Archive for the 'Nature' Category

Hiking Cures All Ailments

Bryan March 8th, 2007

Fellas_bonding_92005_006_1
I picked up a copy of this article at the hike desk at Wilderness Wildlife Week In January.  I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

Hiking Cures All Ailments
by Bruce Douglas, Rocky Top Trail Shop

I am one of those people who believe that hiking and backpacking in the mountains will cure any ailment or condition you may have.  At first this may sound fanatical, but over the years, I have found that hiking on a regular basis can cure anything.  My own experiences and those of fellow hikers have proven again and again that there is nothing that hiking cannot cure - mentally or physically.

I found out the hard way that backpacking is a 100% guaranteed weight loss plan.  I have neglected to market backpacking this way for fear of overcrowding trails and campsites with hikers clad in spandex and warm-up suits.  Have you ever heard, "Lose weight and still eat as much as you want?"  Long distance hiking really does allow for this.

Most active people eat between 2,000 and 3,000 calories per day.  When backpacking, the body is burning between 4,000 and 5,000 calories per day.  And when you are hiking, you don’t have many opportunities to stop and eat fried chicken and biscuits so your caloric intake is considerably less.  I have found that men lose approximately one pound per day while on the trail. Women lose about one-half pound per day.  This equation takes for granted that the person in question has a few pounds to lose and I’m sure there are a few of these people out there.

Hiking also does wonders for the back.  I know hikers who have had multiple back surgeries and tell me that their back always feels better when they are hiking.  One fellow hiker I know has five metal rods in his back and he hiked the entire Appalachian Trail and never felt better!  My lower back always feels better when I come home from a backpacking trip.  Carrying a heavy pack on your back for several days strengthens the back tremendously and will keep your lower back in good shape.  I do wish, however, that I could design a pack that would carry itself but why take all the fun out of hiking?

Many times I have stepped on the trail with a cold or a touch of the flu.  Within a few hours I can feel the congestions leaving my body only to be replaced with good clean mountain freshness.  It must have something to do with breathing clean air and drinking clean (filtered) spring water.  If I could only bottle it and sell it, I would retire and be spending my days hiking in New Zealand.

There must be a lot of bad things floating in the air around the city.  Or maybe it’s just the constant stress we’re under at work, or the frustrations we have when we sit in traffic.  Whatever it is, I think they’re all factors as to why we get those dam headaches.  To this day, I cannot ever remember developing a headache while hiking.  If you have a really bad headache that no amount of aspirin seems to cure, then I suggest you head for your favorite trail.  I promise the pain will be gone in a short while.

Ever wake up with a stiff neck?  Try hiking it out.  I used to try everything to get rid of a stiff neck.  I tried stretching, walking, lying down, sitting up, heat, ice, hot showers and once had my wife walk on my back.  One morning I woke up with one of the worst neck wrenches I have ever had.  I was already committed to a morning hike with my family so I reluctantly rolled out of bed and was practically carried to the trail head.  In one hour, I was able to look around in every direction and still keep an eye on the trail!

Backpacking will cure all your internal plumbing problems.  Whether it’s colonitis or irregularity, the exercise and diet of backpacking will do wonders for your metabolism.  If you are having problems with irregularity, try hiking in the rain or when the weather is cold and miserable.  Nature always calls during the most inopportune moments.

I met a backpacker five years ago who had a spastic colon.  The doctor told him that the condition would be with him forever and he would have to take medication for the rest of his life.  The doctor also recommended exercise, a careful diet and stress reduction.  He began hiking and that took care of the exercise and stress levels.  To this day, he has never needed the medication.

Need to quit smoking?  Try hiking up a 5,000 foot mountain on a day hike and see how well you can breathe.  I guarantee you won’t be craving a cigarette.  You’ll be craving for more air!  You’ll have a new outlook on what smoking does to your lungs.

