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[CDT-L] Thruhiking - Questions and Decisions



Now --- let's get down to some "QUESTIONS". There are a tremendous
number of details that need to be considered if you're disrupting your
life for six months of hiking. What follows is a series of questions
that you may want to consider before you go. These are questions that
only you, the thruhiker, can answer.  They're taken directly from the
notebook that I used when I was getting ready for the AT and from the
notebook that I've started for our CDT prep.  Some of them concern the
trail - but a lot of them concern the rest of my life - and maybe
yours.  
If you're gonna thruhike any long trail, what you're doing will require
that you cut or suspend the links to the people, activities, and
organizations that presently consume your time and your life.  If you
can't or won't cut or suspend at least most of those links, then you'll
spend your thruhike being torn between two worlds - and both worlds will
suffer.  And your thruhike will be less than "All it can Be".  Personal
opinion is that some significant percentage of those who leave the trail
before finishing a thruhike do so for this reason.  What some people
don't realize is that every person, every object, every relationship or
connection that they deal with in their life consumes some part of their
time and life and energy.  And breaking or suspending those "links" also
takes time and energy.  Start now - if you're hiking next year, you're
already late.  

The questions are divided into three parts - on-trail questions, home
questions, and after the trail questions. Some of these questions will
apply to everyone hiking a long distance trail; others are based on our
personal experience as working adults, trying to figure out how to deal
with all the detritus of modern life, and some are "situation-oriented".

Some of these are questions that I've had to answer in the past - and
some that I'll have to answer before we leave in May.  How many of them
will apply to you will depend on your situation.  If you're a 20
year-old college student living at home and don't own a car, a lot of
them will be meaningless. Students, hikers whose spouses or parents will
take care of most of these issues, minimalists with few possessions -
your experiences, and your questions, may be different. So use your red
pen and cross out the ones you don't understand or don't care about and
you'll be left with a list that you might want to consider.  

Then add your own.  There are people who have complications in their
lives that I don't have to deal with - so you won't find those questions
here.  For example, I don't have to deal with children this time -
either taking them with me or leaving them at home - so you won't find
any "children" questions in here.  And you might need to add those
questions to your list if that's one of your concerns. After reading
them all, can you think of some that we may have left out?

So --- on to the questions - and I may add a few comments along the way
(they'll be in brackets [….])


The Trail World:

Which way do you want to go - South to North, North to South, flip-flop,
other???

When do you want to start?  Why?

When do you want to finish?  Why?  Is your ending date flexible?  Can
you make it so?  

What do you want to see along the way? 
        [Side trips, waterfalls, Trail Days, Trailfest, 4th of July 
        in Washington DC, Eagle Creek, Mt James, the Gila Cliff 
        Dwellings?  Others?]? ] 

Will you take time off to go home, or to a wedding or graduation?  

If you'll be on the AT - 
        Will you blue blaze or not?   Yellow blaze?  Slackpack?  
        Be a purist? Some other variation? 

If you'll be on the CDT - 
        Where will you follow the official route and where will 
        you follow various alternate routes?  Will you take the 
        Creede cutoff?  Or the Anaconda cutoff?  

If you'll be on the PCT -
        Will you follow alternate routes (like Eagle Creek)? 

What kind of hike do you want?  Speed hike, leisurely, supported, 
        group, solo, comfortable, primitive . . .

Will you start with a partner? Have you made plans to meet and hike
together before the trail?  Why not?  What will you do if your partner
leaves the trail?  What will your partner do if they leave the trail? 
Get a job?  Provide trail support?  [You may watch your savings
disappear very quickly - can you handle that? ]

Will you keep a journal? Do you want the burden of keeping an on-line
journal?  Do you have someone who's competent to take care of it for
you?  [A web page or journal that's not updated or can't be read is
worse than useless]

Will you take pictures?  How many?  How do you want to handle film
developing? Will it wait until you get home - or be done "as you go"?
Who will do it?  Do you have film mailers in your mail drops? How will
you/they pay for it?  What will they do with the pictures?  How will
you/they organize them so you'll know where the pictures were taken? 

What equipment are you taking on the trail with you?  Does any of it
need repair? 

