Good morning….love the humor in leaving Georgia……I look forward to your well being and progress every day; usually with my morning coffee. Be safe….looking forward, it’s a great day! Actually you caught the hogs/ bear, whatever ….you can see them running. Good job!
I’m bingeing your videos during a snowy couple of November days in Colorado. An April-May LASH from Springer is in my sights. Such great, useful info; thank you! I’ll be curious to hear if ticks and cold were issues for you, and if you used Permethrin and Picaridin
your efforts are inspiring, I'm normally out first thing walking over the hills over here in England . but the dreaded big 19 has got me sat on the sofa. looking forward to following your adventure..
Gordon Lightfoot would scare everything away. Loved the HR comment too. Great job on these videos. Makes my day living vicariously through you but without the discomfort of hiking. Thanks.
Holy smokes 35 miles. My longest day ever was 17 miles on the flat as a pancake Batona Trail in south Jersey. You must have been Infantry. Awesome job!
That “bent” tree is an Indian tree. If you don’t know what that it, it’s when Indians use to bend trees as they grew so they could use them as markers for when they traveled to certain locations. I have a picture of my good friend Baltimore Jack sitting on that tree.
Be it wild boar or bear; the encounter will certainly make you ‘pucker up’! Just sayin’. My moment happened two years ago at about two miles south of Port Clinton, PA on the AT. Rattled my trekking poles the rest of the way into Port Clinton. Nerve wracking when alone!
Congratulations on crossing into NC. Doing a 35 mile day should convince naysayers that proper training can greatly improve the quality of your hike. Well done sir.
Welcome to NC!
35 miles!!!! You're a beast!! No wonder you're trail name is Energizer!! 😁
Impressive pace. You are an inspiration to us older guys. But don’t forget to enjoy the trail. So much to just sit and view at times.
Another vicarious adventure. Thank you Old Man and the AT.
WooHoo on reaching the GA/NC border and then some!
35 miles??? Are you some sort of bionic superhero or something? Wow!!!! Congrats and stay safe.
Fascinating video with wild boar and possible bears. And 35 miles!!! Wonderful journey. Thanks for posting!!!
Good morning….love the humor in leaving Georgia……I look forward to your well being and progress every day; usually with my morning coffee. Be safe….looking forward, it’s a great day! Actually you caught the hogs/ bear, whatever ….you can see them running. Good job!
I’m bingeing your videos during a snowy couple of November days in Colorado. An April-May LASH from Springer is in my sights. Such great, useful info; thank you! I’ll be curious to hear if ticks and cold were issues for you, and if you used Permethrin and Picaridin
Wow beast mode! Enjoying your videos!
Dam that's serious miles on your 4th day. Bad assed good job
Great job Energizer! I also appreciate the high production value of the videos. Excellent work!
Amazing work four days in! RLTW! Keep moving!
your efforts are inspiring,
I'm normally out first thing walking over the hills over here in England .
but the dreaded big 19 has got me sat on the sofa.
looking forward to following your adventure..
Gordon Lightfoot would scare everything away. Loved the HR comment too. Great job on these videos. Makes my day living vicariously through you but without the discomfort of hiking. Thanks.
Holy smokes 35 miles. My longest day ever was 17 miles on the flat as a pancake Batona Trail in south Jersey. You must have been Infantry. Awesome job!
RLTW
You are a beast sir 🫡. !! 35 miles on your 4th day is really impressive.
I've found humidity is almost as bad as altitude for getting air. Great miles and attitude. Best hiking channel on UA-cam.
Holy smokes! Way to go! 35 miles on day 4 is epic! Keep it up rockstar!
I really like the music you have on the videos. Where did you get it from?
I don't know. It's been in my phone music for several years.
That “bent” tree is an Indian tree. If you don’t know what that it, it’s when Indians use to bend trees as they grew so they could use them as markers for when they traveled to certain locations. I have a picture of my good friend Baltimore Jack sitting on that tree.
Be it wild boar or bear; the encounter will certainly make you ‘pucker up’! Just sayin’. My moment happened two years ago at about two miles south of Port Clinton, PA on the AT. Rattled my trekking poles the rest of the way into Port Clinton. Nerve wracking when alone!
Wow!
Good effort.
Congratulations on crossing into NC. Doing a 35 mile day should convince naysayers that proper training can greatly improve the quality of your hike. Well done sir.
That climb to Mt Albert is requires your feet plus both hands. Must have been most interesting in the dark.
I was hoping to hear about that aspect myself. Planning to hike it … in the DAYLIGHT
Yowza! 💪
🤯