Do you suffer from insomnia?  Try getting up at dawn, pack your pack, strike camp, cook breakfast, then head out on the trail.  Carry a 45 pound backpack up and down the mountains for 8-10 hours.  Then set up camp again, walk a half mile to get water and spend 20 minutes filtering the water.  Walk another half mile each time you need to go to the outhouse.  Then try ambling around at night trying to find a place 100 yards from camp to hang the bear bag.  When you finally lie down to rest, think about doing it all again the next day.  You’ll get a good night’s sleep.

In my opinion, backpacking is as good as the fountain of youth.  I challenge you to hike with the Smoky Mountain Hiking Club, the Gatlinburg Retired Hikers Club, or the famous Thursday Hikers Club.  They will hike your socks off and then tell you they are twice your age!  I am convinced that elderly hikers are more alert and twice as healthy as the rest of us.  The best thing for senior citizens is an active lifestyle.  The mind and body will deteriorate if it stays indoors on the couch.  Grandma Gatewood hiked the entire Appalachian Trail when she was 70 and lived to be 100.

If you doubt my claims about his wonderful elixir called hiking, I dare you to prove me wrong.  If there is a shred of doubt after you have tried my 100% guaranteed cure all, I will give you the phone numbers of my three college English teachers who failed me because I did not write well.  I never had anything published before I started hiking.

Bruce Douglas
Rocky Top Trail Shop

Hiking nourishes my body and my soul.  I hike every week and feel better after 3 hours on the trail than I do all week.  I just melts the stress of my week away and afterward, I feel human again.

Montgomery Bell State Park-MB Trail NE Loop

Bryan March 4th, 2007

Montgomery Bell TrailAround 200 years ago, this was a bustling industrial area. Montgomery Bell, one of Tennessee’s first entrepreneurs, owned iron ore mines and furnaces in the areas of Dickson and Cheatham Counties, Tennessee. Mr. Bell supplied, among other things, cannonballs to Andrew Jackson’s army during the War of 1812. Mr. Bell may have owned a share of the operations in what is now Montgomery Bell State Park

Distance: 6.0 miles, loop trail
Total Elevation Climb: 260 feet, mainly minor ups and downs
Trail type: varies from single track dirt and rock to old road bed to grass along the lake shore
Temperature: upper 40s, sunshine and clear, blue skies
Significant features: mostly forest, a few views into deep hollows, and the lake

As I normally do when I go someplace new, I stopped by the visitors center to get a trail map. There I encountered two problems: the visitors center is closed on weekends during the winter (um, seems like they’d have more traffic on weekends, but I’m sure there’s a logical explanation) and trail maps are not available outside the visitors center. So, I took to the trail with no official map (I did have my GPS and a guide book, 60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Nashville, which has a very simple map). Now that I look, they don’t even publish a map online.

The first couple of miles is just a nice walk in the woods. There’s nothing really strenuous about it. It’s just a really peaceful place. There are a number of stream crossings. As always be careful, but I didn’t even get out my gaiters. At about 1.7 miles, I will encountered a fairly nice backcountry shelter with about 8 bunks. It’s located right at the confluence of the streams and has a fairly nice view. I could just imagine listening to the streams babbling while falling asleep. Of course, its located the ideal distance to backpack in on a late Friday afternoon after work.

After another mile or so, the trail turns onto a gravel service road (still maintained and used) for about 1/4 mile and then onto an old maintenance road that borders the golf course.

About one more mile passes away and the trail turns back onto single track to the lake where I ran into a couple of guys fishing. The lake created by an earthen damn is about 17 acres. By the lake shore, the trail turns to grass, so watch for the signs.

After passing the dam, the trail heads back up into the woods along the hollow and up the hill. Another nice walk in the woods. If you download the Google Earth kmz file, you will find that I backtracked about 1/2 mile. I could have edited it out, but I decided to make a point. This was the sign at the trail junction.

