Monday, July 30, 2018
Frequently Asked Questions
Q) Is this the Appalachian Trail?
A) No, it’s the Mountains-to-Sea Trail which runs across North Carolina from the Tennessee border to the Outerbanks. Here's a great interactive map of the entire trail: https://mountainstoseatrail.org/the-trail/map/
Q) You’re walking across the state?!
A) Yes, and no. We’re hiking from the western terminus at Clingman's Dome to Raleigh. Then we’ll canoe the Neuse River from Raleigh to just past New Bern. From there we’ll finish the coastal portion on bikes to Jockey’s Ridge.
Q) Are you crazy? WHY are you doing this?
A) I think Jeff answers that very well here: https://rezelimst.blogspot.com/2018/07/why-when-we-tell-most-people-about-our.html
Q) How big is the group you are going with?
A) There is no group. It is just us. But we could not do this without the support of our family, friends, and the great volunteers and staff of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail!
Q) How long is the trail?
A) The MST is almost 1,200 miles, depending on the exact route. We will hike 668 miles, paddle 216 miles, and bike 150 miles.
Q) How long will it take?
A) Approximately 75 days, if all goes as planned!
Q) How did you get that much time off from work?
A) We asked for it. And we both have super supportive employers!
Q) What will you eat?
A) Lots of instant stuff like oatmeal, granola, mashed potatoes, and ramen with some protein and dehydrated veggies/fruits/nuts mixed in – to make it healthy, of course! And when we pass through a town, we’ll gorge ourselves on fresh food.
Q) Where will you sleep?
A) Most nights will be spent in a tent under the stars, with no rain hopefully. We will occasionally splurge on a hotel or bed and breakfast. And we have some great friends and family helping across the state who will thankfully house us a few nights.
Q) How will you entertain yourselves and not get annoyed with each other?
A) That's a fair question at any time actually. Let's see, Debra talks a lot and will narrate the entire trip. And Jeff will be his usual quiet self until he chimes in with the most amazing, insightful thought ever.
Q) How much does your pack weigh?
A) Debra’s should be around 28 lbs. and Jeff’s will be about 35 lbs. with food and some water. So the weight will vary on our backs as it goes into our bellies!
Q) What will you do if it rains?
A) Get wet.
Q) Where do you get drinking water?
A) We pump/filter it from sources like creeks and springs. So the rain is actually a good thing!
Q) When/where will you bathe?
A) Mostly, we won't unless we're in a fancy campground or hotel. Another reason to be thankful for the rain...
Q) Are you afraid of bears, snakes, lightning, ticks, getting lost, etc…?
A) Of course, aren’t we all!
Q) Have you ever done anything like this?
A) Well, we do something like this most every weekend and vacation. Now we'll just have to string all the days together...
Q) How did you prepare for this adventure?
A) Lots of work acquiring food, upgrading gear, and many spreadsheets for organizing it all – including this one which gives our day by day plans: https://rezelimst.blogspot.com/2018/07/in-beginning.html
Q) How can I follow along or help?
A) We'll hopefully post our updates to Facebook and this blog as we have internet connection. When we need help, we'll ask with specifics. And you can track us here: http://share.findmespot.com/shared/faces/viewspots.jsp?glId=012ZP6X92nWYyt85Rh0Pc3R0D6z1rV1YE
Sunday, July 29, 2018
Why?
When we tell most people about our plans to hike the
Mountains to Sea Trail, they are excited about the idea and can imagine
themselves doing the same thing if the demands of work, family, life in general
allowed it. Some people just look at us with a quizzical look and ask, “why?”.
Our first camping trip together in 1993.
The first of many.
|
There is not a straightforward answer. I usually start by
saying that we have a map of the Appalachian Trail on the inside of our master
bedroom closet door that we see every day as we get dressed for work, and we
have always dreamed of that trek. We have been saving, and researching,
and planning, and talking endlessly about an epic adventure like the AT since
we got married 23 years ago. When our daughter finally graduated from college in
2017, we felt like we had the freedom to pursue the dream, or a similar one
anyway.
We have both read a number of books about hiking the AT. For
each of those that completed the trail – and some that famously did not (Bill
Bryson’s “A Walk in the Woods”) – it was clearly a life-altering experience of
a lifetime, but all of them make it sound like a grind. Honestly, at over 2,000
miles of pure backpacking, it just sounds like an awful lot of painful walking.
