Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP - can one do both A and C? Is that a good idea?
You can, but it would require a walk down the tow path to get from the end of C to the start of A (or vice versa). I'd start with A and then decide if you've had enough or not. The walk back along the tow path can be boring (if there are children with you) just FYI.
Thanks - it would likely just be my sister and me, and possibly my husband and her BF. We all exercise regularly - I run half marathons with my sister, etc. So I guess we could do A and C, in terms of distance, if we wanted to. I have 3 kids, but was thinking adults only for Billy Goat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP - can one do both A and C? Is that a good idea?
You can, but it would require a walk down the tow path to get from the end of C to the start of A (or vice versa). I'd start with A and then decide if you've had enough or not. The walk back along the tow path can be boring (if there are children with you) just FYI.
Anonymous wrote:NP.
You need to be really, REALLY fit for this OP. Do you run x-umber of miles weekly?
The U.S. Park system rescues dozens of people off the Billy Goat trail every year; most of them are not at all fit, and naively think “oh, it’s just another hiking trail.”
Anonymous wrote:DP - can one do both A and C? Is that a good idea?

Anonymous wrote:DP - can one do both A and C? Is that a good idea?
Anonymous wrote:Challenging. I'm not sure which part I found MOST challenging, but it was all pretty darn challenging. It's not like a hike in the woods. It's got some places where you are not gonna move forward unless you climb up 30 feet of jumbled together rocks. And then another such scenario, a little further down the line. Take lots of water.