Montgomery Bell Trail Malfunction JunctionRemember, I don’t have the detailed map and really didn’t want to get out the guide book. So, I headed for the parking lot. After about 20 minutes, I checked the GPS and decided to look at the guide book. Turns out it would have taken me to a parking lot alright. But it wouldn’t have been the one I parked in. I’ll chalk this one up to my own laziness, but the signage could have been much better. This is a definite nominee for the malfunction junction award.

I did enjoy this hike and am looking forward to day hiking the other half of this trail as well as an overnight trip in the near future.

Montgomery Bell Trail track

Pictures are HERE

Download the Google Earth track

Devil’s Backbone State Natural Area

Bryan February 25th, 2007

Today’s hike took me out west of Columbia, Tennessee to the western Highland Rim. The decade old Devil’s Backbone State Natural Area sits on the western edge of the Natchez Trace Parkway near Gordonsburg. The natural area gets its name from the old nickname for the Natchez Trace. The 450 mile trip from Natchez, Mississippi to Nashville, Tennessee was frequently a difficult one involving murderers and thieves, Indians and floods. Travelers often attributed their troubles to the work of the Devil. And if that weren’t enough, it’s not the easiest 450 mile walk to take. For more information on the history of the Trace, click HERE.

Distance: 3.1 miles round trip
Time: 1.5 hours
Elevation change: approximately 100 feet total upclimb
Trail
type: dirt, some rock. Surprisingly not muddy after the rains yesterday.
Temperature: lower 50s, cold and overcast.
Significant
features: Forest and views of adjacent ridges during the winter.

The trail has a 1/2 mile spur to the loop. The trail runs mostly along a 100 foot tall series of adjoining ridges. The loop starts a slight decent in Spring Hollow finally reaching Falls Branch (no bridge for the crossing). There’s another branch to cross (this one with a bridge), and then back up you go rather rapidly. The return side of the loop runs along another ridge and then rejoins the spur trail.

The trail is in the interior of the property, so its a nice quiet and undisturbed place. Also, chances are you’ll have your solitude on the trail as it isn’t heavily used.

Not much wildlife activity today. I did enjoy the ride to the trailhead with my parents and the hike with my dog Hannibal. I did enjoy the hike and will definitely be back for the spring wildflowers.

Download the Google Earth track

Pictures are HERE.

Banff Mountain Festivals Tour in Nashville

Bryan February 24th, 2007

The 2006 Film Winners at the Bannf Mountain Festivals are coming to the Belcourt Theater in Nashville, thanks to Blue Ridge Mountain Sports. The awards were given last fall at the Canadian Rockies city of Banff. Check out the trailers HERE. Films categories include Best Short Mountain Film, Best Film on Mountain Environment, Best Film on Mountain Sports and Best Film on Climbing. If you love being outside, take a break, come inside for one night and check this out!

The show is on Tuesday, March 27, 7pm, at the Belcourt Theater in the Hillsboro Village area of Nashville. Tickets will be on sale at Blue Ridge Mountain Sports over in Belle Meade for $10 starting around March 5 (might want to call them first 615-356-2300). If there are any left, you can buy them at the door for $12.

And, if any of you aren’t in the Nashville area, check HERE to find out if the tour is coming to a location near you!

Thanks to the March 2007 newsletter from Tennessee Trails for the heads up.

Bowie Nature Park-Perimeter Trail

Bryan February 18th, 2007

Bowie Nature Park is one of Middle Tennessee’s best kept nature secrets. Evangeline Bowie bought the 722 acre tract in the 1950’s when about 30 tons of topsoil was washing away every year. She had terraces and 6 lakes built and planted 500,000 Loblolly Pine Trees to help stop the erosion. Prior to her death in 1992, she deeded the property to the City Of Fairview to be built into a nature park. And build it they did. The park has a nature center, outdoor classroom, and 17 miles of trails. Most of the trails are shared by hikers, horseback riders, and mountain bikers. The trail etiquette is well displayed at the restroom kiosk.

