More podcasts from Joe Miller

Search for episodes from GetHiking! Southeast with a specific topic:

Latest episodes from GetHiking! Southeast

2023 North Carolina's Year of the Trail

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2022 12:24


This week, the last week of 2022, we kick off 2023 and North Carolina's year of the Trail. We talk with Beth Heile with the Great Trails State Coalition, a nonprofit created to promote trails in North Carolina, and we talk a little about our work with the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources' Hometown Strong initiative to promote trails in North Carolina's 80 rural counties. This week, we have a special emphasis on the start of Year of the Trail with a plethora of First Day Outings and how you can find out about them.Some helpful links related to this week's show:Great Trails State Coalition. Learn more about the Coalition and their work by clicking here.The Great Trails State Coalition is keeping a comprehensive calendar of all Year of the Trail events, including Sunday's First Day Outings. You can find it here.Interested in taking a First Day hike at one of North Carolina's State Parks? Check out the 47 First Day events at State Parks by going here. Mention is made in the podcast of North Carolina's 12 State Trails. Learn more about those by going here.Finally, if you'd like to join us on New Year's Day, we'll be working with the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission's NC Bird Atlas program and N.C. State Parks on a Birding and a Hike First Day adventure in Wilkesboro and at Rendezvous Mountain State Park. Learn more about this event and sign up to join us here.

A Look at North Carolina's 12 State Trails

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 26:44


Today on the GetHiking! Southeast Podcast we revisit North Carolina's 12 State Trails. Revisit, because in March 2021 we spoke with State Trails Coordinator Smith Raynor about the trails. That discussion was a more broad-based chat about the State Trails program. Today, we take a closer look at each of the 12 trails, and later we will revisit these trails again to see how 2023, designated The Year of the Trail in North Carolina, will impact the development of these long trails. But let us not get ahead of ourselves. Today's podcast is from one of our twice a month Lunch with GetHiking! Zoom sessions, this one from June 30. Learn moreAbout North Carolina's 12 State Trails at the State Parks website here.About 2023 The Year of the Trail in North Carolina at the Great Trails State Coalition website here.NewsLearn more about Dr. Morgan Smith's free online presentation, “Exploring Tennessee's Submerged Cultural Landscapes and Resources,” here. Register to attend the aforementioned “Exploring Tennessee's Submerged Cultural Landscapes and Resources" presentation here.Interested in hiking the recently renovated and reopen Big Creek Trail in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park? Find trail information, including a map, here.Explore with Us!Join us for an upcoming hike, trip or class by visiting our GetGoingNC.com site and clicking on Explore with Us!

First trails open in Pisgah's Old Fort Project

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 6:12


The first 6 miles of trail in a project to eventually add 42 miles in the Old Fort area of North Carolina's Pisgah National Forest have opened. That and more national forest news, from Virginia and Tennessee, in this week's report.For more information on the trail opening and the Old Fort project, start here.For more information on the reopening of the High Knob Recreation Area in the George Washington and Jefferson National Forest, go here.

7 Mountain Hikes that are Summer Perfect

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 41:50


Come summer, we head to the high country of the Southern Appalachians to escape the  sizzling heat at lower elevations. Today, we talk about 7 of our favorite high country hikes for summer, hikes that meet one of two criteria for summer exploring: they either need elevation to escape the heat, or they must have access to water. Better still, both. You can find more information on these hikes and other great mountain hikes in this GetHiking! guide, 7 Mountain Hikes for a Sizzling Summer.In the NewsIn our news report, we cover the closure of the Carden Bluffs Campground in the Watauga District of Tennessee's Cherokee National Forest due to campers being careless with food and trash. How can you keep from having your favorite campground shuttered by nutty bears? By following the advice offered by bearwise.org, which you can find here.Explore with Us!Join us for an upcoming hike, trip or class by visiting our GetGoingNC.com site and clicking on Explore with Us!

GetHiking! 50+ 10 Tips for Hikers 50 and Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 35:18


Today, we share 10 bits of advice primarily for folks 50 and older who are interested in getting into into hiking, as well as for established older hikers who want to continue hiking late into life. It's taken from a Lunch with GetHiking! Zoom session on June 2. (Lunch with GetHiking! is an every other Thursday event done via Zoom, in which we discuss a variety of hiking topics.  Find out when our next event is by joining our GetHiking! Meetup page here.)In the NewsFor more on the opening of the country's longest rubber-bearing multiuser trail, in Tennessee's T.O. Fuller State Park, go here.For more on closures in Virginia's George Washington and Jefferson National Forests, including at Peters Mountain and Whitetop Mountain, go here.Explore with Us!Join us for an upcoming hike, trip or class by visiting our GetGoingNC.com site and clicking on Explore with Us!

Celebrate your local trails this National Trails Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 16:37


Since 1993, the first Saturday of June has been observed as National Trails Day. Administered by the American Hiking Society, it's a day when we celebrate our trails, either by hiking (or, in the case of "blue" trails, paddling) them, or by rolling up our sleeves to do trail maintenance or blaze a new trail. Today, we talk a little about the history of National Trails Day as well as what's going on this year.To learn more about National Trails Day, visit the American Hiking Society web site here.In the newsFor more information on the reopening of portions of the Occoee National Whitewater Center in Tennessee's Cherokee National Forest, go here.To find what facilities are now open along the Blue Ridge Parkway ion North Carolina and Virginia, go here.Explore with Us!To learn more about our GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! adventures, visit GetGoingNC.com, click on Explore with Us!

