I've seen references to mooning the cog train in NH and hiking naked on June 21st, but what other traditions have you heard of or observed? (ie: Maryland in a day, 1/2 gallon of ice cream at Pine Grove Furnace, carrying a pebble from end to end)
I've seen references to mooning the cog train in NH and hiking naked on June 21st, but what other traditions have you heard of or observed? (ie: Maryland in a day, 1/2 gallon of ice cream at Pine Grove Furnace, carrying a pebble from end to end)
There are 3 kinds of poeple in this world; those who can count and those who can't. :datz
Pirate takes a dump at the Mason-Dixon line and hikes no further north.
I've heard two variants of running naked accross bridges over highways. One is to do it at the Mass Turnpike; the other is to do it at every bridge over an Interstate (e.g., I-70 where truck drivers often honk at any hikers-clothed or not-on the bridge).
Once upon a time, I heard about a church or monestary or the like in or around PA that had a beer tap in a lone room, where the beer was free (maybe for donation). I've read it in a couple of journals from the early 1990s, but I've never heard of it since. Does anyone have info?
I heard that if you're hiking the A.T. during the summer solstice, it is a tradition to hike naked...anyone else hear that? or better yet, done it?
"You're never too old to become what you might have been." - George Eliot
No, I have never hiked naked or totally... (you'll never know).
I was witness to a few brave young men in 2001. HH
Hammock Hanger -- Life is my journey and I'm surely not rushing to the "summit"...:D
http://www.gcast.com/u/hammockhanger/main
I was on the AT in two consecutive years during the summer solstice. It seems like everyone talked about nude hiking day, but when June 21 arrived, everyone had an excuse not to.Originally Posted by jojo0425
I just didn't think it was a good idea to hike nekkid past Big Meadows, Skyland and Panorama.Originally Posted by Peaks
That and I didn't feel like tripping all day.
"I too am not a bit untamed, I too am untranslatable,
I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world." - W. W.
obligatory website link
In 2001, a hockey puck started the trail and was put in a back pack when the owner wasn't looking. It would go up the trail until he/she could find an unsuspecting hiker to do the same to. The idea was to see if it could go all the way to Katahdin. You would be breaking the rules if you took it out of your pack and left it somewhere. I heard two endings to this story. One was that a hiker who unsuspectingly carried it some hard miles, found it and threw it as far as he could in a fit of rage. It was near the end in NH or Maine. The other ending I heard was that it did indeed make it all the way.
In 2002, someone had the same idea begun on one of the balds with a 2 lb potato. It went like that for quite some distance while some of us wondered how long it would last without spoiling. Anyway this ended when the pack it got put in belonged to a section hiker that got off the trail shortly after getting the potato.
No, it was thrown in fit of rage. This occurred in the miles right after the AT diverged from the Long Trail, before the NH border. The thru-hiker who got "pucked" (as it was called) and subsequently ended the game, was a bit of a...well, I won't speak too badly of him. But he didn't even have a trail name. What's up with that??Originally Posted by beckon4
"I too am not a bit untamed, I too am untranslatable,
I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world." - W. W.
obligatory website link
Ive read about thru-hikers that pick up a small stone in GA and carry it in their pack to be deposited in MN or kept as a momento of the trip.I guess sobos would do this also. Streamweaver
"Theres is no real hope of traveling perfectly light in the mountains.It is good to try,as long as you realize that,like proving a unified field theory,mastering Kanji,or routinely brewing the perfect cup of coffee,the game can never be won." Smoke Blanchard
I heard it was traditional for a thru-hiker to take a rock from Springer and leave it on Katahdin.
I carried my small rock all the way to the summit of Katahdin, but couldn't part with it. We had bonded. It now rests in my bookcase next to a small piece of Katahdin.
I must say, I didn't see even a small pile of Georgia rocks anywhere on Katahdin. It made me feel a lot less guilty for not leaving the little fellow behind. I guess I should've carried at least two rocks from Springer, one for me and one for tradition.
The moral of this story is, "Pack lots of rocks."
krewzer
The Mass Pike tradition does exist, though sometimes I've heard that only Massholes are required to do it. I maintain the register on top of Becket Mtn. just north of the pike, and 2-4 people per year claim to have streaked the Pike. Maybe that's such a small number that it doesn't count as a tradition.Originally Posted by Moon Monster
All the way to Minnesota, eh?Originally Posted by Streamweaver
I used to work with a Dartmouth graduate who, every time he hiked Mt Washington, would carry back a small stone. When he hiked Moosilauke, he'd carry the stone up and leave it there. He figured that if all Dartmought grads did this, eventually Moosilauke would be higher than Wahsington.
This was cute, but doesn't say a whole lot for the thought processes of Dartmouth grads and their grasp of geology.
Frosty
Originally Posted by jojo0425
it's a tradition, in some circles,...that on the SUMMER SOLSTICE...
the clothes come off.....maybe for a few hours...maybe ALL day...
i guess thats the hiker's choice....but, it HAS been mentioned in a few
FORUMS here before.
Yea...i guess Streamweaver meant MAINE (ME) NOT Minnesota (MN)!
you know there ARE a few pebbles on Springer Mtn...but nothin'
like the mounds of pebbles & rocks on Katahdin.
I picked up a pebble on Springer for the tradition of carrying it to Katahdin. But in Fontana Dam I partook in a bigger tradition: doing anything to jettison some pack weight! So I mailed the pebble home, and had it mailed back to me in Monson.
-Tank
Now that is cheating, I am appalled (not really). Actually I think it is a very funny twist.Originally Posted by TankHiker
Originally Posted by TankHikerI think that mailing it home IS cheating. In order to maintain the thruhike principles, the pebble must be kept in a bounce box.Originally Posted by Blue Jay
Tom
You are correct, however if the person at home never opened the box he sent home it can still be classified as a bounce box. Tank's thru hike would still be safe. However, if the person who sent the rock back to him even looked at the rock. Tank would have to start all over at Springer if he wanted a pure hike.Originally Posted by Frosty
Sleepy the Arab,Originally Posted by Sleepy the Arab
Did you meet Gnome, the little red bearded guy doing the ECT in 2001? He is my son and is the one who told me about getting pucked as you say. I believed his story of the hiker who threw the puck, but latter on my hike another hiker said that it didn't happen that way. Perhaps someone found the puck and finished the task of getting it to the trail's end. I got a big kick out of the stories surrounding folks getting pucked.