Kurt’s Hikes: Mountains and Beach

Hikes: August 2018

August 4: Off the Blue Ridge Parkway: Salt Pond Road to Appalachian Trail to Wilson Creek and back. 8 miles.

The forest road is an easy-climb mile, and that stretch of the AT meanders without too much up and down through lots of rhododendron to the modest Wilson Creek, which makes a nice spot for lunch if, like The Day Hiker, you’re patient, and keep trying tiny tiny bits of your lunch until yes, at last, the crawdads come out from under the rocks. Well, this one took on a bigger project: working to back his way in with a full olive in tow, repeatedly getting his body in, but not the bounty.

August 12: Home to Green Goat via Roanoke River Greenway and back. 3 miles.

On a busy family weekend, not much time left, on a Sunday evening, for not much of a hike beyond a short, enjoyable urban one.

August 18: From Star Trail parking lot: Over Mill Mountain via Woodthrush, Ridgeline, Riser and Big Sunny, and back via Riser and Roanoke River Greenway. 6 miles.

Yes, you walk over Mill Mountain, you earn your lunch at Fork in the Alley, and even your Blue Cow ice cream on the way back.

August 20-24: Beach walks and Highway 12 bike rides on the Outer Banks, for lots of miles afoot and awheel.

The beach is good and wide, but the wonderful and continuous bike path and lanes along the roadway make for pleasurable forays in the both directions for food, the big dune and lots more.

August 26: Appalachian Trail from U.S. 220 south to Carvins Cove overlook and back. 5.6 miles.

We got to thinking, from our lunch perch overlooking a full-pond reservoir, about how, back in the day (1938, it turns out), the proverbial city fathers paid $4.5 million for the land under and around the 63-acre impoundment, so that we—a vastly increased population—would have water to drink.  

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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.
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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

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