It's time (past time?) to book a summer campsite

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 27:38


Camping has grown in popularity, especially over the past couple of years. Time was it wasn't hard to score a campsite at the last minute. That's changed, even at less popular campsites. Today we look at how to book a site during the camping boom.In the newsCheck on forest fire levels and on scheduled prescribed burns at these National Forest websites:GeorgiaNorth CarolinaVirginiaTennesseeSouth CarolinaWest VirginiaExplore with Us!For information on our GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! trips, visit GetGoingNC.com and click on Explore with Us! 

Living (and hiking!) 'til you're 200, with Jevitty's Jerry Kroll

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 39:00


Imagine approaching 70 and wondering how many years of hiking you have left? Five, 10, maybe 15? Now imagine you've only reached the midpoint in your hiking career, that you could easily have another 70 years — or more — of hiking in you. Jerry Kroll has long been a cutting-edge kind of guy, dating back to his sustainable clothing venture in the late 1980s to his ElectraMeccanica Vehicles Corporation, which has produced a single-occupant electric car — with three wheels no less. Now, Jerry is a year into his most far-sighted venture yet, Jevitty Life Science, which is creating an app — now in the beta stage — that could help you take advantage of existing and emerging technology to live to be 200 years old — or older. Today, in one of our GetHiking! 50+ episodes, Jerry, who is 62 and an avid marathon runner, talks about Jevitty and how Mel Brooks' 2000-year-old man may be a stretch, but a 200-year-old human may not be so far-fetched in the near future.To learn more about the Jevitty app, go here.In the NewsOcoee Whitewater Center fire. To learn more about the 1996 Summer Olympics whitewater events site, which was destroyed by fire April 26, go here.Barnett Branch Fire in North Carolina. For the latest on this wildfire along the Blue Ridge Parkway near the Pisgah Inn, go here.Morrow Mountain State Park renovations. Head here for more details on the year-long renovation of facilities and trail.Mother's Day feast at Tennessee State Parks. Learn more about the Mother's Day meals, including the menus, at four Tennessee State Parks, go here.Explore with Us!Learn more about the trips mentioned in today's podcast and other trips and classes coming up in our GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! universes by going here.

A Mercifully Brief Safety Rant

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 9:57


The U.S. Forest Service will close the Catawba Falls Trails on May 2 to make a number of trail improvements to make access to its popular namesake falls safer. But can they possibly make it safe enough. This week, a short rant about the need not necessarily for fool-proof trails, but for awareness and a little common sense. ResourcesYou can learn more about  our "Let's GetHiking: A Quick and Comprehensive Guide for the Aspiring Hiker,"  and order a copy, here.Find basic resource for hiking at the American Hiking Society website, here.Explore with us!Learn more about the trips our GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! groups are taking at GetGoingNC.com, click on Explore with us!

Hiking the Evening into Night

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 26:19


Hiking at night offers rewards not offered in daylight. This type of hiking calls for a different level of concentration: your world is defined by the sphere of light cast by your  headlamp. You tune in the sounds of the night, which are not the same as the sounds of daytime: more owls than warblers, more raccoons than squirrels. Pause in a clearing, snuff your light and you can see the glories of the vast night sky. It's a special place, the night world, and it is one well worth exploring. Today we offer  tips on how to take a safe and successful evening-into-night hike.Night Hike Tips: For the GetHiking! Rule the Night tips sheet on hiking into the night, go here.In the newsFor more on the Schoolhouse Ridge Trail reopening, go here.Explore with us!To learn more about our GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! hikes, trips and classes, go here.

Avoiding Spring's Crowded Trails

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 20:24


The trails have long been crowded come spring and fall. In the last two years, they've become even more so as an increasing number of people have discovered hiking as a safe way to recreate. So what's a long-time hiker to do, hibernate in the best two hiking seasons of the year and wait out the masses? Not hardly, especially if you know how to beat the crowds. In today's episode, we share some tips on how to find the solitude you crave on the trail, even during the active spring hiking season.In the News14-day camping limit imposed. To learn more about the 14-day camping limit imposed in the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest, go here.Ramps gathering in Tennessee. To learn more about the permits being issued to collect ramps in the Tellico Ranger District of the Cherokee National Forest, go here or call 423.397.8455.Forest fire danger. To check on the danger of forest fires throughout the Southeast, visit the State Climate Office of North Carolina's Fire Weather Intelligence Portal here.

Seasonal Closures and Spring Break

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 7:53


Seasonal closures don't always end when they're supposed to: it pays to double check before heading out, especially this time of year.  Also, spring break is coming: do you know where you'll be spending it?For more on Seasonal closures (and reopenings) in National Forests, check  the appropriate National Forest Service website and look under "Events & News"/"Alerts & Notices".GeorgiaNorth CarolinaVirginiaTennesseeSouth CarolinaWest VirginiaInterested in taking the family outdoors for spring break? See what your local State Park has anything happening by checking here:GeorgiaVirginiaNorth CarolinaSouth Carolina TennesseeWest Virginia

The return of Daylight Saving Time — and what it means to you

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 9:51


This past Sunday, March 13, marked the return of Daylight Saving Time throughout the land, and whether you think it a devious contrivance designed entirely to benefit the vast Barbecue Industrial Complex — I know, we're in the South, I should call it the vast Grilling industrial Complex — or think Daylight Saving doesn't go far enough, that we should have 24 hours of daylight, Daylight Saving Time is here and we should make the most of it. In today's episode we discuss how to do just that.In the NewsFor information on the Sliding Rock Recreation Area in the Pisgah National Forest, go here.For information on the opening of nearly 50- developed recreation sites in the Monongahela National Forest, go  hereFor  information on seasonal openings in Virginia's George Washington and Thomas Jefferson national forests, go here.To find a hike in Tennessee State Parks' Spring Hike Series, go here.Explore with Us!For information on our GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! trips, visit GetGoingNC.com and click on Explore with Us! 