Maybe too much to truly enjoy. The AT is also getting so popular, with so many
folks striking out from Springer Mountain in Georgia at the same time to head
north in a big, smelly caravan, with only 10% of those that start finishing the
job in Maine, and only 10% of those that finish being women. We were not
convinced the AT was for us.
Several years ago, Debra shared office space with the good
people that run the non-profit that helps promote, build, and maintain the
Mountains to Sea Trail. This got us thinking about the MST as an alternative to
the AT. With a current total of 1175 miles, the MST is about half the length of
the AT. The trail in the mountainous western part of North Carolina is a well-established
footpath, but after you reach Raleigh, the last 1/3 of the trail breaks down and
is mostly a walk along greenways and roads. That was less enticing, so we started
asking questions. Could we paddle the section from Raleigh to New Bern on the Neuse
River, which roughly parallels the trail? Could we bike up the Outer Banks? The
idea of a multi-discipline “hike” became much more exciting than a relentless
slog with our packs. The MST folks were open to these ideas to the point that the
Neuse River is now an officially recognized alternative to the trail, and
biking road sections is accepted as part of an official “through hike” of the trail.
Now we’re talking.
But none of this was likely to come together, at least not
here and now in 2018, had I not broken my leg in the summer of 2017. That
downtime on the couch recovering from surgery made me realize how one accident
can take away your physical abilities and gave me the time I needed to really
dig in on researching logistics to plan this hike, to figure out how long it
would take and what gear we would need. While there are many books written
about the AT and resources available to plan your trip, planning for the MST is
more difficult. Since the trail was established in the 1970’s, fewer than 100
people have completed the trail, and many of those completed it in sections
rather than in a continuous thru-hike. That means there simply isn’t a lot of
information about how to do it and no playbook to follow; so we have been writing
our own playbook.
Since I am involved, there are spreadsheets involved. No major
decision making gets done in the Rezeli house without agonizing over a colorful and complex
spreadsheet. That has helped us break down the trail, day by day, to know (roughly)
where we plan to camp each night, where we can get water, where, how and how
often we can resupply. It has been a lot of work, but necessary if we are to
have any chance of being successful.
So back to the question of why. This is a roundabout way of
saying that life and our physical abilities are fragile. We have always had a dream
to disappear into the woods and modern society has done nothing to deter us
from that dream. To the contrary, there are so many things about our digital
world that I do not agree with that have strengthened our resolve to leave it
all behind. In many ways the act of writing a blog introduces a certain irony, and I have been conflicted about the benefits, but we have had so many people ask
