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Best of the Appalachian Trail: Day Hikes Paperback – August 21, 2018
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Your Comprehensive Guide to the AT’s Best Day Hikes
From Maine to Georgia, the nearly 2,200-mile Appalachian National Scenic Trail is an iconic destination. Whether you’re an experienced hiker or a casual explorer, let Best of the Appalachian Trail: Day Hikes guide you along the way. Summit the iconic Katahdin in Maine, explore Pennsylvania’s Chimney Rocks, splash in Tennessee’s Laurel Fork Gorge and Falls, and find out where Georgia’s Blood Mountain gets its name. Appalachian Trail experts Leonard M. Adkins and Victoria and Frank Logue have carefully selected their top 144 hikes―ranging from less than 1 mile to 11 miles―and present them for you to experience and enjoy.
Trail difficulty ratings and profiles, which include point-by-point descriptions of each hike, help to prepare you for what’s ahead. Trailhead maps and driving directions are provided to get you where you need to go. Plus, fascinating flora, fauna, and history tidbits entertain and educate you along all 144 hikes throughout the 14 states of the AT. Discover the best day hikes in this useful guide to the beloved long trail.
- Print length256 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMenasha Ridge Press
- Publication dateAugust 21, 2018
- Dimensions6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101634041453
- ISBN-13978-1634041454
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Ideal for those who want to experience the AT’s best in short bursts.”
—David Miller, Library Journal
About the Author
Leonard M. Adkins has been intimately involved with the Appalachian Trail for several decades. He has hiked its full length five times and lacks just a few hundred miles to complete it for a sixth. He has maintained a section of the Trail near McAfee Knob and was a ridgerunner for the Appalachian Trail Conservancy. He has also served as an A.T. Natural Heritage Site Monitor, aiding the conservancy and the National Park Service in overseeing the welfare of rare and endangered plants. In addition, he has served on the boards of directors of the Roanoke Appalachian Trail Club and the Old Dominion Appalachian Trail Club. Among other long-distance trails Leonard has completed are the Continental Divide Trail from Canada to Mexico, the Pacific Northwest Trail from Glacier National Park to the Pacific Ocean, and the Pyrenees High Route along the border of France and Spain. In all, he has walked more than 20,000 miles exploring the backcountry areas of the United States, Canada, Europe, New Zealand, and the Caribbean.
Leonard is the author of 20 books on travel and the outdoors. His Wildflowers of the Appalachian Trail was presented the National Outdoor Book Award, while The Appalachian Trail: A Visitor’s Companion received the Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Award. He has also written more than 200 articles for magazines such as Blue Ridge Country, Backpacker, Islands, The Roanoker, and Blue Ridge Outdoors. Along with his thru-hiking wife, Laurie, he lives in Virginia, within easy striking distance of the A.T. You may learn more about his adventures at habitualhiker.com.
Victoria and Frank Logue hiked the entire Appalachian Trail in 1988 and have returned again and again to hike its many sections on day and overnight hikes. Frank has also served on the Appalachian Trail Conservancy’s Board of Managers. In addition, they have continued to hike out west and abroad, including Israel, Jordan, France, Italy, Iceland, Ireland, Scotland, and England. They live in Georgia, where Frank works as an Episcopal priest and as an assistant to the bishop of Georgia. Victoria, a writer of fiction and nonfiction, recently published her fourth novel. Currently, they love visiting and hiking with their daughter, Griffin, in Arizona.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
56. GREAT SWAMP AND CORBIN HILL
EASY / 2.8-mile round-trip / 1.5 hours
You don’t need a car to reach the beginning of this hike. On weekends and holidays, the Metro North commuter train from New York City stops at the Appalachian Trail Station next to NY 22. (Visit mta.info/mnr for a schedule.)
Great Swamp is the second-largest freshwater wetland in New York, encompassing thousands of acres along its 20-mile length. Muskrats and other wildlife live among nine known rare plant and animal species, including spreading globeflower and Atlantic white cedar.
The views from the open fields of Corbin Hill take in West Mountain and Cat Rocks to the west, Waldo Hill and Sharp Hills to the north, and the route of the A.T. climbing the ridge to the east.
THE HIKE
Walk southward on NY 22 from the parking area, turn right onto a dirt road at 0.1 mile, and cross the railroad tracks at the Appalachian Trail Station. Soon follow puncheon across the wet areas of Great Swamp, crossing Swamp River on a footbridge at 0.4 mile. Cattails grow in great numbers beside the trail.
Begin the steady but gradual climb along the side of Corbin Hill. Open meadows, dotted by summer flowers such as gentian and mullein, provide the views. It is time to turn around when the trail enters woods near the top of the rise.
TRAILHEAD DIRECTIONS
Take I-84 to Exit 17 (Ludingtonville Road). Turn east (right from I-84 West, left from I-84 East), and drive 0.6 mile. Turn left onto Mooney Hill Road, and drive 2.5 miles. Turn right onto NY 292 South, and drive 0.8 mile. Turn left onto NY 311 North, and drive 1.3 miles. Turn left onto NY 22 North, and drive 5.7 miles to the crossing; the parking area is 0.1 mile farther.
GPS TRAILHEAD COORDINATES N41° 35.575' W73° 35.247'
Product details
- Publisher : Menasha Ridge Press; 3rd edition (August 21, 2018)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 256 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1634041453
- ISBN-13 : 978-1634041454
- Item Weight : 12.5 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #781,928 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #424 in New England US Travel Books
- #995 in Running & Jogging (Books)
- #2,098 in Hiking & Camping Excursion Guides (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Avid backpackers and campers, Victoria and Frank Logue wrote their first book, The Appalachian Trail Backpacker, to share many tips and techniques they had picked up in the backcountry. Since then, the Logues have written a number of other books, all known for their straightforward advice, with numerous anecdotes from their own experiences and those of their fellow outdoor enthusiasts.
