Julie and I are hiking the Appalachian Trail in the US from Springer Mt, Georgia, to Mt Katahdin, Maine, in the north, a distance of almost 2,200 miles (3,540 km). Our journey will start in early May 2023 and is expected to take about five months. We will be mostly camping, carrying 3-5 days of supplies to get us between resupply points, where we will be staying in hostels/hotels/motels where we can. I hiked the entire Appalachian Trail back in 1986 so it will be interesting to see how much has changed and how much it has stayed the same.

Appalachian Trail - Day 088 - Fingerboard Shelter to Bear Mountain Bridge

Day: 088

Date: Friday, 21 July 2023

Start:  Fingerboard Shelter (AT Mile 1392.1)

Finish:  Bear Mountain Bridge (AT Mile 1410.4)

Daily Kilometres:  26.1 (Ascent 2979', Descent 4085')

GPX Track:  Click here for Julie’s Strava & Photos

Total Kilometres:  2357.5

Weather:  Warm, humid and partly sunny with a thunderstorm in the morning and some rain in the afternoon.

Accommodation:  Motel

Nutrition:

  Breakfast:  Pop tarts

  Lunch: Mars Bars 

  Dinner:  Pulled pork melts, ice-cream.

Aches:  Dave - very tired; Julie - nothing to report.

Highlight:  We were very fortunate to be able to see the skyline of Manhattan, 40 miles away, from the top of Bear Mountain.  The chances of seeing this are apparently diminishing as time goes by because of pollution and heat haze.

Lowlight:  Our timing was poor packing up this morning.  Knowing that thunderstorms and rain was forecast around dawn we woke at 4:45am to find it was still dry.  We hurried to pack up but, just when we had everything out of the tent, it began to rain quite steadily. The tent and some of our gear got quite wet before we could pack everything.

Pictures: Click here

Map and Position: Click here for Google Map

Journal:

We made an earlier than usual start in an effort to beat the forecast rain, but were unsuccessful (see above).  We started hiking at about 5:30am in steady rain and very gloomy conditions, unhappy that we were already wet.  It didn't take long for the rain to collect on the trail and create large puddles and occasional bogs.

Our progress was slow, partly because of rocks and trail made slippery by the rain and partly because Dave was still feeling tired from yesterday's tough hiking.  We weren't sure exactly how far we had to hike to get to Bear Mountain Bridge and our booked motel today, because there were two trail detours marked and it was hard to determine how our navigation app was calculating distances, but we assumed we had between 15 and 18 miles to do.

Even after the rain had stopped and the trail had dried out there were rocks and climbs/descents, including some arduous rock-scrambling, that kept our pace slow.  On the other hand it was very pleasant forest and the clearer air allowed some good views.

The first detour we encountered was a temporary re-route of the Appalachian Trail to avoid it crossing a busy divided highway. However, on the map the detour looked a little longer and also missed some of the good viewpoints, so we decided to hike the original AT.  It probably took us longer than the detour because it included a much longer climb, but from the crest of the ridge we had excellent views to the west and to the east, where we could see the impressive Hudson River.

The second detour was because Bear Mountain State Park was hit hard by heavy rain and flooding in mid-July and many facilities, including trails, were badly damaged.  The park is a very popular destination for New Yorkers, so having it closed to all but AT hikers at the height of summer is a big deal.  The AT detour directed hikers down a closed park road, but our crowd-sourced navigation app said that the original AT route over Bear Mountain was still useable so we chose that route.  The trail took us up and around the summit of Bear Mountain and we had great views along the way (see above).  At the summit near the  closed lookout tower there were some vending machines to cater to the many tourists who come to look at the views to NYC and along the Hudson River, but today there were just a few thru-hikers, all of whom we knew, buying much appreciated cold drinks and enjoying a chat and the unusually peaceful scene.

The trail down from the summit is an engineering achievement of which the Park is justly proud, so it was disheartening to see how much damage had been caused by the flash flooding.  Huge rock steps had been washed away and boulders and debris had been dumped on the trail.  It is going to be a long time and a lot of work before the trail is restored.

When we reached the base of the mountain, the vast picnic area and other attractions were deserted apart from squads of workers trying to get things back into shape for what's left of the summer.

