What the HELL is up with the Appalachian Trail?! | Murders & Mysteries MARATHON

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  • Опубликовано: 10 янв 2024
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    3 hour marathon compilation of Appalachian Trail mysteries, murders, disappearances, and more.
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @jackiebulmer515
    @jackiebulmer515 4 месяца назад +1271

    RUclips is ridiculous in its censorship. Having to omit words which describe the event is outrageous. Who the heck does RUclips think it is? If it wasn't for us viewers, it'd be nothing.

    • @nox6438
      @nox6438 4 месяца назад +110

      It's not RUclips lol, it's advertisers. He is being overly-safe here with the words he omits here, it's not like videos get deleted, they get demonetized. But, it's better to over-censor yourself rather then raw dogging it and risking demonetization. He may also just feel uncomfortable reading certain quotes and descriptions out loud.

    • @jackiebulmer515
      @jackiebulmer515 4 месяца назад

      😂​@@nox6438

    • @dionst.michael1482
      @dionst.michael1482 4 месяца назад +111

      They’re ridiculous! Forcing people to play these stupid immature word games when people know exactly what you’re saying. Hell, young people know more than the adults do. And they sure as hell don’t censor themselves

    • @nox6438
      @nox6438 4 месяца назад

      @@dionst.michael1482 Read my reply above yours

    • @Bdchi3
      @Bdchi3 4 месяца назад +67

      People are to easily offended

  • @alfredincognito7678
    @alfredincognito7678 4 месяца назад +398

    A drinking game where everytime Kyle says "I actually hiked the appalachian trail back in 2018"

    • @glendacrouch1877
      @glendacrouch1877 4 месяца назад +3

      Are you an RUclipsr?

    • @JohnSixteen-jj6eg
      @JohnSixteen-jj6eg 3 месяца назад +19

      I actually finished my A.T. hike in 2018. I always let people know I hiked the entire A.T.

    • @nameissturdy1390
      @nameissturdy1390 3 месяца назад +21

      I imagine it’s a huge accomplishment in someone’s life. For me it adds to the retelling of what went down during some of the events as he can understand/relate /describe it better than some of the armchair “tubers” on the site.
      And he probably does it in case of first first time watchers. But yeah, I’d play along. 😉

    • @Essencemah05
      @Essencemah05 3 месяца назад +14

      lol…. after I saw your comment, I really start paying attention to when he said it. He says it an awful lot.

    • @sarahschieving385
      @sarahschieving385 3 месяца назад +15

      Or "it's unclear to me"

  • @mattyxo
    @mattyxo 4 месяца назад +301

    When you are lost and self-rescue attemps have not worked, you are supposed to stop, setup camp and conserve your energy. For rescuers, it is significantly harder to find a moving target so Geraldine did the right thing. When you are missing, you should also setup reflective gear (like a reflective blanket) near your camp to increase visibility to air crew or boating crew (depending on where you are). Geraldine did everything right by stopping and setting up the reflective blanket. Probably could have added that her initial hiking friend noted that Gery was slow to keep up, had poor GPS skill and while she was lost, it rained quite a bit - exposure to wet and cold for older folks is tougher to handle. She may very well have heard the search and resuce and did not have the strength to call out (or blow a whistle, if she had one). Sad story.

    • @brendametube
      @brendametube 4 месяца назад +28

      HEAR HERE! To everything you said. These are all fundamental rules on what to do if lost… Except in Geraldine’s case, Kyle is correct. There is a excellent possibility. Had she continued on it she would’ve made it to an area where she would have had much greater chances to be found alive.
      Personally, I would have set up my camp, and scoped out 50 to 100 yards and back, to my camp in every direction.
      If I didn’t find the trail or a helpful path, then at least I made myself very familiar with the outer perimeters of my camp. At that point, I would be safe enough to scope farther out in every direction and back to my camp. This is where I would put my energy along with fires . Not sure why she couldn’t keep a fire going unless it dumped buckets of rain. Always such a sad case to hear about.