In Search of Spring

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 18:23


We love winter, but when mid-February rolls around we can't help but be on the lookout for signs of spring. What are the harbingers of the season and where do we search for them? That's the topic of today's podcast.Download our Spring Wildflowers tip sheet, here, for more info on what spring wildflowers to look for at the beginning of the season, and where to search for them. Find it here.In the NewsFor a rundown of cliff faces in western North Carolina National Forests closed through Aug. 15 for peregrine falcon nesting season, go here.To reserve a space to hike Old Rag in Virginia's Shenandoah National Park, go here.Explore with Us!To learn more about the GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! trips mentioned in today's podcast, visit GetGoingNC.com, clock on Explore with Us!

Training for Long Distance hikes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 26:13


Looking to get into the mountains a lot this year and explore new trail? Or maybe you've got a hiking vacation planned. If you've got big hiking goals, you need a good training program to to meet them. It needn't be a strictly regimented program — not necessarily one that requires running stairs in your 12-story office building before and after work. Rather, it needs to be one you'll adhere to and thus, is fun. In today's episode we talk about devising a practical hike training program suited to you.Looking for a long trail to train for long hikes on?  Check out this post on long hikes at GetGoingNC.com from February  2.NewsFor updates on the Smith Creek Trail reopening following the Unicoi fire, go here.To find out when planned prescribed burns in the Mount Rogers area will take place, check out Mount Rogers National Recreation Area social media:  Twitter or Facebook.Learn more about visitation to National Parks in 2021 by visiting the National Park Service Social Science website and by visiting the NPS Visitor Use Statistics website.Explore with usCheck out the trips mentioned in this podcast at GetGoingNC.com, click on Explore with Us

GetGoing! at 50: A Hiker is Born (at age 62)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 31:34


Like a lot of us, Robin Barefoot got her first taste of being outdoors as a kid, in her case, on the summer vacations her family took in the Adirondack Mountains of New York. And, also like a lot of us, life intervened as she got older and she found herself playing in the woods less and less. Then, in the early 2000s her interest in the woods was rekindled on a trip to the Smokies with her two kids and a friend. Then, a couple years ago, the Durham resident decided to act. She wandered into her local outfitter and asked if they knew of any local hiking groups. They did, setting Robin on the path to achieving her new goal of becoming a hiker, at the age of 62. Robin shares her story in this GetGoing at 50 segment of the GetHiking! Southeast Podcast.Second ChildhoodIf you're interested in learning more about gene expression or other aspects of aging successfully, check out Daniel J. Levitin's "Successful Aging: A Neuroscientist Explores the Power and Potential of Our Lives," published in 2020 and now available in paperback. 

Our Favorite Hiking Resources for Scouting and Planning (and Just Being Entertained)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 25:00


Today we talk about  some of  resources we use for scouting and planning hikes and trips, and for simple entertainment. The links follow:  Trail status, road conditionsNorth Carolina State ParksBlue Ridge ParkwayGreat Smoky Mountains National ParkCroatan, Nantahala, Pisgah and Uwharrie National ForestsShenandoah National ParkVirginia National Forests (George Washington and Jefferson)Virginia State ParksAppalachian TrailVirginia State Parks Sunrise, sunset Sunrise-sunset.orgLeave No TraceCenter for Outdoor Ethics's Leave No Trace websiteVolunteer VacationsAmerican Hiking Society's Volunteer Vacations pageAmerican Hiking Society: general hiking resourcesAmerican Hiking SocietyFastest Known Times fastestknowntime.comWildflower IDA Virtual Wildflower Garden Across TimeFAQ on hiking the Appalachian TrailAppalachian Trail Conservancy's Frequently Asked QuestionsNational Trails Day eventsAmerican Hiking Society's NTD pageMountains-to-Sea TrailFriends of the Mountains-to-Sea TrailFire dangerState Climate Office of North Carolina Fire Weather Intelligence PortalCampsite AssistCampsite Assist portion of CampitePhotos.com Hiking with dogs"Best Hikes with Dogs: North Carolina"The night skySkywatching page at space.comBonus resourcesState state educational forestsNorth Carolina Educational State ForestsNeed a trail name?Trail Name GeneratorHiking etiquetteAmerican Hiking Society's Hiking etiquette page

Our 6 Favorite Backpacking Destinations (by mood)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022 24:36


By mood? We're always in a good mood when we backpack — how could we not be? Rather, by "mood" in this instant we're referring to the kind of backpack trip we'd like to take, or that we have time for. In short, the type of trip we're in the mood for. Thus, we break down our favorite trips by category. They are:Best Weekend TripBest Winter TripBest Basecamp TripBest Wilderness TripBest Avoid-the-Masses TripBest Trip, PeriodYou can learn more about each trip and find a link with details on taking your own Best trip on our GetGoingNC.com blog, here.Join usOur GetBackpacking! program will lead four of this trips between now and summer. Click the link for more information and to sign up.Appalachian Trail: Max Patch to Hot Springs, February 25-27Shining Rock Wilderness via Big East Fork, April 22-24Virginia's Triple Crown, May 19-22Appalachian Trail: Carvers Gap to US 19E, June 17-19Not a backpacker, but want to be?Our Spring GetBackpacking! Intro to Backpacking classes are starting soon Each includes, among other elements:1-hour Zoom Intro to Gear Session5-hour in-field training session, covering all aspects of backpackingWeekend graduation tripLearn more by clicking on the appropriate session:North CarolinaVirginiaIn the newsLearn more about stories in our news segment.Mount Mitchell Trail improvementsFor more information on the improvements themselves, go here.For details on the American Conservation Experience, go here.For info on the N.C. High Peaks Trail Association, go here.