Distance: 5.1 miles round trip
Time: 2.5 hours, with 30 minutes of rest
Elevation change: approximately 184 feet total climb
Trail
type: dirt, some rock, muddy but not uncomfortable to hike
Temperature: mid 30s, cold and sunny. No ice crystals in my water bottle
Significant
features: Forest, lake views at beginning and end, wildlife, and one dead raccoon.

Aptly named, the trail runs in the forest very close to the park boundary. There are some roads and homes to be seen. The trail clearing is about 15 feet wide with the worn part being about 3 feet wide. The trail is not well blazed, but the trail itself is usually very clear. I lost it once near a bridge. It was covered with snow for much of my hike. It was in exceptional shape for a horse trail (none of that ankle deep mud I usually find). Kudos to the City of Fairview and/or volunteers who maintain the trails! Horseback riders and mountain bikers must be prepared to pay a $2 trail access fee.

The trail starts under TVA power lines (can’t seem to get away from those) and parallels them for about 3/4 mile (some at the beginning and some at the end). I apparently disturbed 4 deer from grazing. Then I stepped into the forest for about 3 miles. There is one stream crossing without a bridge (I should have brought my gaiters), but I managed just fine with my boots. I saw a lot of ice in standing water and some near the creek banks. The icicles hanging on to the rock face near the creek were spectacular. I ran across a dead raccoon in the trail. Only saw 2 groups out today (I guess everybody else wanted to stay dry and warm). I finished my hike with a short walk around Lake Van and back to the Jeep. The ducks and geese are hanging out in the lake and generally very active.

Today, the trails were closed to mountain bikers and horses due to the wet weather. You can call ahead to see if they are open or not.

Sorry I don’t have any photos for you this trip as my new camera will be arriving tomorrow. But you can download a file for Google Earth that will let you fly over my trek HERE
.

Duck River Natural Area-Cheeks Bend Bluffs Trail

Bryan February 11th, 2007

In the 1960s, the Tennessee Valley Authority began purchasing land (and sometimes took it, using its eminent domain power) for a lake on the Duck River east of Columbia, Tennessee. Its justification was to dam the river to control flooding. Just a few blocks from downtown Columbia, the area known as Riverside frequently flooded during my childhood. My elementary school was among the buildings that filled with water during the heavy spring rains.

My grandfather took me to the dam site many times to watch it being built. In 1977, with construction on the dam nearly complete, federal courts ordered the project stopped under the Endangered Species Act. The project was held up in legal limbo for about 20 years until TVA had either exhausted its legal challenges or lost its desire to fight. The new Columbia dam project was dead.

In 2002, TVA turned the land it had purchased for the lake over to the state of Tennessee. It is now managed as Yanahli Wildlife Management Area. Within the WMA, the state has designated 6 natural areas, known collectively as the Duck River State Natural Area Complex.

Click the links for more information on the history and biology of the Yanahli WMA. A map of the WMA can be found HERE.

My friend Mike joined me for this excursion.

Distance: approx. 2 miles round trip
Time: 1 hour, with plenty of lolly gagging and yapping
Elevation change: maybe 10 feet
Trail
type: mostly dirt and rock.
Temperature: warmer, around 45 degrees
Significant features: Nice water views along the bluffs during this time. The trees will block some of these views once the leaves come out again.

The trail system is very new and other than the mixed use trails (horses, mountain biking and hiking) on the WMA, Cheeks Bend is the only trail designated for hikers. Maps can be found HERE and HERE. Wish I had found these before I left today.

Pictures can be found HERE.

My Snowy Morning Walk

Bryan February 2nd, 2007

I thought I’d share with you my snowy morning pictures. They were taken on my walk from my house to the road this morning about 8am. For more pictures of snowy Williamson County taken this morning, see Randy’s Morning walk pictures.

Act on the one thing you know

Bryan January 28th, 2007

My friend Dixon Kinser posted this entry to his blog a few days ago:

Quoting Dixon quoting Jennifer Schrock from Simply in Season:

If I had to put what I believe about food and the environment into two words of advice, I would say this: Celebrate hope.

