Of Spiders and Hermits

Robert Harrill lived in this structure for 17 years.

The thing about ocean-area hikes that aren’t along the beach is that they all have three things in common:

  1. They’re hot.
  2. They’ve got bugs.
  3. The Day Hiker talks a lot about 1 and 2 above.

No exception here, though this short walk had plenty of other stuff going on too, like ibis and herons, little scurrying wharf crabs and then . . . inches from Gail’s face as she pulled up and ran back into my arms as if confronted with King Kong, Mothra or Dracula . . . a spiny orb weaver! Which is indeed as scary a spider as you could confront right there at eye level.

So scary that it apparently cannot be photographed! We tried several times and ended up with nothing but blobs, camera experts that we are. Here’s a photo of what dude looks like.

The real lure of this walk is the so-called Hermit Bunker – a small concrete structure left over from WWII – where Robert Harrill lived for the last 17 years of his life (1955-1972) as the Fort Fisher Hermit, achieving a cult status that had him identified as the “second-most visited tourist attraction in North Carolina,” behind only the USS North Carolina. As his legend grew, along with rumors of accumulated riches, so apparently did the perils to his life, and the circumstances of his death – his body was found with bloody wounds – have apparently never been investigated.

We always like good elevation at the mid-point of our hikes, and this one was no exception, as the observation deck at the endpoint of the trail rises to approximately 5 feet above sea level and affords a 360-degree view of the salt marsh and the dune between it and the sea.

Walking back, we sweated some more and watched out for the spider.


In the Fort Fisher Recreation Area at Kure Beach, N.C., the Basin Trail out and back. 2.2 miles

How to get there: U.S. 421 along the N.C. coast south of Wilmington.

You Might Also Like:

Kurt and Gail atop Cascade Mountain, Adirondacks New York, July 22

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.
b3c3b582-9d96-11ed-96a4-12b3f1b64877-IMG_1092

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
d94a484e-8aa9-11ec-98a6-12f1225286c6-IMG_0733

New Catawba Greenway Hike

New wagon tent!

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