Yes, but given the number of people who do these hikes the number of deaths does not make it dangerous. Jeez. You are more likely to have some accident/crime happen to you walking the streets of DC. |
-but only 20% of visitors to National Parks are people of color, according to NPR last week. |
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Good grief - google - hiking alone on Appalachian trail - SO many women do this. http://theactiveexplorer.com/2011/02/02/appalachian_trail/
There are also NUMEROUS resources out there for people who do this as a hobby. http://www.appalachiantrail.org/home/explore-the-trail/hiking-basics/safety http://appalachiantrailgirl.com/?p=255 |
| OP, I'm a single woman who lives in the west and I say do it. You'll regret it if you don't. You'll be as safe or safer than you are driving to the grocery store at home and you'll open yourself up to learning more about yourself and testing your meddle. You may even meet some great people along the way. Don't let the city slicker nay sayers dissuade you. If you want to do it, then do it. Don't let other people's fears make decisions for you. Join the Facebook group solo women travelers and there are people who have done what you're doing and can give you tips and encouragement. Live your life for YOU not for random scaredy cats on the Internet. |
Neither of these are examples of solo women thru-hikers, which is what the poster you were disagreeing with said. If your larger point is that several people in history have died in the general area of a trail that is 2,200 miles long and passes through 15 states, then yes, that's true that happened. Of course, its also true that more Americans will die in a car crash in the next 60 minutes than have died on the AT in its history. |
To be fair the woman who died in Maine was basically a thru-hiker (she started in WV) and she was hiking solo at the time she got off trail. However I do believe she is the exception that proves the rule, and the vast majority of solo hikers on the AT - male or female - will be fine. |
Who cares and how does that affect OP's ability to go camping |
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Haven't read the whole thread but I was surprised by the initial advice not to do this. I didn't get the impression from the first post that OP was going deep-country backpacking for weeks on end by herself. More like, sleeping at drive-up campsites with her car parked next to her. Seems safe enough to me. It is worth keeping your wits about you and exercising precautions, but that's always true while traveling in new places. I haven't done it by myself but I have with others and we met lots of interesting people and lots of families with kids doing the same. I'm sure one could look up crime stats, but going by my limited and anecdotal experience, I would put the risk of being raped and murdered at your average family campground as very, very low. And probably lower than your average shitty Motel 8. Fun, safe, cheap, entertaining.
If you are tempted to do some actual hiking by yourself, check in with the ranger station if there is one and keep to well-established trails. And have someone be your contact for an end-of-the-day telephone checkin to make sure you made it back to camp safely. |
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You might research youth hostels along your route. I tried camping alone in OBX and gave up, only because it was so windy (40 knots) my tent was flapping around my head like a giant bat all night long. I bailed and got a bunk in the hostel where I was camping. It was only a few bucks a night and I could read/enjoy the AC and still have a campfire or a glass of wine at the picnic tables and not worry about my safety. That would be a good option for you. I also would not hesitate to camp at a national or state park or RV park type place esp. if I arrived and set up after dark. A small pop up tent, air mattress and sleeping bag and a bottle of Jack to help you fall asleep.
Last year I took the kids "camping" in Rehoboth and got a cabin at the campground. It started as a security measure because DH was not coming with us, but turned out to be great because it had A/C, mattresses, a small fridge to keep food & beer cold (and leftovers to reheat for lunch) electric, and when it rained we could watch a DVD without worrying about having to pack up a soggy tent later. We still cooked on a camp stove and made smores. |
| There are some campsites at National Parks that have rangers around and lots of families -- those are the ones you'd be OK staying in. I stayed at some like that in Utah and Wyoming (Lake Powell; Yellowstone) when I did a cross-country drive. Families with kids are what you want to camp next to, and perhaps senior citizens. Otherwise, you'll feel safer and more comfortable to go to Super-8 motels (which are everywhere out West and pretty cheap) or similar chain hotel/motels. |
| I would generally feel safer at a NP campground than a Super 8 Motel. Have you been to one along I-95 at night in say Lumberton? Meth city. |
how did they die? |
| Sleeping at an established campground in the middle of busy season? I would say that's as safe as sleeping at a hotel traveling solo. |
Absolutely! It really is safe. DH are teachers and we take are kids car camping at National Parks only. They are incredibly safe, just sometimes hard to get a campsite. This summer we are going to Yellowstone (flying into SLC). Campsites are 23 to 28 dollars a night. You can get an annual national parks pass for 80 dollars and then get free entrance to all national parks. I would rather camp then stay in a seedy motel. It would be an amazing experience. If you have time stay a couple of nights at each national park to break up the trip. Go on a ranger led hike. |
Look OP, I have camped alone, but I think it is generally dangerous. So, if you are hell bent on doing it anyway, stick will heavily populated campgrounds with drive in camp sites. No trail hiking, no backpacking, rock climbing, long strolls, none of that. Just stay on your campsite. If you can, use the site next to the camp host or a huge family. Ask a ranger to stroll with you, etc. |