    • @beetackitt9835
      @beetackitt9835 4 месяца назад +21

      I agree and would also say why are we not asking the really important questions in that many days as strange as it is she did not find her way back so close to the trail, I really think more importantly how the hell did the search and rescue NOT find her I am familiar in search and rescue and they have several options one being from above, but also they would initially start with a bastard search , then the most effective search for the wilderness without using an extreme amount of resources and man power wound be a containment search and if that dont work the last resort is a grid search which requires an enormous amount of man power but even with a basic bastard search I feel they should have found her and if they conducted there teams appropriately and did there job correctly this should have been a happy ending, something is extremely odd about this and does not sound like we have all the information.

    • @srose1088
      @srose1088 4 месяца назад +17

      And I can't help but think the more days had passed with no signs of a search party, the further off the trail I'd think I was.

    • @MoonlightCircus
      @MoonlightCircus 4 месяца назад +15

      ​@brendametube some people are really really terrible at making a fire and keeping it going to any significant degree. I've done enough camping with people who don't understand how to make a fire to watch some absolutely bizarre fire-starting attempts. I wouldn't be surprised if Geraldine simply didn't know how to start a fire if she was straight up trying to set whole trees on fire.

    • @brendametube
      @brendametube 4 месяца назад +1

      @@MoonlightCircus very good point.

  • @coledavis2335
    @coledavis2335 4 месяца назад +469

    For Jesse it feels almost like she was going out there to die. She was unprepared, ignored advice, recently widowed, and felt like she had no control.

    • @-Reagan
      @-Reagan 4 месяца назад +34

      Tbf she didn’t ignore advice, that advice was only given once she was already on the trail, dropped off alone and well on her way in a time when most people didn’t have cellphones and there wasn’t much reception for them and they were still analog phones, not digital.
      They didn’t want her going up the mountain unprepared for that and she didn’t. She went to another entrance further along the trail. She didn’t know that she was woefully unprepared for the hike at all and no one actually told her plainly. It was easy to suppose she had the ability to pull through and prove them wrong - or simply leave the trail and find a pay phone at the nearest town. Not that she could die of dehydration and exposure with fatigue and be lost long before she had the opportunity to leave.
      The other ranger at the trailhead entrance didn’t tell Jesse she shouldn’t go at all, she allowed her to pass. She should have stopped Jesse, it was her job. She asked if Jesse had bug spray - but, she didn’t mention explaining to her exactly why - that it wasn’t simply a convenience, or that she was unprepared in many other ways.
      Jesse was extremely naive but, people still do this (go out unprepared) and, at the time there wasn’t any internet or even half of the common knowledge and media about hiking, health and preparedness that we have, now. She was unfamiliar with the area to even know there was a season when black flies were biting and it’s not something that most trail guides (books, not people) ever mentioned. She would have to look at specific guides for each state and area and it’s unlikely they’d even be available in her area where she planned her hike. She basically had what was at her local library and whatever she heard from other hikers.
      The amount of people who complete through hikes on the AT now **every single day totals as much as all the people who had EVER done it** combined in the time Jesse went out. Yes, it’s the first fault of ignorance but, that doesn’t negate the fault of those who were there solely for safety and failed their duty.

    • @coledavis2335
      @coledavis2335 4 месяца назад

      @@-Reaganstill went out onto the 100M, and with what had just happened, to anyone smart it looks like she went out there to die.

    • @coledavis2335
      @coledavis2335 4 месяца назад +52

      @@-Reagan she literally ignored Ranger advice to turn back, to have bug stray and to prepare more. She was woefully unprepared and going into the 100 Miles without heeding advice. It does not matter the amount of people to hike the AT. That doesn’t change that fact that she went out unprepared, ignored rangers, without gps, after a major terrible life event.

    • @meeperpie5511
      @meeperpie5511 4 месяца назад +11

      yeah, that was what i was thinking as well.

    • @KathyHussey063
      @KathyHussey063 4 месяца назад +5

      @@coledavis2335 was there gps when she died out there?

  • @cait6461
    @cait6461 4 месяца назад +222

    Jesse Hoover's story brought back vivid memories of growing up on the farm and watching the passing of one of a pair of geese. The female passed and the male was so grief struck, he kept with the flock, ate with them and flew and waddled slowly behind them. When they went south for the winter, he stayed behind and we tried to care for him but he stayed on the pond not eating until he too passed and sank to the bottom.