If
you can find a farm, a market, a store where you can see that love for
the earth and for future generations is a priority, sell all that you
have and buy their food. If you can find friendly faces in your local
food systems that are willing to go beyond public relations and discuss
tough questions, hug them! If you can smell the Spirit of God on their
sweet potatoes, buy 20 pounds! Eat those potatoes with gusto, thanking
God that someone, somewhere has a vision.

You are not consistent
in all areas of your life? Lord have mercy on you, a sinner: act on the
one thing you know. You can only afford one holy sweet potato and the
rest is boxed macaroni and cheese? Act on what you can afford. You will
love that sweet potato and the earth that grew it even more.
- Jennifer Schrock, Goshen, Ind.

In our microwave, pill-popping society, our food supply tries to deliver.  Pesticides, unneeded antibiotics, genetic engineering, whatever it takes.  You want strawberries in November?  No problem, they’ve been sitting in a warehouse for a month since we got them from Chile.  Our insistence on eating foods out of season (and oh by the way, it better be cheap) is harming our world.  But the greatest damage being done is to ourselves.  For an eyeopening look into our industrialized food system and the alternative (farm friendly food), a good quick read is Joel Salatin’s Holy Cows and Hog Heaven.

To test the alternative, try buying a few things from the Franklin Farmers Market or the farmers market nearest you.  Get to know the people that grow your food.

By the way, my favorite farm is just a few miles away from me at Rocky Glade Farm.

Radnor Lake Day hike

Bryan January 28th, 2007

Radnor Lake is Tennessee’s very first natural area. Ironically, the lake is not natural at all. It was built in the 1910’s to provide water for the railroad steam engines at nearby Radnor Yard, and as a hunting preserve. The hunting was ended in the 1920s. For over 50 years, the L&N Railroad managed Radnor Lake as a natural area.

Modern locomotives don’t use steam power, and L&N sold the area to a development company in the early 1960’s. Radnor Lake was almost lost to development forever, but lots of grassroots work and Tennessee’s Natural Areas act saved this treasure in 1973.

Trails hiked: Spillway trail from Nature Center to spillway. Then across the dam to Otter Creek Road to the South Cove Trail to Otter Creek Road again. Then to the Lake Trail and back to the Nature Center via the spillway trail.

Distance: 4.5 miles
Time: 2 hours
Elevation change: I didn’t bring my GPS, but not much. Maybe a 100 ft difference, most on the South Cove trail.
Trail type: Varied from gravel to concrete to dirt (not muddy) to mulch.
Temperature: I didn’t check, but it was cold and windy. Guessing 34 degrees
Significant features: Several beautiful lake views

This is a nice hike, especially since its so close. But others know that too and it can be hard at times to watch the wildlife on Otter Creek Road, the Lake Trail, and the Spillway Trail. They are the most used and frequently people who aren’t there to watch the wildlife are rather loud. But it isn’t so bad on the other trails.

I saw 3 ducks in the lake on the south side of Otter Creek Road, but I couldn’t get my camera out fast enough. Other than that, all I saw were the birds in the pictures in the photo album HERE. Anybody know what they are? I think it’s a warbler, but they’re not supposed to be around this time of year… maybe the weather has then fouled up just like me!

Sunday 1/21/2007-It’s Over

Bryan January 21st, 2007

I can’t believe Wilderness Wildlife Week 2007 is already over.  I actually was hoping to get snowed in, but alas, no snow. 

At times, there are 3 or 4 presentations going on simultaneously and at least 4 hikes most days, all requiring varying skill levels.  What I noted here was just a sampling.

Remember to save January 12-20, 2008 for Wilderness Wildlife Week 2008.  Check back at Pigeon Forge’s website for more information.  You can also contact the Music Road Hotel to make reservations starting February 1, 2007.  I’ve already marked my vacation calendar.

« Prev - Next »