AT Day 25
Miles: 32.00
Total Miles: 484.25
(3 miles south if TN/VA State Line)

I’m very tired as I write this tonight. Even more so than normal. But I remember this feeling from my other long trails now. I’d forgotten in the interim. But it’s an entirely different thing to walk a 30 mile day compare to walking consecutive 30 mile day. The exhaustion accumulates.
This was my first “twin thirty” of the AT, and as I lay here tonight, my body is feeling it.
I need new shoes soon. I may get new ones in Damascus tomorrow, or I’ll order new ones to be shipped up trail next week while I’m in Damascus.

Tried to sleep in this morning. But the birds. They’re beautiful and all, but they make sleeping in impossible without earplugs. So although I’ve been trying to get on trail by 8am, and I was aiming to “sleep in,” I was still on trail by 8:15.
I met a young hiker this morning. We’ve met a couple times. He’s 20 years and straight out of the military. We talked for a few minutes before I said anything about the music playing from his phone. I asked him if anyone’s said anything to him about it. He said that nobody had. And if they did, “I didn’t really care if they do.”
I told him that I felt like it was my responsibility as a more seasoned hiker to tell him that it’s a shitty thing to play music aloud on trail where others can hear it. I don’t know if that’s the reason that he slowed down soon after that or not. He told me he was aiming for a 35 mile day today.

I never saw him again after that.
I ran into a tree today. And I mean right the fuck into a tree. It was a downed tree that was just high enough for me to not see with my head down to the ground. It hit me hard enough to leave me dazed for a bit.
Wept a bit more over my friend Joey who had his memorial yesterday in Anchorage. And the oddest thing happened today. The park where Joey’s memorial was held at is called Kincade Park. And for the first time in my life, today I met someone named Kincade. We hiked together for a couple of miles and conversation went deep, quickly.

Was at a shelter with Kincade while we both collected water and another hiker showed up. He was a guy I’d passed a few hours earlier while he was resting by a road crossing. He saw me take a drag off my vape pen and asked if he could have one. But I declined–told him I don’t like sharing with everyone getting sick on trail. He completely understood.
Then I remembered something. I’d been given a baggie of weed about 250 miles back at Standing Bear, while I was waiting for my ankle to heal. I hadn’t asked for it or anything; someone just gave it to me. Not being one to turn down a gift, I accepted. But I haven’t been smoking flower on this trail, which is to say that I’ve carried it in my pack ever since… It’s just been in there… stinking up my diddy bag whenever I go in there for my wallet or tooth brush.
So I told him he could have that, and he obviously accepted with gratitude and said that he’d buy me a beer when we get into the next trail town. I told him that I don’t drink, but that the trail provides. He’ll probably still grab me a meal in Damascus tomorrow.

Wet feet for a lot of today, as the rain came and went from the afternoon until sunset. There was an hour or two there where it was coming down pretty steadily. It reminded me of a guy I met at that hostel the day before I started the trail–who was carrying big knee gaiters because he said that he doesn’t want his feet getting wet on trail. Well brother, I think this might not be the right trail for you… or maybe you’ve learned to change your tone on wet feet.
That reminds me of a hiker I met three or four days ago. He was a young kid–maybe 18 or 19 years old. And he’s hiking the trail without any rain gear. When he told me that, I literally stopped in my tracks and turned around to check if he was being serious.
I told him he should take the trail name Kamikaze.
Damn I’ve been eating a lot of food this last week. My weight and physique still seem like they’re doing okay, so I think that it’s just my metabolism cranking up more than it was already at when I began the trail. Hiker Hunger is a well documented thing, but I didn’t think that I’d experience it since I was coming into trail with such a high volume of training in the preceeding 6 months. But I guess it still doesn’t compare to the volume of work that goes in when it’s day after day and week after week.

I took refuge under a tree trunk at one point this afternoon. Or maybe I should call it “the remains of an entire root system that was blown over in the storm last year.” There are a lot of places like this. Where it’s not that trees are just blown over, but that the earth has been overturned.
It had been raining for at least an hour, but I found this little sheltered area under the uprooted tree. It was the only dry place that I’d seen in awhile. And I could just barely fit underneath of it. So I huddled under and made Top Ramen for dinner. It was a really nice moment in the day. And after I had finished putting my stove back away, it had stopped raining.
The trail provides…
Tomorrow I’ll cross into VA for the first time.
I’ll be in Damascus by late morning, and will likely spend the night.

Actively falling asleep.
Wormwood.