Our motel was two miles away from where the trail reaches the Bear Mountain Bridge and we called the motel owner who was known to pickup thru-hikers who were staying there and give them a ride.  However, this was complicated by the serious damage caused to a smaller road suspension bridge linking the Bear Mountain Bridge to towns and the western shore to the north.  It was closed to vehicles, but pedestrians could use the path attached to the closed bridge to get to its northern end, which we did, before the motel owner could reach us with his car and pick us up.  While crossing the bridge it started to rain, but we managed to get picked up before getting seriously wet.

Also staying at the motel is a thru-hiking French-Canadian couple we have got to know and we later enjoyed a very nice dinner with them at the BBQ restaurant across the road.  

Day off tomorrow for us.  We passed the 1400 mile mark today!

Appalachian Trail - Day 087 - NY Route 17A to Fingerboard Shelter

Day: 087

Date: Thursday, 20 July 2023

Start:  NY Route 17A (AT Mile 1375.5)

Finish:  Fingerboard Shelter (AT Mile 1392.1)

Daily Kilometres:  25.8 (Ascent 3947', Descent 3737')

GPX Track:  Click here for Julie’s Strava & Photos

Total Kilometres:  2331.4

Weather:  Very warm, humid and partly sunny.

Accommodation:  Tent

Nutrition:

  Breakfast:  Cooked breakfast 

  Lunch:  American subs

  Dinner:  Ramen & chicken/Noodles & chicken

Aches:  Dave - very tired; Julie - complaining about mosquito bites.

Highlight:  None really.

Lowlight:  For the second time in two days, Dave dropped his phone and scratched the previously unblemished screen.

Pictures: Click here

Map and Position: Click here for Google Map

Journal:

We enjoyed our comfortable bed and the excellent breakfast cooked by Peter, the hostel owner, before he drove us back to the trailhead at 7:10am.  Once there, Dave realised he had left his phone back on the hostel verandah where he had been putting his boots on, so the ever-obliging Peter quickly drove him back to the hostel where the phone was collected and then returned Dave back to the trailhead where we started walking at 7:30am.

At the hostel we had heard stories about how relentlessly up and down today's hike would be, so we were mentally preparing ourselves for a tough day at the offce although the first few miles were very nice through the early morning forest.

For the rest of the day, however, we did seem to be either steeply ascending or descending on rocky shelves or even cliffs that required hands for safe progress.  It was very hard work, but the forest, populated with boulders and rock formations all shapes and sizes, was picturesque and pleasant.

It was also very thirsty work.  At one road crossing someone had left some cold water which we gratefully drank, but at a later road crossing a water dump had sadly been emptied by previous hikers.  This was a popular section of trail and we saw quite a few hikers today, many of them thru-hikers.

Later in the day we crossed into Harriman State Park where the lightly timbered forest had a grassy floor and was quite different to that which preceded it.  Initially there were some steep climbs and rocky sections, including the renowned Lemon Squeezer, but the trail gradually became easier though, by this time, Dave was ready to stop.

You are only supposed to camp near shelters in the Park and we reached Fingerboard Shelter just after 6:00pm and found a rare tent spot close by.  There are thunderstorms and rain forecast for tonight and it was tempting to set up our beds in the shelter, there being no other hikers present, but the mosquitoes decided us against.

Later, more hikers did show up and, soon after 8:00pm, a "trail angel" showed up with some welcome treats for hikers staying here.

Appalachian Trail - Day 086 - Louemma Creek to NY Route 17A

Day: 086

Date: Wednesday, 19 July 2023

Start:  Louemma Creek (AT Mile 1356.0)

Finish:  NY Route 17A (AT Mile 1375.5)

Daily Kilometres:  30.2 (Ascent 3140', Descent 2707')

GPX Track:  Click here for Julie’s Strava & Photos

Total Kilometres:  2305.6

Weather:  Warm, humid, hazy and partly sunny.

Accommodation:  Hostel

Nutrition:

  Breakfast:  Pop tarts

  Lunch:  Snickers Bars

  Dinner:  Sourdough breakfast sandwiches & hash browns, ice cream 

Aches:  Dave - the usual niggles and some chafing; Julie - nothing to report.

Highlight:  The early morning walk along the Appalachian Trail boardwalk that wound its way through the vast peaceful marshland bordering Pochuck Creek was magic.

Lowlight:  The first three "Welcome to New York" miles of the AT were some of the hardest and slowest hiking we have encountered.  It took 2.5 hours to do three miles going up and down, this way and that, along rocky ledges, gnarly trail and through boulder fields.  It was almost as if New York was boasting to AT thru-hikers that it can be as tough a state as any on the trail.