GetGoing! After 50: Tales of Adventure from the Second Half

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2022 27:24


Think about your recent hikes. Notice anything about your fellow hikers? About their age? That, maybe they're a little older than you might think? According to the latest Outdoor Participation report from the Outdoor Foundation, hiking is the most popular form of outdoor recreation for people ages 45 to 64. And it's not surprising that this trend would be especially noticeable on trails here in the Southeastern U.S. because of the number of older people who relocate here, sometimes to be closer to their kids who've moved here, sometimes simply for the more moderate climate. And even if these folks didn't hike before, the preponderance of hiking trails here proves an attractive way to stay healthy and enjoy the weather, especially our moderate winters. The seven states that comprise our primary focus area here at the GetHiking! Southeast Podcast — Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, South Carolina and Kentucky — have a combined 11,500 miles of trail. In fact, more than half of the Appalachian Trail — 1,190 miles — is in the Southeast. Today, in an occasional series we call GetGoing Over 50, we begin looking at this phenomenon of older adventure-seekers, starting with a conversation with two guys who could be the poster children for the retired, but not relegated to the recliner. Bob and Henry relocated to the Triangle area of North Carolina from Chicago and Long Island, respectively, and are now more active than ever. I caught up with them at the start of one of their weekly outings together, this one an 8-mile hike — much of it off trail — along the Eno River in the Piedmont of central North Carolina.NewsWe promised you links, here are the links:For more information on the Georgia DNR Career Academy, go here.To learn more about the new pilot program limiting visitation to Shenandoah National Park's Old Rag, go here. 

Bluestem: A hike for all eternity

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2022 47:03


Have you ever been hiking through an area that was so captivating that you didn't want to leave — ever? Well, that dream can come true at Bluestem, a fledgling 87-acre nature preserve in northern Orange County North Carolina. Here, you can walk through open pastures, in fringe forest, along a small piedmont creek, past a farm pond … and when you're done hiking — for good — pick your favorite place in the preserve and stake your claim — for eternity. Because Bluestem isn't another nature preserve with 3 or 4 miles of hiking trail, it's also a conservational burial ground, a place where you can have a low-impact green burial and not only enjoy the rolling Piedmont landscape in perpetuity, but become a part of it as well.Recently we caught up with Heidi Hannapel and Jeff Masten to learn more about this emerging conservation cemetery — and hiking destination — that they're creating northwest of Durham.For more information on:Bluestem, go hereConservation Burial Alliance, go hereGreen Burial Council, go hereIn the NewsTo learn about the nearly 90 seasonal road closures in North Carolina National Forests, go here.

28.3 Miles in One Day: the Ultimate Hike

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 37:07


Back in 2011 I was approached by Curesearch, a nonprofit dedicated to eradicating children's cancer, asking if I'd be interested in helping with a new fundraising program they were starting, the Ultimate Hike. The deal was this: I would lead a 12-week training program with the ultimate goal of hiking 28.3 miles on the Foothills Trail straddling the North Carolina / South Carolina line — that's 28.3 miles all in one day. Along the way, they would vow to fundraise a minimum of $2,500 to help fight kids cancer. Hiking and helping kids? Who could refuse that!One of the hikers on my second hike was Chris Morton. Chris and his wife, Candi, were casual hikers with a keen interest in Ultimate Hike's mission: their 1-year-old daughter had a rare form of liver cancer and was undergoing treatment at the Duke Cancer Center in Durham, North Carolina. So motivated by the hike and Curesearch's mission was Chris that he continued doing the hike after that first year. When I left as coach of the Triangle area after five years, Chris became my replacement.Chris now has 20 Ultimate Hikes under his belt, and is gearing up to lead yet another group of hikers in the battle against childhood cancer. Chris joins us today to tells us about the Ultimate Hike, from his boots-on-the-ground perspective.If you're intrigued by the idea of hiking 28.3 miles in a day and helping kids with cancer at the same time, go to the Ultimate Hike website for the Foothills hike for additional information and to find the time of the next information session. And, register by January 15 and enter the code HIKENC at checkout and save 50 percent off the $100 registration fee,Don't live in the Triangle area of North Carolina? Training sessions will also be held in: AtlantaCharlotteColumbia, S.C.Greenville, S.C.In the NewsFor more information on the MY TN State Park fundraiser, go here.To find out when roads and trails will be closed as a result of the Mt Storm-Valley electricity transmission line project in the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests in Virginia, go here.To learn more about the mission of the U.S. Forest Service, to here.For information on the reopening of trails in the Lost Cove area of Wilson Creek in North Carolina's Pisgah National Forest, visit the North Carolina National Forests Facebook page here.Explore with us!To learn more about the trips mentioned in today's podcast, as well as other hikes, trips and classes planed by GetHiking! and GetBackpacking!, go here.