    • @teaspoonsofpeanutbutter6425
      @teaspoonsofpeanutbutter6425 4 месяца назад +27

      My god, that's horrid! So sad, poor little guy.

    • @dionst.michael1482
      @dionst.michael1482 4 месяца назад +28

      Awww. That’s frikkin heart wrenching. To even ignore centuries worth of instinct out of their bond is as staggering as it is beautiful 😢

    • @KaileyB616
      @KaileyB616 4 месяца назад +18

      Oh my God that's so sad 😭😭😭 but it is incredible how tightly bound geese couples become!!

    • @2lipToo
      @2lipToo 4 месяца назад +14

      So sad...these critters mate for life...

    • @mindyleftwich506
      @mindyleftwich506 4 месяца назад +10

      They mate for life

  • @lorastolle3786
    @lorastolle3786 4 месяца назад +181

    I got lost in the Sierra Nevadas after hiking to a ranger lookout. We decided to take a shortcut and ended up climbing up a steep brush covered hillside. We were only lost for a little over an hour. When we finally found the trail, we were at the car. I never took a short cut again!

    • @wandapease-gi8yo
      @wandapease-gi8yo 4 месяца назад +18

      Sounds very like my son and a companion hiking up one of the mountains beside the Columbia Gorge. There is nothing so long as a shortcut! They ended up scrambling down near verticle slopes while looking at the tiny headlights of cars directly below them on the Gorge highway by the light of their cell phones!

    • @Bingewatchingmediacontent
      @Bingewatchingmediacontent 2 месяца назад +13

      The Sierra Nevada’s are scary because if you lose sight of the trail, the trees begin to look alike. I’ve walked in circles near Lake Tahoe just getting lost on the way back to the car. I can see how easily someone can get lost, even very close to civilization.

    • @mom.left.me.at.michaels9951
      @mom.left.me.at.michaels9951 2 месяца назад +4

      I know that experience. At a certain point close to the tree line in Colorado it's all pine trees and even on trail it can begin to all look alike.

    • @Boja23
      @Boja23 Месяц назад +2

      My wife is the king of shortcuts! Yes, we've been lost because of it! Yes, it was scary as a M..F..r. She still wants to play that game, too.

    • @deemo5245
      @deemo5245 Месяц назад +1

      Go off the trail and find a wasps nest 😅

  • @AppalachianheartwoodBlogspot
    @AppalachianheartwoodBlogspot 4 месяца назад +228

    Geraldine getting lost off the trail is common. I'm Appalachian. Family has been here for generations, and live in a county with over 50 miles of the AT going through it. I always wanted to share what my parents taught us if you get lost in the mountains, and that is follow the waters down. You'll usually run into a farm or road eventually. Sound in these mountains doesnt travel well especially if you are sheltered in a cove or holler. I always thought they do sweeps a mile or 2 of the trail. She took stay put to heart. Very sad.

    • @Kari-bb3rm
      @Kari-bb3rm 4 месяца назад +15

      I'll remember this

    • @TheTinydancer9000
      @TheTinydancer9000 4 месяца назад +13

      If you follow the water down in oahu, sometimes it will be a 100 ft drop and a waterfall

    • @AppalachianheartwoodBlogspot
      @AppalachianheartwoodBlogspot 4 месяца назад +23

      @TheTinydancer9000 There are waterfalls here too, not as large as those on oahu, older mountains here, but you still use the water as a guide back to civilization. Find a way down around a waterfall. If it comes to a lake, not many natural ones here find the spillway.

    • @dudemorris7769
      @dudemorris7769 4 месяца назад +14

      @@AppalachianheartwoodBlogspotyou always follow the stream to get to civilization.

    • @diyqueen5812
      @diyqueen5812 4 месяца назад +5

      Maybe she had a small seizure or TIA?