Pictures: Click here

Map and Position: Click here for Google Map

Journal:

We were hiking by soon after 6:00am with the goal of reaching NY Route 17A, 19.5 miles away, from where we would be picked up and taken to a hostel, as early as possible.

The trail wasn't too bad initially and we made good time, particularly enjoying the long boardwalk (see above), but also the beautiful early morning forest.  It was mostly very peaceful apart from the frequent noise of aircraft descending towards New York's LaGuardia or Westchester airports.  We were also conscious that we were close to civilisation as we passed near houses, crossed roads or heard machinery at various times.

Sadly, at one of those road crossings we were an hour too early for the farm store which opened at 9:00am and offered drinks, baked goods and ice-cream - the perfect for a thru-hiker's breakfast.  Instead, starting across the road, we got to climb the exhausting boulder-scrambling "Stairway to Heaven", our biggest climb of the day.  It was tough, though it was "heaven" to reach the top.

Not long after our breakfast break beside a rushing stream we crossed another road to find an esky full of soft drink cans left by a "trail angel" and, despite having just drunk our fill of water at breakfast, we managed to down a few more cans.  It was a treat.

We continued to make good time on a day that wasn't quite as hot and humid as it's predecessors along reasonable trail with plenty of short ups and downs and many boggy sections.  And, of course, still plenty of mosquitoes.  We took our lunch break around 1:00pm high on a rocky ridge at what was supposed to be a viewpoint, though the trees blocked any vistas, before starting our last six mile leg of the day.

The trail wasn't easy, and got even harder when we left New Jersey for the last time and entered New York (see above).  Our hopes for an early finish diminished and we just concentrated on moving forward and enjoying the couple of hazy views we got down over Greenwood Lake.

Fortunately, with two miles to go the trail quality improved and we reached our target highway at 5:15pm.  Dave rang the hostel owner, who turned up a few minutes later and drove us first to a large supermarket where we did our resupply shopping before taking us to the hostel in the village of Greenwood Lake.  After showers and leaving our laundry with the hostel owner, we walked to Dunkin' Donuts, the only nearby food option, to buy a late dinner which we ate back at the hostel.  We are later than we would like, but not too much, and feel like we have had a good day.

Appalachian Trail - Day 085 - Mashipacong Shelter to Louemma Creek

Day: 085

Date: Tuesday, 18 July 2023

Start:  Mashipacong Shelter (AT Mile 1334.3)

Finish:  Louemma Creek (AT Mile 1356.0)

Daily Kilometres:  34.4 (Ascent 2940', Descent 3566')

GPX Track:  Click here for Julie’s Strava & Photos

Total Kilometres:  2275.4

Weather:  Very warm, humid, hazy and partly sunny.

Accommodation:  Tent

Nutrition:

  Breakfast:  Pop tarts

  Lunch:  Egg salad subs, ice-creams

  Dinner:  Rehydrated meals.

Aches:  Dave - some niggles and very tired; Julie - reporting a lot of mosquito bites.

Highlight:  In mid-afternoon, for several miles, the trail passed through the Wallkill National Wildlife Refuge, a vast marshy area.  It was very peaceful, with birdlife and other animals present.  Julie even spotted a bear as we were leaving.

Lowlight:  Some late afternoon rocky trail, heat, humidity, and mosquitoes were the lowlights today.

Pictures: Click here

Map and Position: Click here for Google Map

Journal:

We packed up and left the shelter camping area at 6:30am hoping for some easier trail today.  It started well, and we had some excitement when Julie spotted three bear cubs climbing a tree near the trail, though by the time Dave got there only some fleeing black behinds were visible.  That seemed a good omen but, alas, we were soon back on very rocky trail going up and down over ledges and outcrops, and no views.  It was a little irksome knowing that a multi-use trail, the Iris Trail, was paralleling our course and was much easier.

Despite the rocks we made reasonable time to the Highpoint State Park HQ which was our target breakfast stop, arriving by 9:00am.  We purchased some cold drinks to go along with our pop tarts which we consumed on a nearby park bench.  Very pleasant!

After breakfast the trail continued to be rocky as it climbed to a lookout near the Highpoint Tower atop the highest mountain in New Jersey, but the views were very hazy.  From there, after a long descent, the trail became much easier walking and our pace and enjoyment improved.  The terrain became relatively flat and we passed by farms and houses through some meadows and very pleasant forest, though the low-lying trail was very boggy in parts.

