Above, sunlight frisks through emerald layers. Each illuminated leaf reveals a singular pattern and a defining tree name—tulip poplar, basswood, sugar maple, horse chestnut, cherry, or ash.
Within this North Carolina June fecundity, I breathe in the exhalation of oxygen from the photosynthesizing forests. I thank the great trees for sweeping our excess carbon from the air. I hold up my hands, spread my fingers like leaves, gather the sun’s energy, and take the first step. I am contemplative, reflective. A newt, as radiant as the rising sun slips beneath a decaying log that yields new life. Every visible root on the Trail snakes downward into the soil, where trees are conversing and aiding one another through an interlacing network of soil fungi.
Beauty Spot, Cherokee National Forest, Tennessee/North Carolina
By Jerry Greer
Beauty Spot, Cherokee National Forest, Tennessee/North Carolina
By Jerry Greer
Above, sunlight frisks through emerald layers. Each illuminated leaf reveals a singular pattern and a defining tree name—tulip poplar, basswood, sugar maple, horse chestnut, cherry, or ash.
Within this North Carolina June fecundity, I breathe in the exhalation of oxygen from the photosynthesizing forests. I thank the great trees for sweeping our excess carbon from the air. I hold up my hands, spread my fingers like leaves, gather the sun’s energy, and take the first step. I am contemplative, reflective. A newt, as radiant as the rising sun slips beneath a decaying log that yields new life. Every visible root on the Trail snakes downward into the soil, where trees are conversing and aiding one another through an interlacing network of soil fungi.
Clockwise from above: Northern red-bellied cooter turtles and great blue heron – Potomac River, Maryland; A.T. view in New Hampshire
Photos by Raymond Salani III
No matter where you hike, run, skip or saunter on the A.T., each lift and fall of your foot is a step away and a step in. Find your mantra at any pace, season, or place within this intricate tapestry cloaking the ancient north-south mountain range. Step away from wrapped food on shelves, from tap water, a roof and four walls, and skies dimmed by streetlights. Step into the ways of foraging animals. Feel hunger pangs when the pantry is only what your pack holds or a berry bush offers. Filter water from streams. Feel this stripping away of all that stands between you and the essence of life. Come into your animal self. Take off your shoes and walk barefoot, if only for a few minutes. Kneel to trace a line of tiny white mushrooms twining their way up a trunk. Step with care to avoid a snail that carries a shell, spiraling like a galaxy.
What scents waft toward you? Perhaps you catch a whiff of licorice or the nose-wrinkling musk of a skunk’s passage. Breathe in balsam fir after a rainstorm in New England or the orange honey of black locust blossoms fringing a May morning in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia. Everything is home, yet everything is unfamiliar. Beauty may unfurl like a fern or pounce like knock-your-socks-off joy upon a bouldered summit. There is delight in the hard-earned vista and the long green tunnel alike.
Clockwise from top left: Snail – Harpers Ferry, West Virginia; Red eft salamander in Harriman/Bear State Park, New York
Photos by Raymond Salani III;
Fiddlehead fern – New Hampshire
Photo by Mike Adamovic
The Maine journals I kept from a Monson-to-Katahdin backpack trip with my father spill over with accounts of the downward view. Because the footpath is narrow, wild gardens come close—pitcher plant bogs, red bunchberries glistening on moss, and wild blueberries. Such is the power of the pause. Sometimes, when a quick and steady pace feels right, the woodlands, meadows, streams, cliffs, ascents, and descents form a flowing stream of colors and textures. And then? A great blue heron lumbers from a marsh into elemental flight. Pause then. Coming to a river sparkled in sunshine, the currents reflect molten silver. Pause here, too.
Whether moving, resting, or camping, be attuned to all that glimmers. Waking at night to unzip the tent, your headlamp may shine upon spiders unspooling silk, their webs shimmering silver. Dozing at dawn, the “dee-dee-dees” of a chickadee signal your awakening.
To step away and into beauty also requires a few practicalities. Prepare and practice for adversity. Test raingear, heft of pack, or new hiking shoes. Misery is a poor companion. In my Maine journal, I wrote this entry about Nesuntabunt Mountain when a growling beast of a lightning storm overtook us: “Downpour. The new sensation was exciting at first, but soon became soddening and slimy.” And yet, I also scrawled these words: “Still, we could not resist the beauty. Rainbow Stream rushed down smooth clefts of granite, funneled into raging chutes, then swirled into pools. Always the moss, the frogs, the forest.”
From left: Tree fungi – Delaware Water Gap, New Jersey; Lobster mushroom – New York
Photos by Raymond Salani III
Upon your return home, let your gratitudes tumble like the pure headwater springs. Tingling senses sharpen to moon phases, dawn chorus, a bee buzz, or light spangling through leaves. Feel a tenderness for this greater home, even as you dream of the next time. Keep memories close in photos, journals, sketches, and other art. Investigate maps and plan for the side trails, too. To know and to name, you might study trees, flowers, wildlife, geology, and history, beginning with the Indigenous tribes who have long held a culture of reciprocity within the Appalachian Mountains. Step up to preserve the Trail’s wild natural beauty, for as Henry David Thoreau so presciently penned, “In wildness is the preservation of the world.” Let the A.T. be our collective love story.