  • @ItIsYourMom
    @ItIsYourMom 3 месяца назад +112

    In the 90s, my sister, son (age 7) and I parked along a road (Virginia) and walked up to the AT and a shelter. We hung out, walked a little, then noticed this weird guy hanging around a little ways off. We got a really strange feeling, went back to the shelter, and saw that someone had just set a key on the table (within 15 minutes) - we had been nearby, but had seen no one other than that guy just a little down the trail and we were certain he was now watching us. Attempting to appear casual, we left and headed back to the little trail to the road and the car. As soon as we were obscured by the beautiful blooming dogwoods we ran, acting like it was for fun not to scare my son. This was one of those gut things, both my sister and I had a sick feeling simultaneously at the trail and knew it was best to get out of there immediately. Also, IMO, this is the problem with hiking and camping near roads - too accessible to people who may not have good intentions. Had an odd experience in Big Sur at another seemingly isolated but very accessible location. Anyway - follow your gut!!!

    • @nancyst.john-smith3891
      @nancyst.john-smith3891 Месяц назад +13

      Always.

    • @thebeautifulhobo1
      @thebeautifulhobo1 Месяц назад +13

      Thank you for sharing your experience. As a forager & hiker I have been roaming the woods & coastal areas for years by myself. Loved it when I had big dogs, 80's or could pack freely, Oregon. Nothing is legal in California, not even my mushrooming knife. Dogs only allowed some places! Anyway, I still hike by myself, but knock on wood, I'm never under the impression the trails are safe. Thank you for sharing.

    • @filistraight
      @filistraight Месяц назад +16

      I’ve had these things happen to me maybe once or twice in my life so far. Not the situation, but the feeling. And damn, it kicks in your fight or flight but you have to act like nothing is happening. God that feeling is so awful.

    • @KatFieler
      @KatFieler Месяц назад +12

      I agree 100%. We spend a great deal of time in remote areas, and people we know who don't endlessly offer uneducated advice on the dangers of bear, snakes... Wildlife is way more predictable and way less dangerous than people. Humans are the animal that makes us wary.

    • @rosemarie20
      @rosemarie20 19 дней назад +4

      ​@@KatFielerAbout wildlife, you're absolutely right. Leave them alone and they'll likely leave you alone as long as you're not in the way of them being able to escape; snakes included!

  • @MithyLove
    @MithyLove 4 месяца назад +183

    I've never heard of Jesse's disappearance. There we so many red flags about her hike. Recently deceased loved one, novice hiker, and underprepared. It's really tragic.

    • @mariahconklin4150
      @mariahconklin4150 4 месяца назад +14

      wow and the epilepsy to how scary this was a very bad idea she should have went with a group of people at least.

    • @madisonoberg4513
      @madisonoberg4513 4 месяца назад +42

      I don't think she intended to come out of there

    • @kalzifar6052
      @kalzifar6052 4 месяца назад +19

      @@madisonoberg4513 this was my thought too ,maybe she want it to be her last ride. My Grandpa always said when he notice that he will die soon he will go into the woods and never return. Sadly he never had the chance to do so. But maybe she achieved this.

    • @madisonoberg4513
      @madisonoberg4513 4 месяца назад

      A woman I knew was diagnosed with the early stages of Alzheimer's. She cancelled her appointment, told her family she was going to her appointment. Her car was found at a local hiking spot. She was never found. Excruciating for her family, but I have to assume it was her choice. @@kalzifar6052

    • @kathleenmoore5877
      @kathleenmoore5877 4 месяца назад +1

      Why would she go that far off the Trail just to do her thing? None of it makes sense.

  • @mousetreehouse6833
    @mousetreehouse6833 4 месяца назад +140

    In early newspaper reports, it was stated that Geraldine was early onset dementia. She was hiking with a friend who had a family emergency but could not convince Geraldine to quit the hike. It was also stated that Geraldine had trouble understanding maps and the compass.
    You probably won't find this info in newer reports, mostly to save her family from the grief of public condemnation, which unfortunately was out there.

