{"id":32,"date":"2009-01-06T13:17:00","date_gmt":"2009-01-06T17:17:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/?p=32"},"modified":"2010-05-17T07:36:58","modified_gmt":"2010-05-17T11:36:58","slug":"ten-weeks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/2009\/01\/06\/ten-weeks\/","title":{"rendered":"Ten Weeks"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Ten weeks, seventy days, from now &#8212; well, actually just about 70 days and 57 minutes &#8212; my flight to Atlanta is scheduled to take off.<\/p>\n<p>Ten weeks. Boy, time seems to be flying. That means in just about 9 1\/2 weeks I will be leaving my job, which means in about 7 1\/2 weeks I will be giving my notice.<\/p>\n<p>There is lots to do in the remaining ten weeks. No, not at work. I mean to get ready for my hike. I am waiting for the 2009 edition of &#8220;Appalachian Pages&#8221; to be released and mailed out in the next couple of weeks, then I can finalize my schedule and decide where I will have Jodi send mail drops to me and where I will shop in local stores. And someday soon I need to gather all the warm weather gear I plan to use for the early, cold, weeks of my hike, and see if it actually all fits in my pack. But in the end that&#8217;s all just details. Those things need to be taken care of, but they are not the hike. When I start to worry too much I remind myself, it&#8217;s just walking.<\/p>\n<p>Here are some words that I read long ago, and which somebody recently reminded me of.<br \/>They were written by one of my favorite authors, Edward Abbey, in the forward to &#8220;Appalachian Odyssey- Walking the Trail from Georgia to Maine,&#8221; by Steve Sherman and Julia Older, published in 1977.<\/p>\n<p>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br \/>Appalachia. Appalachia . . . Good God I lived there, in the northern<br \/>fringe, on a little sub-marginal farm in western Pennsylvania, for the<br \/>first eighteen years of my life.<br \/>Eighteen years. Good God. Finally rescued by Hitler and the war (The<br \/>war), the draft, the United States Army, God bless them all.<br \/>Otherwise, who knows, I might still be there driving a coal truck for<br \/>the strippers, or teaching English to sullen delinquents with<br \/>TV-shriveled minds in some grimy small-town high school, or even&#8211;God,<br \/>the soul curls to think of it&#8211;traipsing the Appalachian Trail from<br \/>end to end, for fun! for recreation! for re-creation!<\/p>\n<p> Well, so I escaped. But my brother Howard, he&#8217;s still living back<br \/>there, making a living, driving coal trucks, building gasification<br \/>plants (he&#8217;s a high steel man), raising three wild kids. But he has<br \/>guts, unlike me. And my mother, and old man, they&#8217;re still there,<br \/>surviving in their little house by the side of the road where<br \/>forty-ton super trucks thunder past every thirty minutes, shaking the<br \/>foundations. The farm was sold, years ago, and the old house burned<br \/>down, and the wild blackberry are taking over the fields that the<br \/>strip-miners didn&#8217;t get to first, and over that whole remembered<br \/>countryside of childhood now hangs the awful sound of industry. On a<br \/>clear day you can see for maybe two miles. Powerlines draped from hill<br \/>to hill. Constant traffic on the network of highways that look, on a<br \/>map, like the red breakdown of varicose veins. Trailerhouse slums and<br \/>&#8220;mobile-home&#8221; ghettos spreading across the slopes of abandoned farms.<br \/>Most working people in America can no longer afford to live in real<br \/>houses, no longer have enough free time to build a real home for<br \/>themselves.<\/p>\n<p> But in the burgeoning towns and cities the skyscraper banks rise up,<br \/>tombs of tinted glass and frosty steel, towering above the surrounding<br \/>tracts of fiberboard and plywood, aluminum and formica, where the<br \/>serfs live. Death to the land. Death to all the old American dreams.<br \/>How absolutely prescient was Oliver Goldsmith when he wrote, two<br \/>centuries ago, of a similar malaise falling on England:<\/p>\n<p>          Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey,<br \/>         Where wealth accumulates, and men decay.<\/p>\n<p>No need to go on with this dirge. Harry Caudill has said it all, much<br \/>better, in Night Comes to the Cumberlands and in his recent book, The<br \/>Watches of the Night.<br \/>Thus our native Appalachia. In large part a commercial, industrial,<br \/>profiteering wasteland, America&#8217;s first great National Sacrifice Area.<br \/>(There will be others.) But the wonder of it all is that some of the<br \/>original beauty of the land yet remains. The flame azalea still blooms<br \/>in the Big Smokies, and the blue phlox, the Mayapple, the mandrake,<br \/>the rhododendron, the toadshade, the trillium, the showy orchid, the<br \/>hobblebush, the dogwood, the wild chokecherry. In our Appalachian<br \/>autumn a multitude of ancient hardwoods burst out in seventeen<br \/>different shades of red, gold, rust, the hues of October in infinite<br \/>number. From Georgia up to Maine, the rush of spring-green, the<br \/>exultance of ten thousand different species of flowers, and then in<br \/>the fall the movement of color in reverse, from north to south.