So, at Enota the people are incredibly pleasant. A family with thirteen children working very hard. 

They served us all the chicken and biscuits we could eat. And brought out extra just in case we would like more. 

Enota in the rain

Fresh, homemade biscuits with butter and jelly. 

Just a wonderful place. 

We made it on to the next resupply and finished up at the NOC, given the weather induced delays. It was great hike.

2018 Enota Outdoor Center/Commune

Enota

Our mileage came to around 13 miles actually hiked. 

Morning after the storm

We found out about the change in the weather forecast and the incoming hurricane getting worse and decided we needed to reconsider our plans.

AWOL (a guidebook that was the standard resource and a supporting website and now just a footnote in hiking history) had suggested 15 miles to Trey Mountain. With the Hurricane and storms we decided to go to the Nature Commune instead. 

We met Random Mike, a shuttle driver. 

Google maps took him a strange route but got us there. 

Enota is really pleasant. It is currently run by a family with 13 kids. They work really hard. 

The famous soup was not available. The standard is that they always have soup for hikers. They are known for that.

No soup. They lost their garden to flooding so they had no soup from the garden. We could have stayed in the bunkhouse (which is really nice, we looked at it) but took a cabin instead. 

They had glorious bagels and cream cheese. 

I can’t stress how nice the people are. 

And they had laundry.  🙂

As a hiker you start to focus on food, laundry and showers. So laundry is suddenly a big thing.

The storm got worse, so the next day found us:

Taking a zero for the storm

Clear skies over Georgia

I got up and made blueberry pancakes for breakfast. 

I admit, I’ve not had as much appetite as I had expected. But this morning was fun. 

We used the Wi-Fi in the lodge (no internet anywhere else) to update on the storm, read, and make “Trail Journal” entries. 

Have I mentioned how pleasant the staff is here? They even sang for us and went out of their way to cook us a dinner from scratch.

Currently we are planning to leave in the morning in the rain, hike to Trey Mountain at mile 58 and then Top of Georgia at mile 69 for the hostel and resupply. 

d20 & Happy

Low Gap Shelter

Neels Gap to Low Gap is only 11 miles. We walked somewhere between 12 and 13 miles. Water was right next to the shelter. 

Tree at the shelter

We met two guys who were brother-in-laws and who both went to the University of Utah (neither are really from Utah). They were great guys. 

Storm was heavy with falling trees, chipmunks, bats and mice (one even fell on Happy). 

Incoming Hurricane reported. 

d20 & Happy

2018 Blood Mountain and Mountain Crossing

Morning

Well, it was only ten trail miles but we ended up walking further. The rainstorm helped with water and we met a lot of people. Blood Mountain is a popular day hike. 

People let their off leash dogs play in the water sources.

Mountain Crossing is where I met my first mouse in five section hikes. I woke up. Mouse noses on your feet are cold. They will wake you up.

They provide bins to protect your food so I didn’t lose anything. 

Happy and I slept on the bean bags to get away from the mold in the bunk area and the gear getting dried out on the dehumidifiers.

Fire sky

The picture is one I took and agreed to let a professional use in return for a copy. I’m still waiting. I just got lucky with it — no special filters or anything.

Note:

Pizza is no longer free with the bed. It is a separate charge (and you can also get Dominos to deliver). 

Most hiker hostels provide sheets, but no pillow. A classic hostel does not provide sheets but has a pillow. This one had no sheets or pillows, which makes sense as a hiker is covered for both. 

Also. The washing machine broke a while back. Guidebooks are wrong when they suggest you can get laundry done. The guy who broke it was the guy drying his gear on the dehumidifiers. He was very proud of the accomplishment. 🤷‍♂️

All in all well worth the cost and I’m glad we stayed. Even liked the pizza. Next time through we did not stay at the hostel.

d20 & Happy

2018 Day Two

AWOL suggests Gooch Gap and a 8.7 mile day, followed by a long day and climbing Blood Mountain. 

It suggests tenting, though there is a shelter. 

Happy looked at the trail and we pressed on. Water was a problem so we were going to tent where there was supposed to be water. 

Did not find anything (though there was solid, cold rain) and I was greatful for waterproof rain gear that did not wet through). 

The rain was really solid.

Then I went back looking for a stream while Happy kept the tent going.

Ok. First, the water source is a spring, not a stream. 

Second, it is closer to the road than advertised. 

Third, the water is not on the secondary trail, but next to a campsite that drops off the secondary trail. 

Luckily that is all in the comments in Guthooks so by reading the comments I found out what I needed to know as I looked for water in the rain and the dark. 

Unfortunately, I’m like the other guy and walked well past the water before doubling back. Then I found the water.

My mistake was good fortune for two other guys looking for water since they were passing the campground and would have made the same mistake I had. 

I saved them from that. I got my water and headed back to our informal campsite.

Happy had a light on for me. That made the tent easy to find.

Got back to the tent and slept well. 

d20 & Happy

2028 Day one of our October Hike

More on shoes

Hawk Mountain Shelter

Survivor Dan told us that arriving late and then hitting the terminus was unwise so we took MARTA up and spent the night in a hotel. 

At 6:45 a.m. he showed up and we were off. We were dropped off at the parking lot, backtracking to the terminus and then on to Hawk Mountain like AWOL recommended for an easy start. 

I forgot our butter and left it in the hotel refrigerator.

That stint got us to Mike 7.8. 

We were there and settled in at the shelter early enough to nap from 4:00 to 6:00 when I realized I’d left the butter in the hotel freezer. 

We met a Latvian-American SF officer named Josh who shared the shelter with us. There were about 20 people tented near the shelter. 

d20 & Happy