I was so pathetic
I was 12 on my first backpacking trip - a 50-miler with Troop 676, Essex, Vermont. It was on Vermont's Long Trail, from North Adam's Massachusetts to Peru, Vermont. Sadly, I don't have any pictures of that first year (1984.)
1985, however, was a different story. I started that year with Troop 676's 50-miler, continuing from where the troop had finished the year before. We started off in the rain.
I was 13, and though I had one 50-miler under my belt, I had much to learn. That's me roasting my socks on a stick over the fire. How pathetic.
The Long Trail in Southern Vermont, for the first 80ish miles, is pretty tame. There are a few mountains, but there's a lot of ridge walking, bogs, and ponds.
The comradery of that trip sticks firmly in my mind. I vividly remember doing pull-ups from the rafters of Governor Clement shelter, intentionally pausing with my butt inches from the face of one troop mate seated on the top bunk to pass gas. I also remember the scene arriving at this shelter. We surprised two co-ed college students nude sunbathing on the lawn! They quickly packed up and moved along!
Govenor Clement shelter was also famous for its outhouse. The famed "gazebo" was a 2-holer!
This trip included the first "real" mountains on the LT - Pico and Killington peaks. I vividly remember sitting at the table at Cooper Lodge eating lunch after finishing Killington when an Appalachian Trail hiker stopped by to eat his lunch. At this point I was feeling pretty cocky, having just conquered the second highest peak in the state. That is until I overheard the AT hiker openly contemplating completing the rest of the LT as a "side trail." A SIDE TRAIL! And here I was, thinking I was a stud, only to find this unassuming hiker was hardly breaking a sweat, doubling what I'd done, and had been doing it day-after-day for months. Holy crap! Wake up call for Brian!
The 1985 50-miler was the first one my dad accompanied me on. After he observed how much I took to it, he decided to relive his youth with me. While he had done several portions of the LT in his younger years, he had never completed it. Over the course of several weekends in the summer and fall of 1985, he and I pieced together the remaining ~150 miles. I signed our posts in shelter logbooks as the "Keenan Express."
I still have that pack - but it's now relegated to wall decoration. Doesn't fit nearly as well anymore for some reason!
My dad and I finished the Long Trail for the first time that year (1985.) We went together on Troop 50-milers again in 1986, 1987 and 1988. We did a 170ish mile trip from North Adams, Mass to Appalachian Gap the summer of 1986. We followed that up with a 90ish mile trip from Appalachian Gap to the Canadian border in 1987 to finish the Long Trail for the second time. We would go to Philmont together (but on different crews) in 1988. We didn't do the troop 50 miler together in 1989 because I returned to Philmont to spend a month on Trail Crew. (Click here for a write up on that adventure.) We would do one last trip together the summer of my Junior year of college thru-hiking the Northville-Placid trail in New York. (The writeup for that adventure is the bookend to this article. Click here to read more.)
My dad wanted me to know that our backpacking time together was his gift to me. It was something he specifically wanted to do because his father never made time to do it with him. I can't thank my dad enough. Those hundreds of miles together cemented in me a love of backpacking, self-reliance, confidence, and self-worth. Though his body can no longer do it, his spirit is still with me every trip I take. Thank you dad.