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skinnbones
01-30-2014, 15:09
If you had to choose only one answer, what is the worst part of hiking the Appalachian Trail?:-?

hikerboy57
01-30-2014, 15:14
the first two weeks until you get your trail legs and start getting into a rhythm

Luddite
01-30-2014, 15:16
Having to resupply

Different Socks
01-30-2014, 15:22
Rain and cold.

flemdawg1
01-30-2014, 15:23
the B. O.




...............

Blissful
01-30-2014, 15:26
the mental game (you must play to win)

LAF
01-30-2014, 15:29
from someone who's not done a thru - it't the blasted waiting :) which means I start to over plan things ..... patience grasshopper .....

BCPete
01-30-2014, 15:34
from someone who's not done a thru - it't the blasted waiting :) which means I start to over plan things ..... patience grasshopper .....
+1 ... 2015 can't get here fast enough! :D

MkBibble
01-30-2014, 16:27
As far as I'm concerned. Leaving the trail is truly the worst part.

colorado_rob
01-30-2014, 16:28
Just the rain. Everything else is fan-damn-tastic.

Old Hiker
01-30-2014, 16:30
Looking down at your non-existent ankle bone (too swollen to see it), having Shoto look you in the eye and saying, "You're done for this year".

Chair-man
01-30-2014, 16:32
rain & rain. oops, just one answer. That would be rain.

Pedaling Fool
01-30-2014, 16:42
Easy choice for me: Lyme Disease. It has been nearly 8 years since I became infected and I'm still dealing with it. Diagnosed late...

HooKooDooKu
01-30-2014, 16:52
The Cost...

And I don't just mean the money needed for gear, transportation, resupply, etc. I'm also talking about being able to afford to take time off from work/career and time away from other family responsibilities, etc.

So as much as I would like to try to do an AT thru hike, I just don't see being able to afford it at this point in my life.

daddytwosticks
01-30-2014, 17:35
As far as I'm concerned. Leaving the trail is truly the worst part.

Winner!!! :)

kayak karl
01-30-2014, 17:39
the boredom!

Coffee
01-30-2014, 17:48
Damp rainy humid weather in summer.

evyck da fleet
01-30-2014, 18:15
how beat up my body felt at the end. I promised my knees I wouldn't run or hike for a month if they got me back down Katahdin.

burger
01-30-2014, 18:17
The steepness. Some will disagree, but I'm convinced that the excessive steepness (switchbacks? not on the AT!) is the #1 reason for the huge failure rate for thru hikers. There are just too many stupidly, pointlessly steep sections.

aficion
01-30-2014, 18:57
There are too many people on it.

RED-DOG
01-30-2014, 18:59
For me the worst part was unpacking in the evening and repacking the gear the next mornning, that gets pretty darn tiresome after the first week. and this was true on all three of my thru's.

Sarcasm the elf
01-30-2014, 19:06
Leaving the trail to go back to real life and an office job.

max patch
01-30-2014, 19:10
Crappy food.

Night Train
01-30-2014, 19:58
Kicking roots on a leaf covered trail in November, Ouch! Price you pay for wearing trail runners.

HighLiner
01-30-2014, 20:02
The first significant climb on day one on each of my 27 section hikes hurts so bad. Last year starting at Kinsman Notch in NH was the hardest ever. After the third day all is always good. Got to love it!

Tipi Walter
01-30-2014, 20:04
Drinking bad water in the Mt Rogers area and puking my guts out all night in a tent near Elk Garden, circa 1984. Food poisoning sucks, too, or hiking when miserably sick. Having an abscessed tooth south of Fontana.

Hiking in a butt cold 3 day rain at 35F. Packing up with frozen boots at 10F. Packing up gets old fast in the winter, as Red-Dog says.

coheterojo
01-30-2014, 20:05
As has already been mentioned twice, leaving the trail and returning to real life.