Do you have all the maps, guidebooks, etc. that you'll need for the
trail?  How will you get what you need - when you need it?  

Will you be doing mail drops, or buying along the way, or both?  How
many mail drops do you need? What goes in your mail drops? Where will
your maildrops be sent?  When?  Who'll handle your mail drops?  Are they
reliable? How will they pay the postage?  How will you remember what's
there after 3 months on the trail?  Can you modify the mail drops, or
will they be packed and sealed before you leave?

What stays at home as spare (i.e. - boots, summer/winter gear)?  Who'll
mail the spares when you need them?  

Will you need different warm weather/cold weather gear at different
points on the trail?  Where?  How will you get them? 

Will you use a drift box (also called a bump box, send-ahead box, etc)?
Have you planned where it can be sent - and where it CAN'T?  [Like
Benchmark Ranch]  What will you keep in it? 

How will you get to the trail?  What will it cost?  What's the timing?  

How will you get home at the end of the trail? 

How will you get home if you have to get off before the end of the
trail?  Have you planned for possible bailouts? 

Who'll know where you are - and when?  Do you have a written itinerary? 
Who will have copies?  Who will you tell when you deviate from what you
planned?  Who do you want them to tell?  Do they know that?

Have you planned enough days off in your schedule?  In the right places? 

How will you get money while you're on the trail?  Debit card? Bank? ATM
card?  Travelers checks?  Money orders?  

Do you know which towns have ATM machines?  Banks?  Post offices? 

How will you pay for phone calls to home, friends, equipment companies,
etc?  Phone cards?  Prepaid?  How to pay the bills?   

Do you know which towns have good groceries?  Laundromats?  Hostels? 
Restaurants?  Showers? Medical facilities?  Outfitters/outdoor stores? 
And where those towns are located?  How will you get there?  Hitchhike? 
Bus?  Taxi?  Friends?  Walk?  How will yo get back to the trail? 

If you're gonna do the trail by "sections" - flip flopping or jumping
over the Sierras or Colorado, for example, do you know how to get from
one section to the next?  How will you pay for it?  Have you accounted
for transportation time in your schedule?  

If you need equipment while you're on the trail where will you get it? 
Have it sent from home? Mail order?  Local outfitters?  Do you know
where to find them?  Do you have the phone numbers and addresses for the
mail order companies?  

Do you have the 800 numbers and addresses for the manufacturers of the
equipment you'll be using?  Have you talked to them to find out what
kind of service they're willing to give?  Will they honor the warranties
or guarantees on your equipment?  What will it cost you?  How will you
pay for it?  Do you really want to use their equipment?  

Is anyone gonna meet you on the trail?  Will they want to hike with
you?  How will you tell them where to meet you?  How will you make up
the time you lose while you're hiking with them?  Can you be patient
with their slower pace and lower miles while they're hiking with you?

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To:            Aaron Unger <purplcows@jps.net>, Andrew Yip <AndrewY@micrografx.com>, at-l <at-l@backcountry.net>, "brian.kiesel@convergys.com" <brian.kiesel@convergys.com>, Brick Robbins <brick@fastpack.com>, cdt-l <cdt-l@backcountry.net>, Darcy Bergman <darcy@wave.net>, "David_Clark@candle.com" <David_Clark@candle.com>, Fay Weir <weir@sfu.ca>, Henry Shires <HShires@aol.com>, Jerry McMillan <jerry_mcmillan@pairgain.com>, Jim <HkrTrash@aol.com>, Joanne Lennox <goforth@cio.net>, Larry McDuff <lpmcduff@juno.com>, Lucian Hicks <lucian@sierranv.net>, "Margo J. Chisholm" <margo@tothesummit.com>, mark dixon <mdixon@bigsky.net>, Mary Roch <mags@mosquitonet.com>, Nathan Martin <NCMartin@lbl.gov>, Peter Haskell <pchaskell@hotmail.com>, Sandra Medearis <smedearis@hotmail.com>, Slyinmd <Slyinmd@aol.com>, Steve Baygents <steve@qcel.com>, Timothy J Fearn <timfearn@juno.com>