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SFC Platoon Sergeant
2
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Scary indeed. I was hiking a section of the AT in Maine about 100 miles south of where she disappeared in September that same year. I remember hearing about her. It is easy to lose the trail when you step off of it. Hiking solo can be a spiritual experience, but it comes with great risk. In two weeks I will be back on the trail for 5 days. I am hiking the New Jersey section (74 miles) with my brother-in-law. I am sure we will be discussing Mrs. Largay's experience ad nauseam. I will let her be a reminder to me to not take anything for granted while hiking deep in the woods.
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SA Jim Arnold
SA Jim Arnold
>1 y
I've lived in Portland, ME many times during my commercial fishing years and have hiked the thick woods many times. Be careful brother.
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SFC Platoon Sergeant
SFC (Join to see)
>1 y
Thank you! I always hike with a buddy!
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MSgt James Mullis
2
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The Boy Scouts teach the best advice: "Be prepared". If you're going to accept the risks involved in hiking by yourself, "Be Prepared". For $15 you can buy a Topo Map and a compass (I never hike a trail without one). For as low as $25 you can buy a Chinese handheld Ham radio, set it to the local repeater and its almost as good as a cell phone. If you can't get a signal through during the day, climb to the highest point and wait for night fall when the signal propagation is much better. For $150 you can buy a spot transmitter that uses the GPS Satellites to signal your exact location in an emergency.
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SFC Charles Temm
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My wife has pointed to this incident to say I'm not allowed to hike alone....

That said, I know she is praying overtime I find someone ELSE to go with as she is less than enthusiastic about the idea of the AT
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