<br \/>Lonesome farmhouses still hiding back on red-dog roads, down in<br \/>hardscrabble hollows, up near the summits of cloud-shaded hills. Coon<br \/>dogs baying at the smoky moon. The winding streams, the covered<br \/>bridges, the deep woods where the deer still flourish&#8211;now more than<br \/>ever!&#8211; and the black bear still raid the hogpen, the chickencoop, the<br \/>backpacker&#8217;s portable kitchen.<\/p>\n<p> The backpacker? Who else? For through the middle of the capitalist<br \/>squalor and naturalist splendor runs the Appalachian Trail, a<br \/>ridiculous footpath 2,000 miles long running the length of the<br \/>Appalachian Mountains, up and down a thousand peaks, in and out of a<br \/>thousand valleys, across a thousand meadows, through a thousand forest<br \/>glades. Myself, I&#8217;ve walked only a few short stretches of it in Great<br \/>Smokies National Park. But almost everyone who&#8217;s heard of it, or come<br \/>across it, the idea&#8211;the ideal!&#8211;of some year actually getting into<br \/>harness and walking the entire Trail has always haunted the back of my<br \/>mind. It&#8217;s one of those outdoor dream-adventures we all dream and very<br \/>few have the nerve to realize. Like traversing the Grand Canyon from<br \/>end to end; like hitchhiking through the Sahara and into the Congo<br \/>past the Mountains of the Moon down the planet&#8217;s awesome curve to the<br \/>Kalahari Desert and the Cape of Good Hope; like skiing down Fujiyama;<br \/>like personally inspecting each and every active volcano on the face<br \/>of the earth.<\/p>\n<p> Many talk, many write. Some do. Steve Sherman and Julia Older are two<br \/>who&#8217;ve done it. This is their book about the walk and it&#8217;s a good<br \/>book. In it you&#8217;ll find everything you ever wanted to know about<br \/>hiking the Great Hike. Everything and then some&#8211;none of the misery<br \/>has been left out, none of the tedium, none of the chiggers, snakes,<br \/>mosquitoes, or odd-ball fellow hikers, and none of the glory,<br \/>exaltation and satisfaction either. They say they&#8217;ll do it again<br \/>sometime and I, for one, believe them. (You may not.)<\/p>\n<p> Appalachia is in trouble, but that&#8217;s not news, the whole country&#8217;s in<br \/>trouble, under assault by the insatiable demands of an insane<br \/>expanding economy and what the journalist Tom Wolfe (of New York; no<br \/>kin to the real Thomas Wolfe, the writer) calls a &#8220;happiness<br \/>explosion.&#8221; Fueled by more Valium, alcohol and the St. Vitus Dance<br \/>than by happy people, this explosion is real all the same, and its<br \/>destructive disruption of the North American continent condemns our<br \/>children and our grandchildren to a form of poverty heretofore unknown<br \/>in human history: confinement for life to a wonderful department store<br \/>set in the midst of a steaming junkyard three thousand miles wide.<br \/>They will not love us for it.<\/p>\n<p> But wait a minute! One thin ray of hope shines through the smog and<br \/>uproar. One thin bright ray: it is the conscience of the American<br \/>people beginning to stir at last, beginning finally  to question and<br \/>sometimes even resist the Master Plan of industry and technocracy.<br \/>From the consciousness of loss and danger rises the glow of a national<br \/>earth-use morality. We call it environmentalism; the conservationist<br \/>cause; the light of sanity and moderation. Julia Older and Steve<br \/>Sherman speak for that cause, not with a sermon, as I do here, but<br \/>with the implicit meaning of their experience. In this Appalachian<br \/>Odyssey they have voted with their feet. All over America a million<br \/>others are doing the same. Some day soon these votes must count&#8211;and<br \/>be counted.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>Edward Abbey<\/p>\n<p>Home Pennsylvania<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;<br \/>~~~~~<br \/>Allen F. Freeman<br \/><a href=\"mailto:allen@allenf.com\">allen@allenf.com<\/a><br \/><a href=\"http:\/\/www.allenf.com\/\">www.allenf.com<\/a><br \/><a href=\"http:\/\/allenf.blogspot.com\/\">allenf.blogspot.com<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ten weeks, seventy days, from now &#8212; well, actually just about 70 days and 57 minutes &#8212; my flight to Atlanta is scheduled to take off. Ten weeks. Boy, time seems to be flying. That means in just about 9 1\/2 weeks I will be leaving my job, which means in about 7 1\/2 weeks [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_s2mail":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-32","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-at_thru_hike"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/32","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=32"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/32\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":514,"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/32\/revisions\/514"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=32"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=32"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/allenf.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=32"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}