Fresh, crisp and freeing.
It’s day four of seven and the elevation is 5,342 feet at the Wayah Bald Lookout Tower, the highest point we’ll ascend during our 30-mile section hike of the Appalachian Trail in North Carolina’s Nantahala National Forest. Rain is coming our way, but for now a deep breath of mountain air brings me peace.
For spring break this year, eight Ohio University students signed up to backpack one of the most well-known trails in the United States with Outdoor Pursuits, the adventure recreation and education program of Campus Recreation. Almost all of them had never been backpacking before.
“I don’t get a lot of opportunities like this to go out and completely submerse myself in nature,” said Helena Karlstrom, an 18-year-old freshman environmental studies major. “I have felt really overwhelmed by school this semester … so it was really nice to just drop everything and be unable to use any technology or do any schoolwork.”
“Spending seven days out in the wilderness with a group of people you’d never met, you've got to come out of your box pretty quick,” said Eamonn Bell, a 23-year-old sixth year junior double majoring in Outdoor Recreation and Education, and Recreation Management. “I think that’s what I got from (the trip), being myself more in groups of people.”
As a trip leader for Outdoor Pursuits and a photographer for University Communications and Marketing, I co-led the way and photographed nearly the entire trip — here’s what I saw.