Does they signify the purity of those hikers who stick to the white blazes and don't veer off to the nearest bar?
Does they signify the purity of those hikers who stick to the white blazes and don't veer off to the nearest bar?
White light is a combination of all colors. I like to think of the AT's hikers as a melting pot of everything humanity has to offer.
Color of the blazes doesn't really matter. They just mark the path from one point to another. Are white blazes any better than blue? yellow? pink?
A blaze by another color would lead to the same vistas. And if there's a bar somewhere along the way, you can buy me a cold one.
White is easier to see than brown, like all the crap you're stirring up...
White is the most visible color under low light conditions.
As I live, declares the Lord God, I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that the wicked turn back from his way and live. Ezekiel 33:11
I think they should be an LNT shade of DayGlo neon that also glows in the dark. Better visibility that way. Should probably put a clapper in them, too. Clap twice and a speaker says, "You're still on the trail." Maybe in conjunction with some trip wires to warn newbies when they leave the trail, too.
I don't care what color, shape, or location they are, as long as they're appear somewhat consistently. I really, really, really hate it when the blazing has been pretty good, and then suddenly it disappears and you're not really sure if there are other trails in the area.
GA←↕→ME: 1973 to 2014
I once tried to follow a colorblind hiker on a trail with red blazes. He kept wandering off into the woods. To him, the blazes were about the same color as a tree trunk.
. . . that some guy had a can of white paint in his shed, and one day decided to go mark the trail near his house with it? So, by tradition, it's been white blazed (except there by Dartmouth).
It's not near as significant as the other theories here, though.
Why is it white? Don't you people have lives?
The Weasel
"Thank God! there is always a Land of Beyond, For us who are true to the trail..." --- Robert Service
The following is from my copy of the "Trail Manual For The Appalachian Trail", publication No. 1, forth edition, 1940 issued by The Appalachian Trail Conference (Incorporated) 901 Union Trust Building, Washington, D.C..
Sorry, nothing philosophicial or any deep meaning, just science."The standard color of paint used on The Appalachian Trail is white. Experiments have demonstrated that a paint with a titanium oxide base has the greatest durability and presents a luminous appearence which aids in traveling in the evening hours.
General experience has shown that white is the most satisfactory color for trail marking. It has been stated that its distinctiveness is due to the fact that dead white is a color foreign to the woods. In some sections, by reason of local conditions, such as in areas of gray or canoe birch or quartzite rocks, the effectiveness of the white color is reduced somewhat. However, along the entire route, experience has demonstrated that white is the most effective color, resulting in its adoption as the standard for The Appalachian Trail."
I like the other explanations better. I'm becoming liberal now, so I don't need facts. (Sorry, couldn't resist... )
Of course, this only works when the local trail maintainer has taken the time to actually blaze the trail. [Sorry, I'm still a bit perturbed at the lousy blazing between Osgood Tentsite and the Mt. Washington Auto Road as the Trail takes a number of confusing turns without the benefit of any blazing to speak of. ]
GA←↕→ME: 1973 to 2014
"white is believed to signify life and purity..."
http://www.princetonol.com/groups/ia...dle/color2.htm
possibly because WHITE blazes show up better on trees!