First Day Hikes in the Southeast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2021 14:50


The notion of beginning a new year with a brisk walk goes back ages, but the modern concept of First Day Hikes is relatively new, dating back only to 1992 when a Massachusetts State Park held the first First Day Hike. With the lure of hot soup, the hike drew 380 hikers. Massachusetts State Parks began offering similar First Day Hikes throughout Massachusetts in 2008, and the concept went national in 2012 thanks to America's State Parks, which represents State Parks nationwide. More than 400 hikes were held across the US that first year.  Last year, more than 55,000 people welcomed 2022 with a First Day Hike.In today's episode, we look at First Day Hike options at state parks throughout the Southeast. You can learn more about the hikes mentioned, as well as other First Day Hikes in the region, by clicking the appropriate State Park link below:GeorgiaNorth Carolina South CarolinaVirginiaTennesseeWest VirginiaNot in our listening area? You can find a rundown of First Day Hikes nationwide at the America's State Parks website, here.Find a history of the First Day Hikes concept here.Not accustomed to cold weather hiking? The American Hiking Society offers tips for cold weather hiking here. You can learn more about our GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! adventures, and everything else we do at GetGoingNC.com, click on Explore with us!

Make your 2022 goals reflect your true passion

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 13:30


In today's podcast on 2022 hiking goals, we throw out some options. Here are links you can click to learn more:South Beyond 6,000 ChallengePisgah 400Carolina Mountain Club Challenges pageMountains-to-Sea TrailUwharrie National Recreation TrailNeusiok TrailArt Loeb TrailMount Mitchell TrailAppalachian TrailIn our News segment:On road and facility closures, you can find a comprehensive rundown in the Monongahela National Forest here.To keep tabs on closures on the Blue Ridge Parkway, go here.To find a First Day Hike at a State Park near you, click the appropriate link below:GeorgiaNorth CarolinaVirginiaTennesseeWest Virginia

Welcome Winter! (And Closed for the Season)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2021 8:54


We welcome winter with some great state park programs  — and news of seasonal closings. Also, Pilot Mountain State Park reopens after a devastating wildfire.For more infoOn the 5 Virginia State Parks winter programs discussed in today's podcast, go here.On closings: Key links for checking ahead on closings and road conditions:Blue Ridge ParkwayN.C. Department of TransportationGreat Smoky Mountains National ParkNorth Carolina State ParksNorth Carolina National Forests (Croatan, Pisgah, Nantahala, Uwharrie)Virginia Department of TransportationShenandoah National ParkVirginia National Forests (George Washington and Jefferson)Virginia State Parks 

Holiday visitors? Take 'em on a trip to remember (for all the right reasons!)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 39:20


Tis the season for holiday visitors. And what to do with them while they're in town? Why, take them on a hike, of course. Now, for the non-hikers in your group that may be easier said than done. This week, we offer tips on how to make sure your visitor has a great first experience on the trail.Looking for more tips on how to make sure your visitor's first hike is a great one? You'll find them at a post we wrote for our friends at Blue Cross NC, "Make sure you plan ahead for full-day hikes."Looking for specific hikes that are good intro hikes? In North Carolina, we offer some suggestions in this post at GetGoingNC.com, "10 Hikes for Holiday Visitors."First Day HikesIn our News segment we mention upcoming First Day Hikes as a way to celebrate the New Year. Click the appropriate state park system to find the First Day Hike nearest you.GeorgiaNorth CarolinaVirginiaTennesseeSouth CarolinaWest Virginia

Tips for Hiking off Trail

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021 26:00


Ah, winter, beguiling winter, the season that drops its guard when it drops its leaves. Minus the lush canopy, minus the understory and ground cover you see deeper into the woods and discover the forest's hidden treasures: the foundation of an old homestead, an impressive rock outcrop, an old roadbed that leads ... somewhere. The urge to go off trail and explore is a siren song that can be too great to resist. But before you venture from the safety and security of the trail, there are a few tips you should be aware of; those tips are the focus of today's podcast.For our GetOriented! Finding Your Way in the Woods Guide, with lots of tips on exploring off trail, go here and enter code FindingYourWay at checkout.NewsFor more on the state of North Carolina's inclusion of $29.25 million for the Complete the Trails Fund, go here.

Winter Hiking: Go Coastal, Go Wild

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2021 29:58


We are in the process of turning the corner on fall color and for some, that means the close of the fall hiking season. The color is gone — what's there to see? goes one argument. And there's: the holidays are coming — who's got time to hike with all the demands of the season? In short answer to the latter, who doesn't have time to hike because of all those holiday demands!? I mean, isn't part of the reason we get out to escape the stress of everyday life? As for the former — What is there to see in winter? — the short answer: plenty. We elaborate on the joys of winter hiking in this episode.Winter escapesWe're working on our winter lineup of hikes and trips; here's what we've got so far:GetHiking! Winter Wild. From November thru March we take advantage of the exposed terrain and the dearth of creepy crawly things to explore some of the more wild lands in our midst. Learn where we go and why, here.GetHiking! Hike Through the Holidays. If you live in the Triangle area you're in luck. We have a package of 16 hikes in November and December on four days of the week to different locations. Even with the busiest holiday schedule, you're bound to find a great hike or five in this package. Learn more and sign up to join us here.