if we would blog about the trip and encouraged us to do so. We think there is great value in
spending time in nature and want to share our journey in the hopes that it
inspires others to do the same. A world that treasures and preserves our wild
and natural areas is one that I can live with.
Monday, July 16, 2018
In the beginning...
Start Day | Finish Day | Day | Total | ||||||
Day | Segment | Date | Mile | Location | Mile | Location | Miles | Miles | Notes |
1 | 1A | 8/4/18 | 0.0 | Clingman's Dome Rd. | 9.1 | Smokies backcountry site #53 | 9.1 | 9.1 | backcountry sites (by permit):3.7,9.1,11.7,12.5 |
2 | 8/5/18 | 9.1 | Smokies backcountry site #53 | 20.7 | Smokies backcountry site #52 | 11.6 | 20.7 | ||
3 | 8/6/18 | 20.7 | Smokies backcountry site #52 | 34.3 | Smokies backcountry site #47 | 13.6 | 34.3 | small, sometimes muddy campsite | |
4 | 8/7/18 | 34.3 | Smokies backcountry site #47 | 47.2 | Smokies backcountry site #42 | 12.9 | 47.2 | 1.1 mile hike in and out to campsite | |
5 | 8/8/18 | 47.2 | Smokies backcountry site #42 | 62.0 | Mile High Campgrd | 14.8 | 62.0 | hiking along rd.; .7 mile hike in&out to campsite | |
6 | 8/9/18 | 62.0 | Mile High Campgrd | 68.9 | Waterrock Knob | 6.9 | 68.9 | End of Segment 1A | |
6 | 2 | 8/9/18 | 0.0 | Waterrock Knob | 9.1 | near Balsam | 9.1 | 78.0 | near BRP (no legal camping indicated) |
7 | 8/10/18 | 9.1 | near Balsam | 21.8 | past Mull Creek | 12.7 | 90.7 | In Nantahala - legal camp. btw. mi. 19.8-33.8 | |
8 | 8/11/18 | 21.8 | past Mull Creek | 35.4 | Pisgah NF (somewhere) | 13.6 | 104.3 | In Pisgah NF - legal camp. btw. mi. 34.7-36.1 | |
9 | 8/12/18 | 35.4 | Pisgah NF (somewhere) | 44.5 | Pisgah NF (somewhere) | 9.1 | 113.4 | In Pisgah NF - legal camping between mi. 44.3-44.7; no legal camping mi. 44.7-51.1 (Graveyard Fields) | |
10 | 8/13/18 | 44.5 | Pisgah NF (somewhere) | 61.0 | Pisgah Inn/Mt Pisgah | 16.5 | 129.9 | Pisgah Inn or Mt. Pisgah Campground | |
11 | 8/14/18 | 61.0 | Pisgah Inn/Mt Pisgah | 61.0 | Pisgah Inn/Mt Pisgah | 0.0 | 129.9 | Recovery Day and resupply | |
12 | 3 | 8/15/18 | 0.0 | Pisgah Inn/Mt Pisgah | 17.3 | before Arboretum | 17.3 | 147.2 | rugged climb; 17.3 may not be realistic |
13 | 8/16/18 | 17.3 | before Arboretum | 28.4 | BRP visitor center | 11.1 | 158.3 | Night at Bonnie's! | |
14 | 8/17/18 | 28.4 | BRP visitor center | 42.0 | unknown | 13.6 | 171.9 | No obvious camping options | |
15 | 8/18/18 | 42.0 | unknown | 57.6 | South Toe River | 15.6 | 187.5 | ||
16 | 8/19/18 | 57.6 | South Toe River | 67.7 | Black Mtn. Campgrd. | 10.1 | 197.6 | End of Segment 3. Bonnie meet w/ box? | |
17 | 4 | 8/20/18 | 0.0 | Black Mtn. Campgrd. | 14.2 | fire ring | 14.2 | 211.8 | abundant camping in Pisgah NF this entire section |
18 | 8/21/18 | 14.2 | fire ring | 28.7 | campsite options | 14.5 | 226.3 | ||
19 | 8/22/18 | 28.7 | campsite options | 39.0 | many campsites | 10.3 | 236.6 | through Linville Gorge, cross river; diff. decent, climb | |
20 | 8/23/18 | 39.0 | many campsites | 52.7 | near road | 13.7 | 250.3 | Post office: 9042 NC Hwy 181, Jonas Ridge, NC 28641 | |
21 | 8/24/18 | 52.7 | near road | 66.7 | many campsites | 14.0 | 264.3 | near waterfalls | |
