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7th October 06, 10:48 AM
#1
Congratulations, Andrew!
That is quite an accomplishment.
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8th October 06, 08:04 PM
#2
No, the accomplishment is for my four-yard Bear Kilt, which now has 5,000 backpacking miles on it.
Andrew.
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8th October 06, 09:22 PM
#3
congrats!
when you get to boston, have tom coffee milk and fresh lobster for me...I miss both so very much! ( grew up outside new bedford, 50 miles south of boston)
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8th October 06, 09:47 PM
#4
Congrats Andrew on a Job well done
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9th October 06, 07:53 AM
#5
PCT, straight-though. Bluidy fantastic....just fantastic. I'm jealous as all get-out.
I've not been following it, but you can darned well bet that I'll spend a couple of hours on your website this week.
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9th October 06, 02:14 PM
#6
I've just finished updating all my photos - everything is online now, except for about 100 photos on a corrupted digital camera card.
There are close to 1,000 photos here.
Andrew.
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9th October 06, 03:33 PM
#7
Awesome pictures
Note to self:...continue on page 39 tomorrow
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10th October 06, 04:17 PM
#8
Is that a Tiley hat on your grape?
Umm, I mean, a Tilley on your brain housing group?
Umm---are you wearing a Tilley hat, Andrew?
A buddy of mine with the ambition to be the Pizza King of Central Asia is trying to convince me to do the AT in '09. Never done a long hike before. Then again, I'd only run 12 miles straight before I did the '94 San Francisco marathon . . .
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11th October 06, 06:35 AM
#9
It is a Tilley hat. I figured if an elephant could eat a Tilley hat - twice - then it was good enough for a thru-hike. After 2,600 miles it's still kicking.
Many people attempt the AT with no backpacking experience. In fact, it may be even better to get into it without any preconceived notions about what long-distance backpacking is "supposed" to be like. It isn't like weekend hiking at all, so you'd be just fine.
I'd highly recommend doing some research into ultralight backpacking. If you don't have any experience with backpacking, I wouldn't suggest that you jump headfirst into it, but at least be aware that backpacking is no longer about carrying 50 lbs. on your back. It is possible to hike 2,000 miles with an 8 lb. base weight. You'll be far more comfortable if you're carrying something like a 15-20 lb. base weight, and if you don't already have a lot of heavy ("old school") gear, you'll be set to get the lighter stuff. Feel free to PM me if you have any questions.
Andrew.
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