


MacKaye did not envision a trail serving the desires of a privileged few, but rather the needs of the average person. From its inception, therefore, the Appalachian Trail was intended to be a welcoming place for all — regardless of ability, experience, or various other factors.
Fulfilling this vision of inclusiveness in the early decades of the 21st century remains a challenge. And yet, there are countless stories of people who experience on the Trail something akin to what MacKaye intended: a sense of peace, rejuvenation, and communion with nature and one another. One such story took place last summer in northwest Georgia.

GATC’s director of community outreach, Lynne Beeson, established the partnership with RWN in 2021 and worked with them to schedule the June 2022 hike. The destination, the Len Foote Inn, was also a result of the club’s efforts. It is a frequent GATC partner for community outreach and education programs year-round. “We were fortunate to be able to engage with them later that year and set up something in 2022,” says Beeson. “We are excited to continue this partnership going forward.”
“Most other outreach hikes to the Hike Inn that I’ve led are with youth groups,” says GATC’s Marianne Skeen, former ATC vice chair who helped lead the RWN hike with her fellow club member Shelley Rose. “The kids are fun, but this trip provided an opportunity for fascinating conversations with strong women from around the world with a wide range of life experiences. It was moving to see how much being in the beautiful woods of north Georgia meant to them.”

Photo by Bonnie Bandurski

Photo by Bonnie Bandurski
She particularly relished the opportunity the hike provided to get rare one-on-one time with her daughter, Leila — something they haven’t had since before her grandchildren arrived. It’s a precious experience for Nahid in part because the two will share in the challenge the hike represented and then get to celebrate their victory. “There are always moments where it feels hard. I have been on hikes before where suddenly we reach an altitude and I’m not able to breathe. Still, I think: ‘I want to make it to the top,’” Nahid says. The distance and difficulty matter far less than the high that comes from meeting the moment.
For Mobina, nothing about snaking through a series of switchbacks in the wilderness felt intuitive, and yet she found herself invigorated by the adrenaline high. For Selina, the excursion represented another welcome first. After embarking on an inaugural cross-country road trip and a subsequent camping excursion, she was eager to tackle her first two-day climb.

The Hike Inn greeted the group at the end of the trail. The sustainably designed ecotourism facility was in many ways the leading draw for those who set out on this particular loop. It provided a welcome setting to swap stories, share photos, play games, and even exchange language lessons.
“It was such a meaningful experience,” says co-hike leader Shelley Rose. “The women were willing and eager to challenge themselves and they showed a lot of curiosity about the native plants and all the sustainability features of the Hike Inn (solar panels, composting toilets, red worm composting). A lot of laughter all along the trail continued into evening.”
It was a welcome reminder for Selina that, in the midst of a western hiking experience, she was surrounded by women who had enjoyed the pastime before they came to the United States and simply continued hiking with their own families and communities here. That had not been Selina’s experience in her Eritrean community. “I love learning about different cultures and history and picking up a few words in Farsi or realizing the derivative of Arabic that I speak allowed some of the women to understand bits and pieces of what I said was so cool,” she says.

Photo by Bonnie Bandurski

Photo by Bonnie Bandurski

Refreshed. Inspired. New beginning. Alive. Peace. Prompted by their guides, each woman shared a word or several that summed up what they would take from the experience. They are the same words that generations of hikers have used to describe why they are drawn again and again to time on the Trail. They are the same feelings that all of us experience, regardless of our level of ability, our familiarity with the A.T., the country we were born in, or the language we speak. The Trail truly does unite us all.
The Georgia A.T. Club is one of thirty Trail maintaining clubs that are responsible for most of the day-to-day work of keeping the footpath open. In addition to Trail maintenance, club volunteers build and repair shelters and other structures, monitor and protect the Trail corridor, monitor and manage rare plants and invasive species, develop management plans for their sections, and much more.
For more information visit: appalachiantrail.org/clubs
For more information about the Refugee Women’s Network visit: refugeewomensnetworkinc.org