The Gifts of Adventure

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2021 8:57


Now that Halloween has passed and the holiday season is in full swing, we suggest considering the gift of adventure — a gift that can also benefit the places you love to take your adventures. While our focus is on gifts available through Georgia State Parks, every State and National Park in the region has gifts suitable for swell gifts. Click the links below to start your holiday gift-buying:State ParksGeorgia State ParksNorth Carolina State Parks Virginia State Parks South Carolina State Parks Tennessee State ParksWest Virginia State ParksNational ParksBlue Ridge Parkway Shenandoah National ParkGreat Smoky Mountains National Park

Backpacking with Bryan DeLay: Exploring the Southern Appalachians for more than 50 years

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2021 45:32


Bryan DeLay was 12 when he took his first backpacking trip, with his Scout Troop, in the mountains of Tennessee; he was smitten. But it wasn't until he was 35 and realizing there had to be more to life than developing shopping centers that he got into backpacking big time. Over the next 30 some years the Knoxville resident estimates he's spent 75 to 100 nights a year in a tent, bringing his number of nights on the trail to around 1,600, and the number of states he's backpacked in to 25. Despite taking a big trip out West every August, Bryan, a native of Tennessee, still prefers backpacking in his backyard, the Southeastern United States.In 2008, Bryan started documenting his trips on YouTube, as Backpacking with Bryan Delay. Today, we talk with Bryan about his adventures and why he prefers the Southeast backpacking experience.Check out Bryan's videos on his YouTube Channel, Backpacking with Bryan DeLay, here.In the NewsFor more on the Tree Cookie celebration Saturday, Oct. 30, at Lamar Alexander Rocky Fork State Park in Tennessee, go here. For more on exploring the park itself, go here.Check out the new WNC Outdoor Industry Job Board  here.

We talk fall color — when and where to find it — with N.C. State Parks Ranger Maggie Miller

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2021 28:43


From her post at Pilot Mountain State Park near the Blue Ridge Escarpment, N.C. State Parks Ranger Maggie Miller talks about the coming fall color — specifically, when it's coming and  the best places to catch it. For more information on the North Carolina State Parks she mentions — or for any other state park in the Tar Heel state — go hereFor information on the Hawk Watch program mentioned by Ranger Smith, check out the North Carolina State Parks Events and Programs page here.In the NewsWe also catch up on fall color in Georgia and Virginia, with information on where you can find the latest breaking news in those states. Click the appropriate state below:Georgia State ParksVirginia State ParksControlled burns will be occurring in the Cherokee and Monongahala National Forests. For specifics:On controlled burns in the Cherokee National Forest, go here. On controlled burns in the Monongahala National Forest, go here. 

Seeking Fall Color on the Blue Ridge Parkway

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2021 10:46


The National Park Service reports that 2 million people visit the Blue Ridge Parkway in October alone. That is a whole of traffic and a whole lot of potential company as you seek fall color and solitude. In this episode, the National Park Service offers 10 tips on how to make the most of October on the parkway — and we share some thoughts as well.Related resourcesRoad Status. To see about road closures and delays along the Blue Ridge Parkway, go here. Rocky Knob Recreation Area. To learn more about Rocky Knob and the Rock Castle Gorge Loop Trail, go here.Doughton Park Recreation Area. To learn more about the Doughton Park Recreation Area and its 30 miles of trail, especially those accessible from Long Bottom Road, go here.To get the latest info on fall color along the Blue Ridge Parkway, check out their social media:FacebookInstagramTwitter

Ramblin' Man: Our Thoughts on the Journey to the Adventure

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2021 32:47


While our goal is to put foot to trail, the drive to the trailhead and back home can have its illuminating moments as well. On the drive out, we speculate about the adventure ahead, on the drive back, we reflect on the adventure had. Car time can be a rare time to be alone with our thoughts. And a scary time, too. Today, we let the recorder run as we make the two-and-a-half-hour drive to a backpack trip in South Mountains State Park.NewsWith bears feeding up to hunker down for the winter, and with the fall leaf peepers out in drives, it's no surprise that an altercation or two occurs. A picnicking couple and their dog had a skirmish with a bear on the Blue Ridge Parkway near Asheville; learn about what you should do in a similar situation at BearWise.orgFall color comes to West Virginia. Learn when and where to expect it here.

Finding the Trails Less Traveled

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2021 30:27


Busy time on the trail, fall. Something about temperatures in the 60s and trees ablaze in color brings out the hiker in darn near everyone. For the next couple of months, the trails will be packed. Well, some of the trails. In today's GetHiking! Southeast Podcast, taken from our first Lunch with GetHiking! Zoom session, we discuss how to find the trails less traveled during the fall hiking frenzy. As mentioned, the episode is taken from our new Lunch with GetHiking! series: every other Thursday at noon we'll gather on Zoom to discuss hiking topics pertinent for the season. Here's a schedule of our topics through year's end, followed by the Zoom link to join in.Sept. 16 — Finding the Trails Less Traveled. This early run of fall-like weather has been both blessing and curse. After a summer of heat and humidity, the first half of September has been hiking-perfect: Sunny, dry days coupled with clear, cool nights. You can't wait to get on the trail — and neither can the seasonal masses who discover hiking every year at this time. In the first of our every-other-Thursday Lunch with GetHiking! Zoom gatherings, we'll talk about  ways to find the trails less traveled. Some may be obvious, some not so much.Sept. 30 — Our Favorite Trails Less Traveled. Last week we told you how you can find the trails less traveled, this week we tell you about some of our favorites. .Oct. 14 — Fall color comes to the piedmont. Color should be beginning to blossom in the Triangle. We discuss what to look for, where to look for it. We might bring in someone with State Parks to talk specifically about color in the parks.Oct. 28 — Longer hikes. Maybe your hikes have been in the 3- to 5-mile category so far this fall. And lately, maybe you've felt you'd like to hike farther: cool weather will do that. We discuss what to consider as you start hiking longer as well as some of our favorite Piedmont hikes in the 5- to 10-mile range.Nov. 11 — Coastal Hiking. It's finally cool enough, the biting bugs and slithery critters are at bay. It's time to look east for a hiking destination. We discuss 5 of our favorite coastal hikes, with handout.Nov. 24 (Wednesday, the day before Thanksgiving) — Where to take the visiting kin for a Thanksgiving Day/Weekend hike. Our shorter favorite trails that showcase the best the region has to offer. Includes handout.Dec. 9 — Winter hiking. It's a knee-jerk reaction: it's getting cold, time to hang up the hiking gear until spring. Winter can be a magical time on the trail; we discuss how, and why you should keep hiking through the winter. Dec. 23 — Hike in the New Year. Where to hike in the new year and what to expect on a First Day hike. Plus, setting goals for 2022.Join us! Here's the link to join us at noon every other Thursday for Lunch with GetHiking!

