My Boyfriend Had Never Backpacked—Until We Hiked the Appalachian Trail Together
Some hikers prepare for years to thru-hike the AT. Others do it on a whim.
Some hikers prepare for years to thru-hike the AT. Others do it on a whim.
Rue McKenrick would hike the perimeter of the country to demonstrate our nation’s unity—if only he and the country could hold together long enough for him finish.
Thousands of people hike the Colorado Trail every year, but India Wood had a bolder idea: Hike a 732-mile diagonal, from corner to corner, straight across the state. It would take dozens of maps to do it—and help from a few new friends.
Hiking the Appalachian Trail with four kids is tough; figuring out how to do it safely and legally in a pandemic year might seem insurmountably so. But for Olen and Danae Netteburg, two physicians who have spent the last decade working in Chad, it was just another challenge.
When they wake up broke, broken, and far from home, how do thru-hikers find the will to go another mile?
With travel plans cancelled due to COVID, one hiker makes the most of staying close to home.
With races around the country canceled, an unprecedented number of ultrarunners are testing themselves on the trail.
When you’ve stepped onto a long trail, you never really leave it.
As she nears the end of her journey on the Colorado Trail, our writer reflects on some of the people she’s met along the way.
A chance encounter with a group of friends on an annual, women-only backpacking trip leaves our Colorado Trail correspondent reflecting on how her own life changed her attitude towards the trail.
What do hiking the Colorado Trail and childbirth have in common? Sometimes, you just need to trust your body to get you through it.
After a series of mistakes left her dehydrated on the Colorado Trail, our writer learned that making it on a long trail is about more than guts or skill.
Hiking a long path is hard. As Patricia Cameron discovered while getting ready for the Colorado Trail, doing it in the era of COVID-19 adds a whole new level of difficulty to the process.
A would-be thru-hiker hit the trail to change her life. She knew about the natural hazards. It was the human threat she never saw coming.
When a father-daughter team tackles the Pacific Crest Trail over the course of seven summers, they learn something about long-distance hiking—and each other.
I wasn't ready for an emergency—but my gear was.
For early thru-hikers, steep hills and long distances were only part of the challenge.
From big fish caught to big mountains summited, kids can do the darndest things.
Are hiking dresses, skirts, and kilts more than a novelty? I freed my legs to find out.
When five-year-old Christian Thomas set out with his family to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail, some skeptics said he couldn’t—and shouldn’t. But like a lot of kids, he wasn’t listening.
Fifty miles a day for 45 days. No crew. Joe McConaughy’s AT thru-hike was one for the record (and history) books.