Around 1:00pm we reached the road going into the village of Unionville, and detoured to the general store there to buy some supplies and get some lunch and cold drinks.  Other thru-hikers had had the same idea and we were greeted by several we knew who were already enjoying food and drink on the store's verandah.  Soon we joined them and joined the social chat.  There was a German girl there who had been bitten by something while she slept last night and had a massively swollen eye, but was being quite stoic about it.

We had more miles to do, so left before the others, some of whom did not seem keen to walk any more miles today.  We roadwalked back to the trail and then followed it through the beautiful and peaceful Wallkill National Wildlife Refuge (see above), before finishing the day with a long rocky climb over a mountain before descending to a creek where we got some water and decided to camp illegally.  There are roads and houses nearby and we can hear traffic, but don't think anybody can see us.

Appalachian Trail - Day 084 - Fairview Lake View to Mashipacong Shelter

Day: 084

Date: Monday, 17 July 2023

Start:  Fairview Lake View (AT Mile 1313.6)

Finish:  Mashipacong Shelter (AT Mile 1334.3)

Daily Kilometres:  33.2 (Ascent 2772', Descent 2874')

GPX Track:  Click here for Julie’s Strava & Photos

Total Kilometres:  2241.0

Weather:  Hot, humid, hazy and partly sunny.

Accommodation:  Tent

Nutrition:

  Breakfast:  Pop tarts 

  Lunch:  Ham & cheese rolls, other snacks and ice cream.

  Dinner:  Rehydrated meals.

Aches:  Dave - some niggles and very tired; Julie - nothing reported.

Highlight:  The trail magic that we received when we passed a trailhead at lunchtime.  Unfortunately, there had been a lot of hikers in front of us and the superbly stocked spread had been severely depleted.  In particular, no cold drinks left.  But we did find other things to eat and enjoyed the unexpected treat.

Lowlight:  A toss-up between too many rocky tedious sections of trail and too many mosquitoes.

Pictures: Click here

Map and Position: Click here for Google Map

Journal:

We were hiking soon after 6:30am on a misty humid morning.  Our tent is pretty good, but the misty night has left things in the tent damp and the constant dripping from the leaves of the trees overhead had left our tent fly quite wet.


The morning's hiking, with a breakfast break atop Rattlesnake Mountain, mostly followed a ridge through a nice mix of deciduous and conifer forest.  It undulated a lot, climbing up and down rocky outcrops and ledges, and was a mix of very good and very bad trail with everything in between.  There were.no views initially because of the mist, but gradually that cleared and we had very hazy views for the rest of the day.


Our morning goal was to reach Culvers Gap and the tiny hamlet of Branchville, 12 miles from where we had camped, in time to have lunch at a pub there and perhaps pick up some insect repellent and a new gas canister at the hunting and fishing store there.  With a couple of miles to go, a thru-hiker told us there was trail magic at the trailhead just past Branchville and that there was a huge spread of food but it would be closed by 2:00pm.  That created a bit of a dilemma for us, as we didn't want to skip Branchville then find slim pickings at the trail magic.  We decided to check out Branchville first, picked up our supplies, decided the food options there weren't great and bought some cold drinks to take with us just in case there were none at the Trail Magic.


This turned out to be a wise move as the Trail Angel had run out of drinks and a lot of other stuff as well (see above), but we found enough to eat and were very grateful.


After lunch we had to climb back up onto a ridge from Culvers Gap in very sweaty conditions and the rest of the afternoon was a bit of a slog, made worse by mosquitoes and some very rocky sections.  There was a nice old pavilion at the top of Sunrise Mountain where we took our afternoon break and Julie did manage to stir up a large black snake she hadn't seen which reared up, but didn't strike.  Subsequently she worked out it was non-venomous.


In New Jersey we are only supposed to camp in designated areas near shelters which is a pain in the butt, so we stopped Mashipacong Shelter around 6:30pm and found a spot to camp amongst a few other tents.  We may not always observe this rule!

Appalachian Trail - Day 083 - Delaware Water Gap to Fairview Lake View

Day: 083

Date: Sunday, 16 July 2023

Start:  Delaware Water Gap (AT Mile 1296.9)

Finish:  Fairview Lake View (AT Mile 1313.6)

Daily Kilometres:  27.6 (Ascent 2657', Descent 1532')

GPX Track:  Click here for Julie’s Strava & Photos

Total Kilometres:  2207.8

Weather:  Very warm and humid, overcast and gloomy with occasional light rain.

