“The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. Thanks for following along! As mentioned above, my gear list is below (I know it states 15lbs for my list, but my pack is consistently around 20ish-maybe I filled it out wrong?). Little factoid: Veterans Day honors the living and Memorial Day honors the fallen. Quick shout out: Happy Veterans Day to all those serving or you have served!! You and your families sacrifices to our great republic do not go unnoticed. No time to waste (que Tom Hanks talking to Wilson in Castaway). With a start date of 16 February 23, I have 98x days left before “D Day”. The plan consists of a mixture weight lifting, hiking, biking, skiing, and proper nutrition. I’ve crafted a final training plan based off these three training hikes which I will share in my next post. 8mi is about the distances I aim to cover for the first 10x days on the AT. I was happy with those stats and building more proficiency with equipment usage and feet toughening. The Osprey Exos is such a great pack and other than my Nalgene bottle dilemma, I am wed to it forever. No hot spots on my feet, legs felt strong, and no back or shoulder pain throughout the hike. Trekking poles helped with stability again and saved my knees from any pain. In sections where the pea gravel was more than average, it was a little tricky (not afraid to admit I almost busted it once or twice). It was a quick descent minus the one small ascent on the elevation profile above. You can see a bit of a white rock face and there is a waterfall off to the lower right side. I was refueled and ready to head back down. The wind picked during the rest stop to 15-20mph sustained and gusts above 20mph. On the positive side, the Goal Zero solar pad charged the battery bank to almost half power in a short 3hr span. This Nalgene bottle thing is a work in progress. It fit perfectly, though it was hard to reach throughout the trek. This time I secured it 0n the outside pouch of my pack. One quick point on my Nalgene bottle drama. Once at the turn around, I sat down on a log, ate a oatmeal peanut butter bar, and downed my 1liter of Nuun tablet water. There are multiple stopping/look out points to take some great shots. It was a pretty steep section with great views along the side of the trail. This descent then becomes an ascent on the way back (what goes up must come down and vice versa). Screen shot of what the platform looks like below.Īs you can see on the elevation profile above, there is a steep descent before reaching the true turn around point. I’m not a big proponent on using GPS, but I did not have a map on me and wasn’t keeping a pace count so the app came in handy. The GPS function is very beneficial and you can immediately tell if you are going the correct way. Luckily the All Trails app was on point at a couple of confusing sections. There are very few signs to point the correct direction with the majority of them either stolen or just poncho-poof gone. There are no blazes to follow on the trail. I noticed some bear poop off the trail at one point so I turned off the Active Noise Cancelling on my headphones. The trekking poles helped out with balance and grip. ![]() The pea gravel is tricky on steeper parts. There are a few stretches of straight trail, though no more than 200m in length. The majority of the first two miles is uphill at ranging gradients from 6% to 29% traversed by switchbacks. The width of the trail starts to narrow to around 4ft at it’s widest and 2ft at it’s shortest with STEEP drop offs on one side. Once you cross over the first intersection, the climb up begins. At the start the trail is wide with plenty of room and parallels a stream with clear running water. Gravel and rocks ranged in size from dime to fist to foot size. Trail composition is hard compacted dirt covered with pea gravel. The start point is a short walk from the parking lot and clearly marked as there are different trails which zig and zag out of the canyon. I’ll add my gear list at the bottom of the post if you are interested in any of my gear. I carried my Osprey Exos 58L packed with about 25lbs and Z Pack Carbon Fiber trekking poles. ![]() I was wearing Altra Timps, Darn Tough cushioned sole socks, Kuhl Renegade pants, a Merino Smart Wool 150 1/4 zip, a hat and Oakley M Frames. It was 44 degrees when I pulled into the parking lot at the start of the trail. I encountered hikers, one mountain biker, and two hikers with dogs. The trail is multiuse meaning hikers, horseback riders, mountain bikers, and dogs are allowed. This trail is an out and back route of 7.6mi in length, 1607ft in elevation, and is rated as “moderate” in the All Trails app. For my third training hike I chose Columbine Trail which slices through the Cheyenne Canyon in Colorado Springs.
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