22 | 8/25/18 | 66.7 | many campsites | 75.2 | Beacon Heights | 8.5 | 272.8 | End of Segment 4 | |
22 | 5 | 8/25/18 | 0.0 | Beacon Heights | 7.6 | Daniel Boone camp | 7.6 | 280.4 | 1.2 mile hike in and out to campsite |
23 | 8/26/18 | 7.6 | Daniel Boone camp | 20.1 | Trout Lake parking | 12.5 | 292.9 | ||
24 | 8/27/18 | 20.1 | Trout Lake parking | 34.4 | Rhodo thicket | 14.3 | 307.2 | rhododendron thicket | |
25 | 8/28/18 | 34.4 | Rhodo thicket | 51.9 | Park Vista Inn | 17.5 | 324.7 | ||
26 | 8/29/18 | 51.9 | Park Vista Inn | 66.2 | Trail Angel Camping | 14.3 | 339.0 | ||
27 | 8/30/18 | 66.2 | Trail Angel Camping | 84.6 | Tent campground area | 18.4 | 357.4 | ||
28 | 8/31/18 | 84.6 | Tent campground area | 90.0 | Devil's Garden Overlk | 5.4 | 362.8 | End of Segment 5; verify camping option | |
29 | 6 | 8/31/18 | 0.0 | Devil's Garden Overlk | 9.4 | Stone Mountain SP | 9.4 | 372.2 | |
30 | 9/1/18 | 9.4 | Stone Mountain SP | 21.9 | pvt. gravel rd. | 12.5 | 384.7 | No obvious camping options | |
31 | 9/2/18 | 21.9 | pvt. gravel rd. | 35.1 | Crater Park, Elkin | 13.2 | 397.9 | Get help from Chad and Co. | |
32 | 9/3/18 | 35.1 | Crater Park, Elkin | 52.5 | Yadkin River Adventure | 17.4 | 415.3 | Optional paddle section: Elkin to Pilot Mtn. | |
33 | 9/4/18 | 52.5 | Yadkin River Adventure | 67.5 | Pilot Mtn SP | 15.0 | 430.3 | End Seg. 6; no camping until Pilot Mtn Campgrd | |
34 | 7 | 9/5/18 | 0.0 | Pilot Mtn SP | 10.4 | Pilot Mtn Campgrd | 10.4 | 440.7 | |
35 | 9/6/18 | 10.4 | Pilot Mtn Campgrd | 20.8 | Mountain Trail Stable | 10.4 | 451.1 | $10/night, hot showers | |
36 | 9/7/18 | 20.8 | Mountain Trail Stable | 35.0 | Hanging Rock SP | 14.2 | 465.3 | ||
37 | 9/8/18 | 35.0 | Hanging Rock SP | 36.0 | Hanging Rock Overlook | 1.0 | 466.3 | End of Segment 7 | |
37 | 8 | 9/8/18 | 0.0 | Hanging Rock SP | 14.2 | Jim Booth's Catfsh Pd | 14.2 | 480.5 | on road; $10/night, bathhouse |
38 | 9/9/18 | 14.2 | Jim Booth's Catfsh Pd | 35.3 | Oak Ridge Town Park | 21.1 | 501.6 | on road; 1 campsite, register with Town in advance | |
39 | 9/10/18 | 35.3 | Oak Ridge Town Park | 44.9 | Anna Long Marshall | 9.6 | 511.2 | on road; camp or arrange shuttle w/ Trail Angel | |
40 | 9/11/18 | 44.9 | Anna Long Marshall | 63.9 | Bryan Park | 19.0 | 530.2 | on trail; Crash with Chad and Maria? | |
41 | 9/12/18 | 63.9 | Greensboro | 63.9 | Greensboro | 0.0 | 530.2 | End of Segment 8 | |
42 | 9 | 9/13/18 | 0.0 | Bryan Park | 21.4 | Shallow Ford | 21.4 | 551.6 | on road; 10 campsites, $10/night |
43 | 9/14/18 | 21.4 | Shallow Ford | 42.3 | Old Place Bed and Breakfast | 20.9 | 572.5 | $100/night | |
44 | 9/15/18 | 42.3 | Old Place Bed and Breakfast | 60.1 | Eno River SP | 17.8 | 590.3 | End of Segment 9 | |
45 | 10 | 9/16/18 | 0.0 | Eno River SP | 18.1 | Private Land | 18.1 | 608.4 | .1 mi. off trail, primitive camping, 7 sites |
46 | 9/17/18 | 18.1 | Private Land | 28.5 | Trail junction | 10.4 | 618.8 | primitive camping, 7 sites | |
47 | 9/18/18 | 28.5 | Trail junction | 39.3 | Rolling View Rec. Area | 10.8 | 629.6 | campground | |
48 | 9/19/18 | 39.3 | Rolling View Rec. Area | 54.4 | Shinleaf Rec. Area | 15.1 | 644.7 | campground | |
