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46 Days. Keeping Up With Jennifer Pharr Davis on the Appalachian Trail PDF

167 Pages·2011·5.78 MB·English
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46 DAYS 46 DAYS Keeping Up with Jennifer Pharr Davis on the Appalachian Trail BREW DAVIS Foreword by Jennifer Pharr Davis Copyright © 2011 by Brew Davis FIRST PAPERBACK EDITION All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Davis, Brew. 46 days : keeping up with Jennifer Pharr Davis on the Appalachian Trail /Brew Davis with Jennifer Pharr Davis. p. cm. ISBN 978-0-8253-0678-5 (alk. paper) 1. Hiking—Appalachian Trail. 2. Backpacking—Appalachian Trail. I. Pharr Davis, Jennifer II. Title. GV199.42.A68D37 2011 796.510974—dc23 2011043243 For inquiries about volume orders, please contact: Beaufort Books 27 West 20th Street, Suite 1102 New York, NY 10011 [email protected] Published in the United States by Beaufort Books www.beaufortbooks.com Distributed by Midpoint Trade Books www.midpointtrade.com Interior design by Neuwirth & Associates, Inc. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed in the United States of America May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view. May your mountains rise into and above the clouds. Earth Apples: The Poetry of Edward Abbey (1994) First to my wonderful wife. Then to the Pit Crew, who helped her to do something amazing. CONTENTS Listening and Following, by Jennifer Pharr Davis Introduction Frequently Asked Questions about the 2011 Record DAY 1: 56 miles DAY 2: 44 miles DAY 3: 46 miles DAY 4: 42 miles DAY 5: 41 miles DAY 6: 38 miles DAY 7: 31 miles DAY 8: 34 miles DAY 9: 30 miles DAY 10: 38 miles DAY 11: 43 miles DAY 12: 36 miles DAY 13: 42.5 miles DAY 14: 43.5 miles DAY 15: 47.3 miles DAY 16: 48.7 miles DAY 17: 48.3 miles DAY 18: 49 miles DAY 19: 49 miles DAY 20: 45 miles DAY 21: 52.7 miles DAY 22: 48 miles DAY 23: 46.9 miles DAY 24: 53.9 miles DAY 25: 51.9 miles DAY 26: 52.9 miles DAY 27: 50.2 miles DAY 28: 52.1 miles DAY 29: 46.8 miles DAY 30: 52.9 miles DAY 31: 49.7 miles DAY 32: 52.6 miles DAY 33: 46.9 miles DAY 34: 47.3 miles DAY 35: 50.3 miles DAY 36: 49.2 miles DAY 37: 46.9 miles DAY 38: 49.8 miles DAY 39: 46.1 miles DAY 40: 45.5 miles DAY 41: 47.2 miles DAY 42: 50.8 miles DAY 43: 46.3 miles DAY 44: 48.2 miles DAY 45: 52.2 miles DAY 46: 60.2 miles DAY 47: 36.2 miles DAY 48: aka, The 19th Hole Reflections, by Jennifer Pharr Davis Acknowledgments LISTENING AND FOLLOWING Life is filled with voices. On a daily basis we hear the opinions of advertisements, faith groups, politicians, friends, and family. We constantly process external noise that tells us what is responsible, what is successful, and what is normal. All the noise makes it difficult to find silence and the differing opinions make it difficult to find ourselves. The most popular question surrounding our 2011 record attempt on the Appalachian Trail was why? Why would I want to hike 2,181 miles as fast and efficiently as possible? That, in itself, is not a difficult question to answer, but it is challenging to explain. The simple answer is, that by attempting to set an overall record on the Appalachian Trail, I was following my heart. I was listening to the internal voice that screamed in the silence, filled my head with dreams, and made my stomach feel uneasy—excited and scared—as if I were on the edge a cliff. For over two years, my every run, every hike, every lull in the workday was filled with dreams of the record. I wasn’t trying to think about record, and at some points, I most certainly did not want to think about record, but its daily presence was undeniable. If I had to describe the voice inside that led me back to the trail, then I would say that it was loud, loud and hopeful. My reaction to the voice, however, was much different. My response to the swell of possibility within my soul included fear and reason. I was scared I would fail, scared what other people would think, and scared that my husband would resent me for monopolizing another one of “our” summers. I also rationalized that hiking the Appalachian Trail, for the third time, wouldn’t prove anything, and it wouldn’t put me any closer to the kids and stable income that I wanted to be a part of my future. But on the trail, I get to leave the noise, erase other people’s expectations, and listen to my heart. For me, these silent times of reflection and prayer are found hiking in the woods. I believe that I know who I am standing on top of a mountain, and that I make my best decisions in the heart of the forest. It took ten weeks of backpacking through Europe together before my husband and I made the decision to listen to hope, strip away fear and reason, and try for the overall

Description:
46 Days chronicles the trials, successes, joys, and frustrations of Jennifer Pharr Davis's record-winning Appalachian Trail thru-hike through the eyes of her husband, Brew Davis. Brew lead her pit crew, the group of generous, loving hikers who supported Jen along the way, providing company along the
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