The Logues have supplied writing and photography to a number of regional and national magazines including Outdoor Traveler and Backpacker. They have appeared on CNN and numerous local TV and talk radio shows. The Logues were also guests on the Discovery Channel's series, "Go For It." For more than two years, the Logues hosted a weekly online chat on long distance hiking for Backpacker magazine.
Frank served for four years as a member of the Appalachian Trail Conference's Board of Managers (through July 1999) and as a member of the ATC's Publications Committee for eight years. Frank graduated from Virginia Theological Seminary in May of 2000 with a Master of Divinity. Frank was the founding pastor of King of Peace Episcopal Church, and now works as a Canon for the Episcopal Diocese of Georgia.
Leonard M. Adkins, profiled by Backpacker magazine, and referred to as "The Habitual Hiker," has hiked more than 19,000 miles exploring the backcountry areas of the U.S., Canada, Europe, and the Caribbean. Almost every hiking season finds him on some new and exciting adventure. He has thru-hiked the full length of the Appalachian Trail five times (and lacks less than 700 miles of finishing for a sixth), traversed the Continental Divide from Canada to Mexico, followed the Pacific Northwest Trail through Montana, Idaho, and Washington, and walked Canada's Great Divide Trail. Other long-distance journeys include Vermont's Long Trail, West Virginia's Allegheny Trail, and the Ozark Highlands Trail in Arkansas. His adventures in Europe include a trek of the Pyrenees High Route from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean along the border of France and Spain and an exploration of Iceland's interior. His most recent excursions were a number of hikes in New Zealand, including some of the country's Great Walks, such as the Milford and Abel Tasman Tracks.
The off-season is spent writing books and articles. Leonard's words and photographs have appeared in Islands, Caribbean Travel and Life, Blue Ridge Outdoors, Backpacker, Colorado Daily, Mid-Atlantic Country, Charleston Gazette, and other newspapers, magazines, and websites. He is currently the hiking columnist for Blue Ridge Country, writes the outdoors column for the bi-monthly Roanoker magazine, and blogs about hiking trails at www.blueridgeoutdoors.com.
Leonard is the author of more than a dozen books on the outdoors, nature, and travel, and his Wildflowers of the Appalachian Trail (photographers Joe and Monica Cook) received the National Outdoor Book Award, ForeWord Magazine's Book of the Year Award, and a Virginia Literary Award nomination. The Appalachian Trail: A Visitor's Companion was honored by the Society of American Travel Writers Foundation with a Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Award.
Leonard is not just a writer; he takes an active part in all of the books he produces. He walked all of the trails he writes about in his hiking guides with a surveyor's measuring wheel to insure accurate mileage and descriptions. For his travel books Maryland: An Explorer's Guide, West Virginia: An Explorer's Guide, and Adventure Guide to Virginia, he visited all of the places he describes: bed & breakfasts, restaurants, historic sites, museums, golf courses, bookstores, antique shops, amusement parks, beaches, hiking, biking, canoeing, kayaking, rafting, and more.
Victoria Logue is a graduate of Georgia Southern University in Statesboro, Georgia. After graduation, Victoria worked as a writer for two daily newspapers in Georgia--the Warner Robins Daily Sun and The Rome News-Tribune. During that time, she garnered awards for her feature writing and personal columns from the Georgia Press Association and the Special Olympics. She and her husband, Frank, also spent two months in Kathmandu, Nepal, documenting daily life and customs.
In 1988, the Logues quit their jobs to hike the 2,100-mile Appalachian Trail. For six months they backpacked across the backbone of the eastern United States from Georgia to Maine. Upon returning home, the Logues wrote their first book, The Appalachian Trail Backpacker, which was published in 1991 by Menasha Ridge Press.
They went on to write a number of other books related to hiking, the outdoors and travel.The Logues have also supplied writing and photography to a variety of regional, national and international magazines.
The Logues have appeared on CNN and numerous local TV and talk radio shows. The Logues were also guests on the Discovery Channel's series, "Go For It." For more than two years, the Logues hosted a weekly online chat on long distance hiking for Backpacker magazine on America Online.
Victoria has served as the editor of the Old Dominion Sierran, The Brunswick News lifestyle section and Georgia's Coastal Illustrated. She was also a contributing editor for Outdoor Traveler, Mid-Atlantic Region.
Victoria continues working as an author and writer. She is a Tertiary in the Third Order, Society of Saint Francis, a certified labyrinth facilitator and is involved in promoting spirituality through leading retreats.
Her most recent non-fiction work is "Hiking Tennessee," which will be published by Human Kinetics in the Spring of 2015.
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2025good companion/trail guide for the jcb treasure hunters out there
- Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2024This book did a great job of breaking down day hikes, length and difficulty. It helped me select and plan my next hike. Absolutely recommend!!
- Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2017Bought as a gift for my daughter and her boyfriend who live in Maryland and who love to hike. Will not know if it was a good buy until the weather gets better.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2024Gives insight to where I can do short hikes.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2021My son in law loves this book and has trekked some of the trails since Christmas
- Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2020This is what I expected. Came as stated.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2018I gave this book as a gift and the lady loved it and liked the way the hikes were described.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2017It's a good book and provides good information about the AT - Great for those that don't have long stretches of hiking time.