49 | 9/20/18 | 54.4 | Shinleaf Rec. Area | 67.4 | Trail junction | 13.0 | 657.7 | .3 mi. from trail | |
50 | 9/21/18 | 67.4 | Trail junction | 77.4 | Trailrace Fishing Area | 10.0 | 667.7 | End of Segment 10 - congrats! | |
51 | 9/22/18 | Home | Home | 0.0 | Zero Day | ||||
52 | 11a-16a | 9/23/18 | 0.25 | Falls Lake | 14.20 | Milburnie Dam site | 13.95 | 681.65 | Self shuttle. Stay in Raleigh. |
53 | 9/24/18 | 14.2 | Milburnie Dam site | 31.80 | NC 42 bridge | 17.6 | 699.25 | Self shuttle. Stay in Raleigh. | |
54 | 9/25/18 | 31.8 | NC 42 bridge | 46.0 | Smithfield Commons | 14.2 | 713.45 | Self shuttle. Stay in Raleigh. | |
55 | - | 9/26/18 | 46.0 | Home | 46.0 | Home | 0.0 | 713.45 | 0 day / take bikes to Swansboro |
56 | 9/27/18 | 46.0 | Smithfield Commons | 65.0 | Howell Woods Camp | 19.0 | 732.45 | Campgrd. @ mile 65: 919-938-0115 | |
57 | 9/28/18 | 65.0 | Howell Woods Camp | 78.9 | Johnston Co. Rte. 1201 | 13.9 | 746.35 | Rt 1201/Richardson Bridge Road | |
58 | 9/29/18 | 78.9 | Johnston Co. Rte. 1201 | 95.0 | Old Waynesborough Park | 16.1 | 762.45 | Campsites avail. mi. 95: 919-731-1653 | |
59 | 9/30/18 | 95.0 | Old Waynesborough Park | 113.0 | Alan Daly Campground | 18.0 | 780.45 | RV campground avail. mi. 113: 919-734-4616 | |
60 | 10/1/18 | 113.0 | Alan Daly Campground | 122.0 | Seven Springs | 9.0 | 789.45 | Neuse R. Trading Post mi.122 camping 919-222-9290 | |
61 | 10/2/18 | 122.0 | Seven Springs | 145.0 | Wildlife center @ 70 | 23.0 | 812.45 | Mile 145 according to MST. Night in Kinston | |
62 | - | 10/3/18 | 145.0 | Kinston Nature Park | 145.0 | Kinston Nature Park | 0.0 | 812.45 | 0 day |
63 | 10/4/18 | 145.0 | Kinston Nature Park | 156.0 | Highway 55 bridge | 11.0 | 823.45 | Possible shuttle/night in Kinston | |
64 | 10/5/18 | 156.0 | Highway 55 bridge | 175.0 | Pelican Landing Fishing Camp | 19.0 | 842.45 | Camping avail. mi. 175: 252-617-2778 | |
65 | 10/6/18 | 175.0 | Pelican Landing Fishing Camp | 194.0 | Union Point Park/New Bern | 19.0 | 861.45 | hotel | |
66 | 10/7/18 | 194.0 | Union Point Park/New Bern | 205.0 | Fishers Landing Campground | 11.0 | 872.45 | Camping available at mi. 205 and 207 | |
67 | - | 10/8/18 | 205.0 | Fishers Landing Campground | 216.0 | Pine Cliff Recreation Area | 11.0 | 883.45 | pick up and night in Swansboro |
68 | - | 10/9/18 | 216.0 | Pine Cliff Recreation Area | 216.0 | Pine Cliff Recreation Area | 0.0 | 883.45 | transition to bike / Neusiok Trail |
70 | 17 | 10/11/18 | 0.0 | Neusiok Trail | 21.4 | Oyster Point Campground | 21.4 | 904.9 | camping allowed anywhere on trail |
71 | 10/12/18 | 21.4 | Oyster Point Campground | 40.3 | Otway B&B | 18.9 | 923.8 | camping allowed at church also along way | |
72 | 10/13/18 | 40.3 | Otway B&B | 69.1 | Cedar Island Ferry | 28.8 | 952.6 | campground at ferry | |
73 | 18 | 10/14/18 | 0.0 | Cedar Island Ferry | 0.0 | Ocracoke | 0.0 | 952.6 | Ferry to Ocracoke, stay overnight |
74 | 10/15/18 | 0.0 | Ocracoke | 33.3 | Sands of Time Campgd. | 33.3 | 985.9 | Ferry to Hatteras; Campgd: 252-995-5596 | |
75 | 10/16/18 | 33.3 | Sands of Time Campgd. | 50.0 | Rodanthe | 16.7 | 1002.6 | ||
76 | 10/17/18 | 50.0 | Rodanthe | 81.0 | Jockey's Ridge | 31.0 | 1033.6 | Stay at Trey's Beach House |