You have Questions, Patrick Boleman has Answers: a Walk with a Naturalist

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021 40:25


When you're hiking a trail, you have questions. All kinds of questions, especially if you're hiking in the nature- and history-rich southeastern United States. What kind of tree is that? Why is it growing in this particular spot? And how did this trail come to be, anyway. Last week I had a chance to get a lot of my questions answered on a hike with Patrick Boleman, Land Stewardship manager for the eastern properties of the Triangle Land Conservancy, based on Durham, North Carolina. Related links:Learn more about the Bailey and Sarah Williamson Preserve where we hiked, here.Learn more about the work of the Triangle Land Conservancy, here.Learn more about the work of land trusts in general, and find the land trust nearest you, at the Land Trust Alliance,  here.In the NewsFor information on the upcoming fall leaf season in Georgia, visit  GaStateParks.org/LeafWatch, and for North Carolina, visit romanticasheville.com.For more on the National Rolley Hole Marbles Championship Sept. 18 at Tennessee's Standing Stone State Park, go here.

Make the Most of the Fall Hiking Season: Here's How

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2021 28:48


As hikers, we get excited whenever there's a changing of the seasonal guard. But we get especially excited when the season changes to fall. So little time — about three months — so many plans. Today, we offer some quick tips on how to take the best advantage of the fall hiking season.You can find additional tips, as well as more information on the tips we mention in the podcast, here.The NewsFor the latest on what's open and what's not in our regional National Forests in the wake of Tropical Depression Fred and Hurricane Ida, click the appropriate link below:Pisgah National Forest (North Carolina)Cherokee National Forest (Tennessee)George Washington and Jefferson National Forests (Virginia)Monongahela National Forest (West Virginia)Learn more about Tennessee State Parks' offer of a 50 percent accommodations discount for Louisiana residents displaced by Hurricane Ida, here.

The First Sign of Fall

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 23:14


I'll take a sign, any sign, that the heat of summer is waning, the brilliance of fall on the horizon. This year, that sign came in the form of Thursday.In the newsPisgah National Forest closures. Find the most up-to-date information on closures in the Pisgah National Forest of North Carolina at the USDA Forest Service website, here.Help! To help the Forest Service in its efforts to open trails in the Pisgah following Tropical Depression Fred, you may either email Natalie Lester, the Pisgah District Volunteer and Partnerships Coordinator, at Natalie.Lester@usda.gov, or check in with one of these groups to volunteer:Pisgah Area Southern Off-Road Bicycling AssociationCarolina Mountain ClubBackcountry HorsemenCarolina Climbers CoalitionCherokee National Forest seasonal road closings. To learn which roads in the Cherokee National Forest are affected by closings that go into effect starting Sept. 6, go here.

Join us for a Morning Walk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2021 27:56


Every Monday and Friday, we invite GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! peeps to join us on a 20-minute-or-so hike to talk things hiking on  Facebook Live at our GetGoingNC page. On today's podcast, we take you on a recent Morning Walk, along a stretch of the Eno River in the piedmont of central North Carolina. (Join us on our twice weekly Facebook Live hikes, on Monday and Friday mornings around 8 a.m., at our GetGoingNC Facebook page, here.In our news segment we discuss recovery efforts on public recreation lands in the mountains following flooding and wind damage resulting from Tropical Depression Fred, on Aug. 16-17. While some areas have reopened in the mountains, many remain closed. Check with the appropriate land manager before heading out for your next adventure.Blue Ridge ParkwayN.C. Department of TransportationGreat Smoky Mountains National ParkNorth Carolina State ParksNorth Carolina National Forests (Croatan, Pisgah, Nantahala, Uwharrie)Virginia Department of TransportationShenandoah National ParkVirginia National Forests (George Washington and Jefferson)Virginia State Parks  

Backpacking vs. Thru-Hiking (but isn't ... )

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2021 11:12


Yes, thru-hiking is a genre of backpacking. So is there a difference? Well, yes, there are some obvious differences — the time you're on the trail, how much stuff you can take. But we take issue with a fellow podcaster who compared thru-hiking to a marathon and backpacking — in this case, of the 1-, 2-, 3-night variety — to a "fun run." Those aren't exactly fightin' words, but they do require a response, a clarification of sorts, which we give in brief in today's podcast.Also, in our news segment we mention the closure of the Bald River Falls Trail in the Tellico River District of Tennessee's Cherokee National Forest for repairs. For more on the closure go here, for more on the trail itself, go here.If you're interested in any of the GetHiking! and GetBackpacking! trips we mention, you can learn more about them by visiting GetGoingNC.com and clicking on Explore with Us! 

