Sunday, November 8, 2009

Trails That Burn and Strangers Who Give Coffee



























Hours ago, I finished my Appalachian Mountain Club hike on the New York section of the AT. Already, I feel satisfaction and soreness, a result from going over the river, through the woods, through a swamp, and up the mountain to Bear Rock.

Along the way, we met a Boy Scout group, a mountain runner, and a young couple cooking hot dogs by the Telephone Pioneer Shelter. Most of the leaves had fallen, and the AT, which goes from Maine to Georgia, revealed varigated shades of dull orange. We ate lunch on Bear Rock, experiencing the concrete satisfaction of climbing a mountain and looking down into the quiet world below. I experienced the same satisfaction on the way down, when we looked back at the place we had been. 

We finished the hike early, around 2 p.m., which gave us a half hour to look through the Native Landscape Garden Center, owned by Peter Muroski, an animal lover, meteorologist, and expert story teller. Our leader suggested that Pete sell coffee to hikers.

"We'd kill for a cup of coffee," my friend said.

"Would you like some coffee?" Pete asked. My friend, our guide, and I said, "Sure."

Pete led us to his office inhabited by two caged birds, a free-range parrot, and a 13-year-old cat. A native of Brooklyn, he said that people are nicer out of the city and that he's grateful to do what he loves. As proof, he showed his wall of photos, which included his wife on their first date, him with a giant fish, two deer mating, and a bearded man finishing the trail, his arms lifted in victory. Our guide and my friend suggested he write a book, not about hiking the trail but the strangers who wander off it.

Pete brightened at the idea. He said he lets hikers use the bathroom and camp on the wood chips outside his business. In addition, he provides temporary work for hikers wanting to finish the trail. As a result, he's met many people. One experienced hiker let a giant bear get too close while he made oatmeal. The hiker stood up to his full height and said, "You're not getting my oatmeal." The bear turned down the mountain.

Other hikers needed emergency care, the result of hypothermia.

"I've met a lot of people," he said.

From our lunch spot on Bear Rock.

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