In light of the recent event in southern Virginia this year, I thought this was pertinent info...
https://www.reddit.com/r/Appalachian...in_area_named/
Be safe everyone
In light of the recent event in southern Virginia this year, I thought this was pertinent info...
https://www.reddit.com/r/Appalachian...in_area_named/
Be safe everyone
JC. Is it surprising to anyone?
I frequently tell people that hiking the AT is the perfect activity for those who are <truly> homeless or mentally ill. You got Trail Magic, hiker feeds, hiker boxes, cheap hostels... all these people wanting to help you out just cuz you’re a “hiker”. Yet, the same people would shun you if they met you on the sidewalk in the city.
I don't know that you've got it all figured out, but your bias against trail magic is clear.
..........
<irrelevant drivel>
Last edited by Traffic Jam; 07-09-2019 at 05:31.
It wasn’t stated well but my point is that I think we should expect more of these incidents and be prepared. Honestly, if you are homeless, living out of a pack, are scraggly and unkempt...what better place to fit in than the AT? With as much attention as the AT has had the past few years, it’s going to attract all types of people. Plus you’ve got all these perks! (Not knocking the feeds, trail angels, etc, just stating facts). We need to be very careful and not trust someone just because they are a hiker. Hikers get way too much status.
....maybe someone can jog my memory but I recall a story a few years ago where the police deliberately pointed someone homeless to the AT, saying, “You want to walk around with a backpack, there’s a trail.”
can’t remember who the hiker was.
The AT isn’t exclusive, the mentally ill and truly homeless have as much right to be there as anyone, but there are also going to be problems and we need to be careful. [/QUOTE]
Homeless people don't fit in on the trail. They are easy to spot. To a hiker, hostel owner, etc., they don't look at all like hikers. Look for someone with unclear plans, poor hygiene, not doing much hiking, carrying gear for a bushcraft experience, asking for handouts, bad luck story, spending too much time at trailheads, etc.
I could see homeless people trying to hang out at select places where like mentioned above it's going to be obvious after not much time.
I do not see many homeless people hiking the trail for trail magic and free stuff... that's a whole lot of extra work and calories and the pay off wouldn't be worth it with the amount of free stuff. I'm sure people try it but I doubt it lasts very long before they ask themselves what they were thinking.
NoDoz
nobo 2018 March 10th - October 19th
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I'm just one too many mornings and 1,000 miles behind
Yeah, that poor hygiene of the homeless people compared to those sparkly clean hikers...
I think if I woke up to somebody pissing on me his nads would be back up in his intestines