    • @justinweldon9293
      @justinweldon9293 4 месяца назад +20

      I just finished when you find my body the disappearance of geraldine largay. In the book her hiking partner mentioned on several cas3s she was unsure which direction to start each morning, which was concerning g to her. No mention of the early onset dementia in the book at least

    • @bamtherandomness19
      @bamtherandomness19 3 месяца назад +9

      That makes so much more sense, and she probably couldn't hear very well because of her age as well as the dense woods 😢 I never hike alone for safety and fear of this happening to me. She must've been terrified being all alone, which is the saddest part.

    • @bettywith2girls
      @bettywith2girls 3 месяца назад +8

      I agree with you...I think she tried but just got lost (wouldn't be the 1st person, nor the last, to get lost going to the "bathroom" off trail) and her age and physical limitations didn't help. She d-i-d do some stuff to be found...put a reflective blanket out on the ground to be seen by others, made a fire (burnt trees), etc. Yeah, I agree...when she realized that she might not be found and that she was really, really lost...yeah, I'm sure the poor lady was scared. God bless.

    • @anasazirose
      @anasazirose 3 месяца назад +5

      There'd be no excuse for public condemnation. You can in no legal way stop a person from doing what they want, even with dementia.

    • @maguffintop2596
      @maguffintop2596 3 месяца назад

      That would make sense when one compiles the enormous number of missed opportunities. She brought dental floss but no GPS, no flashing flashlight/flare, no way to hunt, couldn't figure out how to make a large fire (scorched trees found), remained set up in deep woods under canopy, apparently had no idea about following water sources, etc. She was not independent hiking material. Very sad. @@justinweldon9293

  • @JackBarrett7
    @JackBarrett7 4 месяца назад +41

    I had signed up to hike the trail in '05 and I received a joint email from the parks service and FBI talking about they suggest a minimum number of hikers go out, no first timers and no one hike alone because of a spike in 'criminal activity'. I found out later thered been at least three murders within a three week period, and they were concerned with combing the areas, unaware of how many bodies could potentially be found, nm catching the killer(s).

    • @CSDonohue11
      @CSDonohue11 28 дней назад

      That’s why always stay strapped .
      Especially in the wilderness .
      As well as the concrete jungle .

    • @JackBarrett7
      @JackBarrett7 28 дней назад +3

      @CSDonohue11 You should grow up. Also, you should learn how to fight. I know, I know, sometimes a weapon is needed, but if you learned self defense, I promise you wouldn't fear being a victim so much and wouldn't rely on firearms or feel the need to advertise your opinions on RUclips comment threads that have nothing to do with guns.

    • @CSDonohue11
      @CSDonohue11 28 дней назад +1

      @@JackBarrett7 You should take your own advice
      If you were really as grown as you think
      You wouldn’t assume all the things you do and thus show your ignorance .

    • @JackBarrett7
      @JackBarrett7 28 дней назад +1

      @@CSDonohue11 I'm not the one referring to carrying a gun as being "strapped" or using suburban and country cliches like "concrete jungle". Those terms, just like "street fight" IMMEDIATELY indicate someones afraid of what they probably call "big cities". Grow up. Youre not a soldier, not a 'viking', and you shouldnt be advertising your fragility online or anywhere else for that matter. Be happy being who, what and where you are.

  • @VeganWellnessTribe
    @VeganWellnessTribe 4 месяца назад +239

    Oh snap, you really meant 3 hours. Ok ok, let’s get it let’s go. I’ll get a snack for this one

    • @pumpkinfield100
      @pumpkinfield100 4 месяца назад +20

      3h perfect, I’m making cinnamon buns… enough time to make it and to enjoy it while listening

    • @VeganWellnessTribe
      @VeganWellnessTribe 4 месяца назад +12

      @@pumpkinfield100enjoy! I’m happy for the long form video too 😊

    • @jen-lq3wc
      @jen-lq3wc 4 месяца назад +7

      Work day entertainment 😅

    • @Kawiboy
      @Kawiboy 4 месяца назад +6

      Ditto 😂✌️👊

    • @bevcamren1316
      @bevcamren1316 4 месяца назад

      Please don't use sponser for$6;400 it is phony you an google there is no free $ from government just a way to get people s information

  • @5funnyCats
    @5funnyCats 4 месяца назад +120

    Please, unless you are an extremely experienced hiker, never hike alone, always carry water and a GPS device (or at least a compass) and pay close attention to your surroundings. I'm a seasoned hiker living in the Smoky Mountain Valley where people get lost every year. 99% of the time they are alone, either they start out that way or, more frequently, separate from their companions. It is much easier to get lost than you would ever expect. Just a short distance from the trail and you can quickly become disoriented and unable to find your way back. If this happens, yell loud and frequently, don't end up dying due to embarrassment.

