• I Love Those Old Swinging Bridges

    Frankly I’m not sure how many miles we hiked this time; supposedly 29 according to the trace notes, some guy’s GPS said 33, the signs on the trail said a puny 26, and the maps something else entirely. I don’t keep count much anymore, I just hike back to my car from the trailhead. A lot of times fellow hikers will ask me how far to the next landmark.…

  • We Didn’t Wear the Tiny Bells

    I was having a conversation with one of my coworkers today about hiking, and she told me when hiking in bear country to wear bells and carry pepper spray. I then had to tell her a very old hiker joke: How can you tell if you see bear scat? Answer: it smells like pepper and has tiny bells in…

  • I Started to Swing a Leg

    I really thought I was going to see a bear this time. The ground was soft and wet. I barely made any noise as I moved through the forest. Thanks to the heavy rain, there was not a soul out there to be seen or heard. There were not even any signs. No tracks, and no scratching posts;…

  • Drone Footage of Walking the Cumberland Falls Section

    Hey Y’all. Heres some video of us hiking the Sheltowee on Section Four! You can see me, Daniel, and Greg under the camera at 1:03 and then cross the bridge to Cumberland Falls at about 1:50. The drone that took the footage freaked me out a few times. It sounded like a hive of bees, and I kept looking for a…

  • The Man on the Corner Wanted Pizza

    You may or may not believe what I am about to tell you. In fact, if I heard this story from someone else, I probably wouldn’t believe them either or at least search for an alternative explanation. But it happened to me, so I am firm in my conviction that what I say is true. I am satisfied with my position whether…

  • You’ve Been Thunderstruck!

    This was another amazing trip. My favorite part was camping and making some new friends in the shelter Saturday night. There is a strong camaraderie among long-distance hikers that few outsiders can really understand. We know the pain. We know the joy. We know what it takes to get the job done. We know the miles…

  • Rockin the Boulder House in the Honeycreek

    I headed out Sunday morning for a beautiful hike through the southern but rugged portion of the Big South Fork. On my way, I stopped for a brief visit to the Sheltowee Trace’s south terminus at Burnt Mill Bridge. It seems like ages ago that I began my year-long trek to complete the 319-mile trail. I parked my car…

  • A Bear-Dog Named Booger

    This weekend my anthropology buddy and I did a little archaeological assessment of a known pre-historic human habitation site down in the Big South Fork. We started our day by climbing a steep 500’ hill to the site. The primary feature of the camp was a large shell-midden which was sheltered under an enormous sandstone overhang. With a very…

  • May We Al Find Our Path to Walk

    Have you ever seen the famous picture of Vietnamese Buddhist Thích Quang Duc self-immolating in the middle of a busy Saigon intersection? The image repeatedly came to me as I hiked along the undulating rocky trails of the Sheltowee Trace. I do not use this historical event as an analogy, but rather to illustrate the powers of mind over…

  • Journey of Several Thousand Steps 

    The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step; what a wonderful idea.   But those are not my words. Wouldn’t it be amazing if they were? I would be the next stage for the ages for sure. However, this is an idiom dangerously approaching platitude; used, abused, and overused by hikers describing their own hikes as an analogy…