Accommodation:  Tent

Nutrition:

  Breakfast:  Breakfast sandwiches 

  Lunch:  BLT sandwiches 

  Dinner:  Rehydrated meals 

Aches:  Dave - the usual niggles and a couple of falls; Julie - nothing reported.

Highlight:  Probably our wildlife sightings.  While negotiating the rocks bordering Sunfish Pond we came on two different snakes very close to each other and beautifully marked.  We think one was a Northern water snake and the other was a rattlesnake which was not in a hurry to get out of our way despite the rocks around him being banged repeatedly by Dave's trekking pole.  In the end it got off to the side enough for us to get by and showed no hostility.  The other sighting was a beaver patrolling his beaver pond quite close to shore though we could really only see the snout.

Lowlight:  Still plenty of rocks on the trail today, and many of them exceptionally slippery, making progress slow and tedious for long stretches.

Pictures: Click here

Map and Position: Click here for Google Map

Journal:

We slept in until 7:00am then packed,  checked out of our motel, and walked down to the town bakery arriving soon after it opened at 8:00.  We bought some breakfast sandwiches to eat on the tables outside and some sandwiches to take with us for lunch.  While we ate breakfast we chatted with the father and daughter thru-hikers we had met a few days ago on the trail.  They hadn't enjoyed their stay at the crowded hostel in town.

Soon after 9:00am on a very gloomy morning we rejoined the trail at the eastern end of town and followed it onto the long bridge across the Delaware River which also carried the freeway and a lot of traffic noise.

Once across the bridge we entered the Delaware Gap National Recreation Area and a trail which followed Dunnfield Creek upstream.  It had rained very heavily in the early morning hours and everywhere was wet and the stream was a loud torrent of white water.  Tributaries were also overflowing and the trail was often a stream itself.  It was impossible to dodge the water so Julie's feet were soon very wet while Dave, with his Goretex boots, remained relatively dry though the water was often almost deep enough to flow into his boots over the top.

The trail was also rocky again, so we haven't quite left the Pennsylvanian rocks behind us even though we crossed into New Jersey as we crossed the Delaware.  The humidity was high and it was sweaty walking as well.  We had hoped for easier walking today but it did become a bit of a slog.

After about six miles we reached the pretty Sunfish Pond and hiked along its very rocky and slippery northern shore encountering a couple of snakes along the way (see above).  Shortly after we took our lunch break and then had a very slow rocky walk following a ridge to the north-east.  It took us about four hours to cover seven miles, which was disappointing, though there were often good views eastwards over the rural valley below and more distant mountains from slippery rock ledges the trail followed.

We took our last break at a fire tower on the ridge which had an adjacent picnic table and then walked our last four miles collecting water for camping along the way.  We found a nice spot on the ridge, marred only by prolific mosquitoes, at 7:00pm and camped.  Didn't see many hikers at all today, which surprised us given the number who had been in town, but that's OK.  It's nice to have the trail to ourselves.  We also passed the 1300 Mile mark today, which gave us a boost.

Appalachian Trail - Day 082 - Delaware Water Gap Day Off

Day: 082

Date: Saturday, 15 July 2023

Start:  Delaware Water Gap (AT Mile 1296.9)

Finish:  Delaware Water Gap (AT Mile 1296.9)

Daily Kilometres:  0

GPX Track:  Click here for Julie’s Strava & Photos from her walk around town today.

Total Kilometres:  2180.2

Weather:  Mostly overcast, very warm and humid with a late shower.

Accommodation:  Motel

Nutrition:

  Breakfast:  Breakfast sandwich on sourdough, choc chip muffins.

  Lunch:  Chicken salad sandwiches & fries.

  Dinner:  Pizza, apple crumble & ice cream.

Aches:  Nothing to report.

Highlight:  None really.

Lowlight:  None really.

Pictures: No pictures today.

Map and Position: Click here for Google Map

Journal:

We slept in and bought a late breakfast from the Dunkin Donuts next to the motel.  Rarely seen such grumpy staff!

We then finished planning our tentative schedule for the next couple of weeks and Julie went and purchased what we need for the next few days from the few local stores (not many in Delaware Water Gap), buying some lunch for us on her way back to the.motel.

Julie went for a walk around town after lunch, catching up with a few more of the thru-hikers we know, then we relaxed for the rest of the afternoon.

Later we got some takeout pizza for dinner.  Thunderstorms and heavy rain forecast for tomorrow morning when we go back on the trail!