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What do you get when you cross Mother Nature and a willingness to experiment in the garden? Dolly Sickles, our Optimistic Gardener. When she isn’t working in the non-profit sector, she can generally be found brandishing her gardening gloves.

Field Trip | Hiking the Appalachian Trail

Mother Nature's given us a bit of a reprieve from the triple digit scorching temperatures today, but I still thought it would be nice to elevate our field trip today, taking us higher into the clouds and out of the lowland temperatures.

And on to an invigorating hike on the Appalachian Trail.

The Appalachian Trail, or A.T., is a 2,175-mile long hiking and camping path that stretches through 14 states, starting at Springer Mountain in Georgia and ending at Mount Katahdin in Maine. It covers the Smokey Mountains and the Appalachian Mountains, and in between, in the Black Mountains, you'll find the highest elevation on the east coast, Mt. Mitchell, in a little town called Burnsville.

According to Georgia Trails dot com, "The rugged, often rocky terrain reaches a height of more than 4400 feet and never dips below 2500 feet." The A.T. concept grew out of the conservation movement in America, launched from Teddy Roosevelt's "Bully Pulpit," in the early 1900s.

My first taste of the A.T. was on my sixth wedding anniversary, when my husband and I vacationed at Amicolola Falls in Georgia, at the Len Foote Hike Inn. The Inn is located just eight miles south of the start of the A.T. Plus, our good friend, Greg, had read A Walk in the Woods, by Bill Bryson, which further tweaked our interest.

Given enough vacation time, I'd love to hike the A.T., even if I have to do it over the course of one state a year.

  • Have you ever hiked on the A.T.?
  • Have you ever hiked the whole thing?
  • What's your favorite hiking spot?
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Absolutely, I'd love to take a trip like Dave did. The only time I've ever been fortunate enough to hike the AT was only a two mile hike when I crossed it on another trail in Virginia's Mt Rogers state park.

We hiked down to a AT shelter and back to the trail we were on. It was pretty cool just to have been on part of such an historic trail. I'd love to do a lot more hiking on it someday. Maybe state by state as was mentioned...

The mountains in North Carolina are some of the most beautiful in the world. It sounds like DaveC has the right idea!

Several weeks ago my wife and I headed to the Blue Ridge Parkway in search of Red Crossbills, a type of bird we've never seen. We spent a lot of time in and around Mt. Mitchell State Park where we found the temperatures to be in the upper 60's and low 70's compared to RTP's upper 90's. We hiked a portion of the NC Mountains-to-Sea Trail which crosses the AT. In the process of looking for the birds we found lots of wildflowers in bloom along the Parkway and trails. We find it just as challenging to identify wildflowers as looking for and identifying birds. Some of the flowers we found in bloom were Turtlehead (also shown as Chelone in our NC Wildflower book), Turk's Cap Lilies, and Woolly or Moth Mullein. Besides offering a refuge from the local heat, the mountains offer plently of beautiful blooming scenery.

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