Kurt’s Hikes: Good Afternoon, Irene

Our standard hyperbole from atop 4,001-foot Flat Top Mountain at the Peaks of Otter is that from its eastern viewpoint you can look across the flat of Virginia to Virginia Beach. So on this day, we took a new-to-us short route up, to look over and see Hurricane Irene hit the Virginia coast.

And indeed, with some rain and wind, I suppose we did come in contact with the mild, western-most edges of the storm: On the way up this short, steady-climb trail, the weather became increasingly breezy and threatening, until, over the last quarter mile to the summit, we were in clouds and intermittent rain. At the very top, the rain gave way to fog, decreased winds and brief moments of sunshine, so we pretended we were in the eye.

This, according to The Day Hiker, is a hard walk for such a short distance, as its climb is sustained and at times slightly steep. Still, it’s less than two miles and you’re there, in a good bit less time than coming up the Flat Top Trail on the other side of the mountain.

Lunch was good, though Gail did show mild, whitish-fingers symptoms of Raynaud’s – in August!


Flat Top Mountain via trail from Peaks of Otter picnic area along Va. 43 and back. 3.6 miles.

How to get there: Blue Ridge Parkway to Peaks of Otter area around milepost 83; south on Va. 43 for about a half mile to the picnic area parking lot.

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Kurt’s Hikes: The Last Dispatch

As I conclude my tenure with Blue Ridge Country magazine, which began with its founding in 1988, I will not conclude the weekly woods walks with The Greatest Day Hiker Of Them All.
The Greatest Day Hiker of Them All takes the jump at Arnold Valley Pool, June 16 (the family gave her a standing O).

20th Year of the Hiking Oddity: A Few New Spots and Lots of Family Along*

Most of our every-weekend hikes were local to our home in Roanoke, Virginia, and repeats of ones we’ve done many times, but there were a few new things along the way.
Gail stands atop Texas’s Palo Duro Canyon, October 4.

Kurt’s Hikes: June-December 2023

You look at seven months of hikes to close the 19th year of Gail and me walking every weekend and you start to see some patterns, most striking of which is the hikes are creeping toward shorter.
March 5: On the way up the Star Trail.

Kurt’s Hikes: Jan-May, 2023

One highlight of the walks of the first five months of the year was a semi-surprise for The Day Hiker when, upon our arrival at the base of the Star Trail up Roanoke Mountain, pretty much the whole dang family (all but the Raleigh family) was there.
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Kurt’s Hikes: Oct-Dec, 2022

Our fall hikes included lots of old favorites, a few urban walks and three great family hikes, with grandkids as young as 5 along for hikes of nearly eight miles total—in the cold!
Gail stays comfy in rain under the tarp at Carvins Cove, 9/11/22.

Kurt’s Hikes: Feb-Sept, 2022

Our hikes from February through September included our 18th annual Valentine’s Day visit to Apple Orchard Falls; and several firsts, including Virginia’s Channels and a section of the
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New Catawba Greenway Hike

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Kurt’s Hikes: June-July ’21

Some Urban, Some Mountain, One Beach
Gail makes her way up Brushy Mountain.

Hikes: April-May ’21

Devil's Marbleyard, A.T. and More
Kurt and Cookie head up the Little Rocky Row Trail, March 20, 2021

March 2021 Hikes

CALENDAR OF EVENTS