Basecamp Backpacking

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2021 17:14


This week we explore Basecamp Backpacking, which marries the best of backpacking — camping in a remote, primitive location — with the freedom of lightweight day hiking. How? That's in the podcast, silly.News linksFrom our News segment, find more information by clicking the appropriate link:For details on "Anna Ruby Falls Closed for Maintenance," go here.For details on the Benton MacKaye Trail opening at Thunder Rock in Tennessee's Cherokee National Forest, go here.To follow Nimblewill Nomad as he attempts to become the oldest hiker, at age 82, to hike the Appalachian Trail, go here.Basecamp BackpackingTo read more about Basecamp Backpacking, read this post from our blog at GetGoingNC.comTo learn more about the 5 Basecamp Backpack trips mentioned in the podcast, check out our post, "5 of Our Favorite Basecamp Backpack Trips," here.Care to join our GetBackpacking! crew on a Basecamp Backpack trip? We have three scheduled so far for fall; learn more and sign up to join us by clicking the appropriate link below:Doughton Park, Oct. 22-24Rock Castle Gorge (VA), Nov. 19-21Birkhead Mountain Wilderness/Uwharries, Dec. 10-12.

National Forest v. National Park, Opening up the Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2021 10:53


This week on the GetHiking! Southeast Podcast we answer that age-old question, which is it you can get a permit to gather firewood in, a National Park or a National Forest. We also look at two efforts to open the outdoors to a wider range of people. Related linksInterested in gathering firewood in the Hanging Rock Day Use Area of the Clinch Ranger District, George Washington and Jefferson National Forests in Virginia? Learn more here.To learn more about the Virginia Outdoor Foundation's $20,000 grant to let kids from Richmond explore Virginia State Parks, go here.

What makes for an ideal beginner backpack trip

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2021 28:18


This week we scout a trail system in Virginia that we hope will make for a good weekend backpack trip for beginning backpackers. Along the way, we explain what makes a great trip for a first timer. In the episode we make mention of "Backpacking Virginia: The Definitive Guide to 40 Can't-Miss Trips from Cumberland Gap to the Atlantic Ocean," by Johnny Malloy. Learn more about the book here.If you're looking for recommended first-time backpack trips, check out these 5 from "Backpacking North Carolina: The Definitive Guide to 43 Can't-Miss Trips from Mountains to Sea."

Be a Campground Host, be heard on eBikes

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2021 10:10


This week we look at a shortage of campground hosts that's closing National Forest campgrounds and at the issue of ebikes and how our National Forests are looking to accommodate them.LinksInterested in being a campground host, or in any number of other volunteer opportunities on federal and state lands? Check out the possibilities at volunteer.gov.We mention off-road ebikes, and cite as example the Pedal All Wheel Drive II. Get a sense of what it's like here.

Backpacking Virginia's Triple Crown

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2021 25:05


Three of the most iconic spots on the Appalachian Trail in Virginia are Dragon's Tooth, Tinker Cliffs and McAfee Knob. And combined with three trails in the North Mountain trail system they can be done in a loop of about 35 miles. In today's episode, we follow 10 backpackers on a four-day, three-night trip that covers these geologic icons and some pretty phenomenal scenery in between.ResourcesCheck out this all trails.com description of the hike here.Find our GetBackpacking! Guide to Virginia's Triple Crown here. Download before July 16 and it's free.

Get Out and Explore this July 4 Weekend

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2021 8:52


It's all about the July 4 weekend in today's episode, including:Where you can catch catch the Brood X Cicada Choir and their 100-decibel performance.The answer to the question you've possibly been wondering: Are fireworks allowed in National Forests? (No.)Speaking of which, is there one convenient location where you find out the fire danger — and other cool fire-related stats — before heading into the woods? (Yes.)Are there still campsites available for us procrastinators? (Yes.)LinksTo discover the convenient location mentioned above where you find out the fire danger — and other cool fire-related stats, go here.Reserveamerica.comRecreation.govFor info on Virginia's Sky Meadows State Park and the Brood 10 cicada concert, go here.To read the Blue Ridge Outdoors article on cicadas, go here.

Our 5 Favorite Group Campsites

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 13:13


Hiking is great, but nothing beats a post-hike gathering at the campsite. Over the years we've become a connoisseur, of sorts, of group campsites; today, we share 5 of our favorites.Learn more about these sites and make reservations by visiting this post at our GetGoingNC.com website.

A Quick Word About Bears and Food

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2021 10:12


Bears have been getting into more campers gear of late: the reason? Improper food storage. In this week's quick listen, we talk about the importance of food storage on the trail.For more information on food storage and dealing with blackberry in general, visit bearwise.org.

An obscure nature preserve in a Georgia suburb

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 20:00


About 12 percent of the United States is protected as natural area. That's roughly 456,000 square miles of the nation's total land mass of roughly 3.8 million square miles.  Now, when most of us think of land set aside to protect nature, at least here in the Southeast, we think of National Parks, we think of National Forests, we think of State Parks. Yet nationwide those three entities only account for about 10 percent of total protected land. What about those remaining 3.3 million square miles? You'll find them in thousands of small nature preserves peppered all around. Preserves such as the Al Bungard Conservation Area, one of four small preserves in Savannah, Ga. These preserves can provide adventure you'd never expect on land so small, as the GetHiking! Southeast Podcast discovered when we discovered the Al Bungard property just a half hour walk from our airport hotel in Savannah.Where can you find a similar adventure, either near your home or when you're traveling? A good place to start is  The Land Trust Alliance, which represents land-preserving land trusts around the country. Find The Land Trust Alliance here.Also, check out The Nature Conservancy, at nature.org.As was the case with the Al Bungard Conservation Area, we had to do a little digging to find it. That process of unearthing little-known preserves and green spaces is the focus of "Explore Your Neighborhood: A Guide to Discovering the World Immediately Around You," which we wrote last year. Learn more and purchase a copy here.

Claim GetHiking! Southeast

In order to claim this podcast we'll send an email to with a verification link. Simply click the link and you will be able to edit tags, request a refresh, and other features to take control of your podcast page!

Claim Cancel