Explorersweb Article - Come Walk With Us
A Huge thank you to Kristine De Abreu at Explorersweb for the great article on our upcoming trek! Be sure to check it out!
Couple Launches Three-Year Hike Along World’s Longest Trail
Long-distance hiking 21/11/2018
The Great Trail, also known as
the Trans Canada Trail.
In early 2019, Sonya Richmond and
her partner Sean Morton from Ontario will embark on a three-year journey along
Canada’s 24,000km Great Trail. The longest recreational trail in the world, it
links all three coasts and includes a 6,000+km loop into the Northwest
Territories. The couple will start at Cape Spear, Newfoundland, the easternmost
point of Canada, and continue west to Victoria, British Columbia before turning
north.
The Great Trail, formerly known
as the Trans Canada Trail, took 25 years to complete and was only fully
connected in 2017. It links over 400 individual trails and 15,000 communities
across Canada.
Since its completion, foot
travellers from around the world have come to Canada to tackle this supreme
hiking challenge. Recently, Dana Meise of Alberta became the first to
complete the entire route. It took him 10 years. Before him, Sarah Jackson was
the first woman to finish the trail’s east-west section, while Melanie Vogel of
Germany is currently thru-hiking the entire trail on her own.
Faced with a three-year absence
from gainful employment, and no sponsors as yet, Richmond and Morton have had
to make difficult financial decisions. They have placed their home on the
market, set a daily budget of $20 a day and have been scrambling to find
last-minute sources of gear or donations — as yet unsuccessfully. Their current
budget affords them a basic diet of “coffee, sugar and plain oatmeal for
breakfast, a simple wrap or peanut butter sandwich for lunch, dehydrated rice
and beans or pasta for dinner, and tea.” They hope to round up enough support
at least to add some trail mix and energy bars to their diet.
They plan to carry backpacks with
tents, sleeping bags, pot and stove, water bottles and a filter, two changes of
clothes, Therm-a-Rests and two to five days of food. Because the trail
frequently passes through or near communities, they can reduce their weight by
shipping backup gear and winter clothes to local post offices, and stocking up
regularly at grocery stores. Still, Sonja Richmond estimates that their pack
weight will increase to 23 to 33kg in winter. “In the Prairies and up
north, we may switch from backpacks to carts,” says Richmond.
Before this expedition, Richmond
completed her PhD in forestry at the University of Toronto, while her partner
is a freelance photographer and writer. Richmond currently works as an analyst
at Bird Studies Canada. En route, the couple hopes to raise awareness of the
birds of Canada.
The Great Trail consists of
roadways, greenways, lakes and rivers, mountains, islands and tundra. The trail
combines wilderness and rural portions but also major cities such as Montreal
and Toronto. This varied landscape offers travellers a choice of
transportation: bicycles, kayaks or canoes, even horses. Some parts can only be
negotiated by watercraft.
The Great Trail consists of
smaller trails like the BLT trail. Photo: Mother Nature Network
Because of their shoestring
budget, the couple lacks a packraft or canoe and will detour around rivers and
lakes until their third year. By then, they hope to acquire the means to paddle
the fluid sections of trail.
Comments
Post a Comment