Gear Before and After Shakedown Hikes

“This is my invariable advice to people: Learn how to cook- try new recipes, learn from your mistakes, be fearless, and above all have fun!” ― Julia Child, My Life in France

In the 1970s my family packed up to embark on our first of many summer car camping adventures.  Car camping was sold to my parents as an inexpensive way to discover the USA and for a family of soon to be six to “Get away from it all.”  Mom became the navigator in the shotgun seat and used free state maps, Rand McNally Travel Guide, and AAA triptiks to identify where we would stay for the night. She was quite proficient at knowing the symbols that showed KOAs, state and national parks that had a flush toilet, showers and swimming pools and/or playgrounds (used to run off our pent-up car energy before bed).  My family traversed the country hiking, touring and exploring historical and unique and off-the-beaten-path sites, hiking on trails both in urban settings (e.g., Philadelphia Freedom Trail) and national and state parks (e.g., Redwoods State Park trails).  In hindsight, my parents maybe were ahead of their time by implementing “hands-on-learning.”  I just thought it was cool to stand in the place where: Clara Barton, Laura Ingalls Wilder, George Washington Carver, or Molly Pitcher stood.

On our first adventure, we pointed the car and gear trailer to Yellowstone National Park and the Badlands National Park.  My family spent the first night at a campground in Iowa and that night lives on in family lore.  Everything went according to plan.  Dad, my brother and I put up the evergreen Coleman canvas tent purchased at Sears.  My toddler brother jumped up and down in his wooden playpen. Mom cooked a “four square meal” with her new aluminum stackable pots and pans over a Coleman’s white gas, two burner stove.  Her recipes were made up from her Girl Scouts days and friends who camped, (Note: In 1975 Mom switched up her cooking by using Harriet Barker’s One Burner Gourmet Cookbook). It was a picture perfect camping experience, until it began to thunder, rain, hail and tornado (yes, I know tornado isn’t a verb.)

Lire l'article complet ici.

DERNIÈRE MISE À JOUR

October 26, 2024

Rédigé par
Photo thumbnail Blog Author

Beth Malchus Stafa


Bonjour depuis les terrains de randonnée de Grandma Gatewood, le Serpent Mound de la culture Hopewell et le lac Érié. Nous sommes Beth et Tom, les noms de sentiers Dessert Queen (celle qui regarde le menu des desserts avant l'entrée) et Mr. Rook (celui qui joue aux échecs), des randonneurs de toujours qui se lancent dans leur prochaine aventure, une randonnée en tongs sur le sentier des Appalaches. Notre voyage commence en avril 2023, lorsque nous nous engageons volontairement sur le Goodloe E. Byron Memorial Pedestrian Walkway pour traverser la rivière Potomac, nos sacs à dos remplis de l'équipement nécessaire à ce voyage de six mois. Nous adoptons l'esprit du mois et les caractéristiques de l'archétype jungien du Fou en faisant preuve de confiance, de persévérance et de courage. Nous croyons qu'il n'est pas trop tard pour viser haut, pour pratiquer la joie et l'émerveillement, pour être curieux et essayer de nouvelles choses et pour affronter l'inconnu ensemble.

Explorer plus de contenu

Mentions dans les médias

Sawyer’s donation of water filters represents a significant shift away from the cumbersome logistics of bottled water, offering a faster and more efficient solution.

John Dicuollo
Public Relations Director at Backbone Media

Mentions dans les médias

Summer tick season used to be a problem only in the southern part of Ontario, but tick populations are moving north as the climate grows warmer.

TVO aujourd'hui
Mentions dans les médias de TVO Today

Mentions dans les médias

Mosquitos are nasty creatures. They bite, they transmit terrible diseases to people and pets, and from what I read, they have absolutely no redeeming value in the ecosystem.

ArcaMax
Mentions dans les médias d'ArcaMax