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 4 месяца назад +30

      Take a compass & a whistle, for sure! I got lost w/my dog in a provincial park for only 6 hours which isn't long at all in the grand scheme of things but I had no sense of direction because I was lost under a canopy of trees in the pouring rain so I had no idea where the sun might be in the sky, I couldn't get cell service and I was in black bear country. I mean, when it's beginning to get late in the day, it's a frightening prospect, thinking you might just be going in hopeless circles!
      If not for my trusty companion who never left my side, I'd have been a basket case by the time I found civilization. I really mean it, she kept me from nearly losing it!💓🐕💓

    • @juliefall2892
      @juliefall2892 4 месяца назад +14

      Take a flare, also those old plastic maths rulers the arch and triangle shaped ones if you burn those they send up a lot of smoke..back in the 70s kids use to do this at concerts and in class rooms they called them smoke bombs, probably toxic , but not as toxic as dying.

    • @juliefall2892
      @juliefall2892 4 месяца назад +13

      @@isabellind1292 take some chalk to mark trees . Always make a note of where the sun is in relation to direction rsing and setting and shadows, moss may grow mainly in northern direction ,wind direction, may be helpful.

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 4 месяца назад +8

      @@juliefall2892 Thank you. Good advice. Oh boy, never again will I let my guard down and think it'll just be a walk in the park just because it's called a "park!"!☺👍👍

    • @Nocturnalux
      @Nocturnalux 2 месяца назад +1

      No GPS back then but seriously, a compass and whistle are mandatory.
      I never hiked in my life, no interest in that kind of thing, but I always assumed people who did took compasses.

  • @RC-yy4qp
    @RC-yy4qp 4 месяца назад +86

    Thanks to your videos, I’m finally taking my hiking and camping seriously. And by that I mean I have been on a multitude of day hikes and 1-2 night camping trips where I don’t have the 10 essentials or tell people where I’m going/for how long…can’t believe I’ve made it this long with my inclination for exploring off hike without anything major happening.
    Planning my first backpacking trip now with all the safety bells and whistles talked about in your videos.
    Keep up the great content, helps out so much!

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 4 месяца назад +12

      You don't need the bells but don't forget a whistle! (And bug spray)!
      🏃‍♀ 🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟🦟
      Safe and happy trails!💓🏕💓

    • @juliefall2892
      @juliefall2892 4 месяца назад +9

      Take extra muesli bars just incase.

    • @smittysmeee
      @smittysmeee 3 месяца назад +3

      ...and 3 days extra of any necessary medications! Always leave a trail of bread crumbs 🍞🐥

    • @laurarudolph7451
      @laurarudolph7451 2 месяца назад +3

      The best thing is a GPS locator.

    • @theresabromar5415
      @theresabromar5415 2 месяца назад

      ​@@smittysmeee Your "Trail of bread crumbs." is the best line ever! LOL

  • @mita6010
    @mita6010 4 месяца назад +33

    Whenever hiking alone in New Mexico, I always carried a whistle and mirror. The whistle, obvious, the mirror was to get attention by reflecting sunlight if possible.

  • @Christina-mx1nr
    @Christina-mx1nr 4 месяца назад +39

    I live in Maine and have done work on my own in the literal middle of nowhere. You can be 15 feet from something and have it be completely obscured by vegetation and rolling terrain. Also, “roads” aren’t always exactly what you might think of “roads”. I haven’t looked at the maps of what the warden was referring to specifically in this situation, but I can see it possibly being a logging road.
    I’ve been lost twice in Maine. Once was in and area where 3 of 4 directions were inhabited within a half mile, but the other was over 42 miles of nothing. I found a 4 wheeler trail and followed it to a paved road, thankfully having chosen the “correct” way.
    Don’t hike in Maine alone.
    The wardens and searchers are as badass as they come, but you are ultimately responsible for your own safety…be it hiking, working, driving, whatever.