Different Socks
01-30-2014, 20:08
+1 ... 2015 can't get here fast enough! :D

+2, for me Dec 2015 can't get here fast enough, then the trek north begins.

Astro
01-30-2014, 20:12
Rain so far, but if I ever did get Lyme Disease that would definitely replace it.

Drybones
01-30-2014, 20:21
Blisters....................

Happy44
01-31-2014, 17:39
Blisters....................


you feet go numb about 2 weeks in if you doing 20s+ and pack weight doesnt matter either after the end of the 3rd week because you could carry a truck if you wanted to, but getting to the end of week 3 is the hard part, everything after that is just routine and FUN, Leaving the trail is bitter sweet, when on the trail its the best day ever, 1 day after you get home it will feel like the worst thing you ever did.

Josh Calhoun
02-04-2014, 12:53
The Rain. god did i hated the rain so much i took zero days whenever i could to avoid it

Son Driven
02-04-2014, 13:01
If you had to choose only one answer, what is the worst part of hiking the Appalachian Trail?:-?

Being off the trail. The suffering is the best part. Realizing the depths of my endurance increases my faith in the trails creator.

ALLEGHENY
02-04-2014, 13:07
If you had to choose only one answer, what is the worst part of hiking the Appalachian Trail?:-?


That bad feeling you get about people near roads who don't seem right.

Dogwood
02-04-2014, 16:49
My mind is no longer wired in ways that habitually pose questions and arise at answers in terms of best/worst, good/bad, etc. I have changed the way I tend to think about things. I fought this for the longest time stubbornly trying to jam everything in life into neat little black and white, good and bad, fast and slow categories. In the past, when people told me there were a lot of grey areas I fought that so hard. I question and explore various, often opposing, perspectives now but primarily define and focus on things that I think empower me. If I focus on the worst of something, it leads me to seeing more things as "the worst", ex: this sucks and this sucks and this is the worst and this is even worse than that thing, No this is even worse than that. I don't want to think like that! Not that it means I shouldn't also be aware of negative persepctive too BUT I avoid primarally focusing on the negatives. I think I'm better for making the change.

George
02-04-2014, 17:56
the boredom!

for me it comes in 2 forms, sometimes the walking with little change/ stimulus - or off season the long nights
the variety of discomforts that many mention at least keep things interesting

going home has never been a problem - the routine becomes the change, and after a while at home, the itch to hike ( and the gut ) comes back - such is the cycle

excuses
02-05-2014, 23:59
Getting to the AT. I section hike and have to get to the trail every year. NJ and NY this year, from NW TN.

Prime Time
02-06-2014, 00:10
Finishing.

Happy44
02-06-2014, 14:42
My mind is no longer wired in ways that habitually pose questions and arise at answers in terms of best/worst, good/bad, etc. I have changed the way I tend to think about things. I fought this for the longest time stubbornly trying to jam everything in life into neat little black and white, good and bad, fast and slow categories. In the past, when people told me there were a lot of grey areas I fought that so hard. I question and explore various, often opposing, perspectives now but primarily define and focus on things that I think empower me. If I focus on the worst of something, it leads me to seeing more things as "the worst", ex: this sucks and this sucks and this is the worst and this is even worse than that thing, No this is even worse than that. I don't want to think like that! Not that it means I shouldn't also be aware of negative persepctive too BUT I avoid primarally focusing on the negatives. I think I'm better for making the change.


I'm going to rewrite this paragraph for dogwood, here go's...


I don't think negative unless im on the internet and on white blaze and flaming people out who dont agree with me......... i am the hypocritical hipster! The end!

bamboo bob
02-06-2014, 16:27
The hardest part for each time was the mental part of not quitting. I never wanted to quit but sometimes it was just so easy to take that ride home. In New England and never more than 2 hrs from home it was just too easy to go home and a constant battle. On western trails it is the opposite, it's too much of a hassle to go home.

The Snowman
02-06-2014, 19:31
rain, cold, and the heat