick from The Big Chill (1983): "I'm not hung up on this completion thing".

mongo বলেছেন...

Another fine book about hiking the AT is As Far As the Eye Can See by David Brill. Full disclosure: I make an uncredited cameo appearance at the end as the friend who gets married shortly after Dave finished his hike. Our wedding was outdoors at her parents’ house on five wooded acres with a pond. Dave was grateful for the location. He told me later that if the wedding had been indoors he would not have been able to handle it.

Biff বলেছেন...

"Over the next five decades, he worked as an engineer at a foundry and machine company, an apparel manufacturer, a frozen food plant, a Naval ordinance plant and Robins Air Force Base."

I don't know what would be worse: if that's a typo or if the NYT style guide allows it.

rehajm বলেছেন...

A friend did it a few years ago nobo to raise money for the als center taking care of his sister. He dreamed of doing it since he was inspired in college. He started the pct but it was the drought/fire year and he wasn’t enjoying himself. He’s out on the Muir Trail right now. Say hi to Mulligan if you’re out there…

MikeD বলেছেন...

Back in 1970 my backpacking partner & I decided to spend 10 days on the Pacific Coast Trail. We hit the trail at 3 Sisters wilderness in OR. Whoever coined the phrase "disreputable people" was spot on to all the yahoos crowding along, almost as much garbage on trail as an urban public park. Thankfully we had good Forest Service maps and soon spotted a side trail leading West. Within a few miles we were in Pacific Northwest's version of a rain forest. Great 10 days hiking to one little mountain lake after another

rehajm বলেছেন...

I remember the grubby smelly hikers walking through Hanover or at the Dartmouth commons. Yuk.

rehajm বলেছেন...

…prisoners sometimes show up to take advantage of trail magic aka free grub…and there was that guy who slashed a couple a few years ago….

gilbar বলেছেন...

Enigma said..
"..Disreputable people jump on the trail for a couple miles near the major attractions.."

EXACTLY!
the trail goes TOO CLOSE to cities for me.

on the other hand..
Compared to the Continental Divide Trail, the Appalachian Trail has Hardy ANY grizzly bears.. So, there's That!

gilbar বলেছেন...

i personally,
have "walked the width of the Appalachian Trail several times :)

a woman in the Iowa State Master Conservationist class i took two years ago, had through hiked it two years before.
(of course, i had to tell her i'd walked the width :)
She said it was nice, but Very Crowded (to her).
the next year, she'd through hiked the CDT, which she liked MUCH better.
(of course, i had to tell her i'd walked the width of That one too)
turns out, she'd through hiked the Superior Hiking Trail, as well as the Ozark trail
(BOTH of which i've walked the width of TOO!)

last year she walked the Pacific Crest Trail, which i have NOT walked on.

She said the "most remote" one was the Ozark trail
(it was the only one she needed to mail food ahead on)
most are very close to towns the whole way
(her idea of close, and her idea of town might be different than yours)

Donatello Nobody বলেছেন...

Thru-hiked the trail in ‘87 with my then-newlywed bride and our two best friends. To this day we are the only foursome I’m aware of who started and finished the trail together (April 15 to September 2). A life-changing experience, though both couples are still together and we still get together whenever we can. Sorry if we were a little grubby and/or smelly from time to time.

gadfly বলেছেন...

Amazon wasn't available back in 1951 where Gene Espy could have obtained a Swiss Army knife complete with 15 tools that would fit in his pocket.

When you buy this sucker, be sure to use the Althouse Amazon Link.

Michael বলেছেন...

If you get the chance, there is a great Appalachian Trail museum at Pine Grove Furnace State Park in Pennsylvania. It's the mid-point of the trail, halfway between Georgia and Maine. Lots of great personal stories about the early thru-hikers.

Also, it's tradition for thru-hikers to visit the camp store and eat an entire half-gallon of ice cream. It's fun to hang out at the picnic tables and hear their stories as to why they're attempting the hike.

gilbar বলেছেন...

"a great Appalachian Trail museum at Pine Grove Furnace State Park in Pennsylvania."

yes! that IS a great museum.
One of the (many) places where i've "walked the width of the trail".
There's a Caledonia State Park, up on South Mountain, that the trail goes through, that has wild brown trout (i camped there).
I was thinking that i'd try walking the trail through Penn..
But the through hiker i knew said that "Penn was the Worst part of the entire trail!"
i asked why?
she said it was the rockiest, and wore out shoes; and you couldn't see anything but trees.. Sounded pretty good to me :)

Curious George বলেছেন...

"Smilin' Jack said...
“A Walk in the Woods”, by Bill Bryson, is a great book about (attempting to) thru-hike the Trail, later made into a movie with Robort Redford and Nick Nolte."

Yep, awesome book.

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