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Sunday, December 28, 2008

My trail Journal site




I have a trail journal site set up and have for about a year. I haven't done much with it yet but will begin posting more and more as time goes by. I will be getting full Eglin Airforce base access which will enable me to drive about 3 miles and jump right on the Florida trail. This will allow me to hike over 50 miles with wilderness hammock hanging without interuption. I hope to take my girls out there with me from time to time as well. Should be fun. The Florida trail is hot most of the year so I'm hoping to get about 50 to 100 miles logged before it gets too toasty. It should be the perfect way to prep for the "big dance," at the end of the summer.




Along with this blog check it out at http://www.trailjournals.com/buzzybeetle






Friday, December 19, 2008


I'm reposting these links. The ones at the bottom were tied to a myspace warning page that informs you that you are leaving myspace. These are the best resources I know of for section and thru hiking.




  • http://www.nps.gov/appaTake a look at the strip map! --You truly get an idea of the amazing distance involved as you scoll down state after state 2200miles!!

  • http://www.appalachiantrail.org/ The trail is managed by volunteers and hiking clubs that live near their particular section of trail. This is the official AT site that organizes their efforts. Just as states manage roads, volunteers along the AT manage their particular section. This isalso the best source for all things AT in terms of current news/trailconditions and maps etc can be found.

  • http://www.whiteblaze.net/ Perhaps my favorite site. It is a wealth of news and info. This is a newsgroup and blog for AT enthusiasts. Very family friendly. Primarily for thruhikers but great for section hikers too. Good reviews on gear, what to take what to leave, data and schedules, topo maps, pictures and a ton more.

  • http://www.backpacking.net/27-pound.htmlThis is a good starting place when it comes to acquiring the right gear. Not that this is a definitive AT list. I just stumbled upon this and found it useful. I have a substantially different set of gear already. He's a tent user I am a hammock guy. He's going for the $280 sleeping bag. I will not etc. Either way it is anexcellent list. The guy has obviously thought this through and has experience.

  • hikinghq.net/hammock/hammock.html guy is a pretty regular guy on whiteblaze.net. I will be using a Hennessy Hammock if trial runs go well. My Dad has one I'm either going to swipe from him or just use to try out. I think this guy helps moderate the whiteblaze.net site as well. Take a look at his excel spreadsheets hiking plans and info on the hennessy hammock. cool stuff. some of the links are old/dead

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

An update on gear. . .

I purchased Caroline a pretty nice pack that could easily carry her small load and a water bladder (main thing). It has a built in rain fly and lots of features. I am so excited for her. She just recently ran a 5k run here in town and did it in about 30 minutes, which is substantial at age nine. She is also excited because I have almost 2 weeks off after Christmas. We are going to do our 20 mile 2 day trial during that time and we will truly see what she's got! I am anxious to get her out there and spend that time with her. If she can successfully carry a 10 to 12 lbs load on relatively flat Florida Blackwater Forest terrain then she will be able to do what we will be doing which is a 7-10 mile pace at the end of next summer on the AT.

I also traded a buddy of mine for a few needed items listed as possible needs below. The first is a Katadyn Hiker Pro water filter.



I have a great water filter squeeze bottle that I got about 10 years ago but it is getting old and with the amount of water that I am going to need I just can's see filling this thing up just to squeeze it into other containers or Caroline's water bladder. I sweat profusely! Doing 7-10 miles a day up and down mountains will ensure that I go through 2-3 liters a day. With any luck it will be kind of a cool winter. Either way my buddy had never used it.


He also had a MSR aluminum non stick cooking kit. I got those two things from him and I purchased a little butane hiker stove that weighs in at 4 oz. It's virtually identical to the MSR version but cost 20 bux less. The biggest advantage that I could determine for this tiny little stove was that it takes up less than 1/10 the space and weight that the wally world "hiker" stove does. Actually the Walmart stove is a better stove if space and weight are not an issue. It's flame covers a larger area which if you were frying eggs would be a good thing on a thin little lightweight pan. The new stove boils a quart of water in 3.5 minutes. Not bad for about 25 dollars. The fuel canisters are also lighter and more efficient than the big bulky butane canisters from "the Walmarts."


So my Pop moved to Crestview and I more or less stole his Hennessy Hammock from him. He mentioned to me that he doesn't fit well in it and I read that to mean, "you can have this." Sorry Dad if that's not what you meant but you will never see it again. I tested this hammock out on 4 very different nights. The first was a hot summer night. I was impressed at a few things. The first is that I thought for sure that on a hot muggy Florida night that I would be stuffy inside. I took the rainfly that covers the hammock and opened it up very wide so that it was still there in case it rained or a bird decided to drop his digested goodies on me. With the fly open the breeze into the hammock through the bug mesh was great. I was very comfortable even though I just had pj's and some socks on inside. The next two nights were nothing short of blissful. The lows were in the low 60's and it was dry and clear. On these nights I took a bag out and unzipped it half way and just slept like a baby. The final night was as cold as it gets here and the low was around 29 degrees in November. Incidentally it's December 17th and there won't be a single day this week where the highs are below 70 and the lows below 50 this whole week. Go figure. Anyway the only night that I will say was not pleasant was the 29 degree night. The Hennessy's biggest drawback is that it is more of a 3 season shelter/bed. With your back side to the bottom of your compressed bag (regardless of it's loft or quality) which is against a very thin but strong nylon shell of the hammock the cold gets to you. The alternative is to insulate with layers of foam or a sleeping pad. The drawback there is that the hammock is . . . well . . . a hammock and there isn't a ton of room inside so once you are inside you still have to zip your bag and situate yourself so you are on your sleeping pad. I tried all of these scenarios to determine if the hammock would work for me. The weight savings of hammock hanging are huge. They are convenient to setup and take down. Even with the cold weather disadvantages I can totally see myself taking a hammock next year. Now if I just had the larger Explorer model I would give Caroline the smaller one and then I would have a little more room inside. We'll see about all that. Here's a good little clip of a guy using the hammock in various ways.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Adding much needed perspective. . .







I am adding this Google Earth screenshot to add valuable perspective. You can see the small yellow pin in the panhandle of Florida. The nice thing is that that journey to the trail head is not too far at this time. Over the years and depending on whether or not we stay here the trail will be farther and farther away each time we go. The line on the trail as you see it here is actually a GPS waypoint for each of the several hundred AT shelters, lean-to's and huts along the trail from Georgia to Maine. They are generally spaced between 5-15 miles apart to make them available to weary thru hikers who would rather not pitch a tent every night.