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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"Such is life on the Trail.", February 3, 2001
"So it was that, on April 14, 1990, I found myself at the southern terminus of the Trail on Springer Mountain in north Georgia," Ed Garvey begins his third book on hiking the Appalachian Trail. (His first two are now out of print.) "I was about to set forth on my second attempt to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail" (p. x). For forty years, Garvey was associated with the AT, working strenuosly to prompt state and federal agencies to acquire a right-of-way of sufficient width to protect the Trail in perpetuity for its entire length (p. 139). He completed his first thru-hike from Georgia to Maine in 1970 (p. ix). Twenty years later, at age 75, he returned to hike the 2,144-mile Trail again. As such, Garvey's inspiring book offers 2,144 reasons why life is worth living. For anyone seriously interested in investing five million footsteps in the AT, this book is the book to read. Garvey's Trail journal (pp. 1 through 175) shows that "everyday on the Trail is an adventure" (p. 140) and a challenge. In these pages, we accompany Garvey on his journey from shelter-to-shelter, some of which exude "all the warmth and brightness of a dungeon" (p. 56), from injury to injury, through the steady rain of some days, and through the spectacular scenery of the Trail, including "thousands of acres of wildflowers--bluets, spring beauties, and trilliums" (pp. 8, 33) of others. In Virginia he encounters a "five-foot black snake lolling directly across the Trail" (p. 81), and later he nearly meets a cougar. "What a thrill!" (p. 102). Garvey's journal is filled with Trail camaraderie, and even instructions on "the proper way to make a mint julep" (p. 108). In addition to Garvey's detailed, daily journal entries, this section of his book also includes photographs from his thru-hike, as well as his daughter, Sharon's excellent illustrations. This book may be read not only as the story of an Appalachian hiker at age 75, but also as a practical, "how-to" guide for backpacking the AT. Pages 176 through 267 offer Garvey's nuts-and-bolts advice for thru-hiking the AT, including finding and hiking the Trail (pp. 176-92), and his recommendations for food (pp. 193-216), equipment (pp. 217-36), clothing and footwear (pp. 237-57). On a bittersweet note, this book can also be read as a daughter's labor of love for her father, who wrote to a friend on August 24, 1992 "my hiking days are over" (p. 295). Without disclosing his book's ending, Garvey did not finish his 1990 thru-hike. About leaving the Trail and going home, he writes, it is "a ritual experienced by perhaps 800 of the 1,000 who start each year with the high hopes of doing the entire Trail. And, yet, for none of them has the trip been a failure. For each, it will have been a rich experience, walking through tunnels of rhododendrons, seeing trillium, spring beauties, bluets, wild azalea, mountain laurel, acres of ferns, and many more. The camaraderie of sitting around a campfire at the trailside shelters at night, of waking to the sounds of birds singing . . . 'Better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all'!" (p. 61). G. Merritt
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