I would be happy, I think, to be able to average something on the order of 12 to 16 miles per day. Initially I was thinking about doing Front Royal to Thornton Gap (sections 1 and 2) in two days (one night) which is about 27 miles.
I would be happy, I think, to be able to average something on the order of 12 to 16 miles per day. Initially I was thinking about doing Front Royal to Thornton Gap (sections 1 and 2) in two days (one night) which is about 27 miles.
A couple years ago I hiked north from Amicalola Falls to Hot Springs, including the GSNP. This took me three weeks. I found that in the first two weeks, I could reliably plan for 1.5 MPH, including all my stops for water, snacks, rest, photos, chats with other hikers, admiring views, checking guidebooks, etc. So ... a 12 mile day took about 8 hours from leaving camp in the morning until arriving in camp at night; a 15 mile day took about 10 hours, and so on.
In my third week of hiking, as my "hiking legs" kicked in, I started to approach 2.0 MPH including all stops and delays, with a 20 mile day in 10 hours on my last day on trail.
I would think you could assume that you will hike at 2.0 MPH when actually hiking, and plan based on that figure and what you think your stops and delays might come to.
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Ok, so far I think that the general consensus is that my mileage goals are probably reasonable. That is a bit of a relief and will help me think through some of the mundane logistics like how I am going to get to and from my start and end points.
I hike a good bit in the Smokies, so a bit more elevation up and down than in the Shennies. I use 2 miles/hour for my general rule of thumb and it seems to hold pretty true. I go a bit faster downhill, but then I have to be careful not to jamb up toes or tweak knees--it works better if I take it slower.
Les Rust
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A couple of years ago we did the SNP in June doing about 10-12 miles a day, and we are bunch of old, fat, out of shape guys. 8-10 is a good pace, you'll find on the SNP that some sections you'll make better going N-S (as we did), others you will grind pretty hard. Regardless, it's great hike to make. I'd love to do it again some day. PS, we were sufficiently in shape to do a 20 on the last day to walk out of the park as we were trying to gain some time for a one of our group that was walking on further south from the SNP. It almost killed us, but we did it. That was the most tired I have ever been in my life!
Sweeper
Hiking & Hanging is therapy, and much cheaper than medication in the long run. Carry on.
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Start out at a comfortable rate with lots of breaks and you'll be at 3 mph before you know it
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I always figured 2mph unless the wife wants to hold me up a dash by contantly "stoping and smelling the roses" and looking at stuff as you hike. When I am by myself I have cracked 3 to 3.5 but that is more into a force march if you really want to call it that. More enjoyable to slow down and not push it.
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After you get done hiking the AT inside SNP, be sure to go back and hike the side trails. SNP has a lot to see, but most of it isn't on the AT.
Thru hikers **HAVE ** to hike a certain number of miles average every day, or they won't make it before winter sets in. Hiking a section you can afford to slow down and enjoy yourself.
Enjoy.
I have done a lot of the side trails over the years. Not all of them of course because most of hiking in the SNP has been from Swift Run Gap north to Front Royal. I grew up visiting Big Meadow and Sky Land lodges during the summer and in college I used to drive up from Harrisonburg at least once a month year round to hike. Its only recently (after quite a few years away from the park) that I decided I wanted to try the AT through the park.
Since you are still planning and doing section hikes, I might suggest you plan your hikes South to North unless you like up hill hiking.
Reason, Big Meadow to Mathews Arm is all up and down and not critical, but if you hike North during the last 10 miles toward Front Royal you be going more down hill and with the flow of other hikers.
Your timing seems right - it gets too hot for me starting in June.
Also, go with the weather forecast more than a calendar date. No need to mention bear safety - just hang your food items.
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