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 4 месяца назад +8

      Getting lost, alone in the great outdoors can be the scariest place to be.😦
      I was only lost for 6 hours w/my sister's dog in a provincial park but you don't know how long it'll take before you find your way out! ⌛
      It was pouring rain so I had no sense of direction of where the sun might be in the sky because I was under a canopy of trees the entire time and I never saw another human being and I couldn't get any cell service. I could've been going in circles for all I knew.🌲🎡🌲
      If not for my trust companion who never left my side, I'd have been a basket case by the time I found civilization as it was getting late in the day and we were in black bear country.🐻 🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🌲🐕🚶‍♀🌇
      Next time I'll remember to pack a map, a compass & a whistle. I apparently thought it a priority to pack the dog cookies. 😃🍪🐕💓
      Be prepared and safe and happy trails, fellow travelers who venture out into our beautiful world! 🌲🌎🌲

    • @abc-wv4in
      @abc-wv4in 2 месяца назад +1

      It seems she should have stayed put at the "bathroom" area and if she'd had a whistle someone would have found her fairly quickly. I admire her spunk but she was not prepared to hike the AT solo, much less the northern end of it. May she RIP with the Lord.

    • @sorbabaric1
      @sorbabaric1 Месяц назад +1

      Is Maine mostly flat? I grew up in Southern Oregon. All hills, mountains, rivers, creeks, small valleys. Plus distinctive landscapes mostly, . The first time I was in flat country (tri state Eastern Washington? Dry grasslands, long time ago)
      I found it very unsettling. All the landmarks and things I grew up with to use to orient myself . . . Absent. I hear the pine forests in New Jersey can be very disorienting and all directions look the same. Flat with pine trees.

  • @AmericanPatriot014
    @AmericanPatriot014 4 месяца назад +28

    Once on an ocean dive we found a missing man made artifact on the ocean floor. Talk about an unsolved mystery I experienced first hand many years ago. I had a really very creepy experience once while scuba diving. Here is a true story related to our oceans.... I remember not too long after I got my PADI Open Water Certification. I went to qualify for my Advanced Open Water Certification. This higher certification requires nights dives, deep water dives, navigation dives etc. to increase your skill set and expertise. I never will forget on our first navigation dive there must have been at least 23 divers on that evolution. After a 45 minute boat trip we arrived on the site per the gps coordinates. I suited up, checked my gear, checked my dive buddies gear, he checked my gear and off we went. We dove in, gave the OK signal to the boat captain and dive master and dove on down. I bet we were not submerged for more than 14 minutes (this dive was planned for 32-35 minutes) after we hit the ocean floor and that is when we discovered IT. There IT was...... a large dildo on the ocean floor. What an amazing discovery. A large tan colored dildo laying on the ocean floor in the middle of no where! As best as we could tell that rascal must have been at least 10-12 inches in length. So you are indeed correct...there is no telling how many creepy and unexplained discoveries and mysteries and creatures and strange objects that are out there right now that waiting to be discovered by mankind! Later that evening we all came to the conclusion that it must have come from a Cruise Ship....
    I can only imagine stuff found on the AT

    • @Bearded_Ham75
      @Bearded_Ham75 2 месяца назад

      You found the Lost Dildo of Atlantis 😂

    • @xeldinn86
      @xeldinn86 25 дней назад

      Paragraphs please.

    • @AmericanPatriot014
      @AmericanPatriot014 25 дней назад +2

      @@xeldinn86 sure of course. here is your Paragraph! Paragraph....Enjoy your paragraph.

    • @AnxiousAlien...
      @AnxiousAlien... 22 дня назад +1

      😂😂😂

    • @UnKnownn2520
      @UnKnownn2520 19 дней назад +1

      "That rascal must've been 10-12 inches in length" idk why i just imagined sitting by a campfire and having an old cowboy tell me this story in the most southern accent imaginable. Thanks for the laugh

  • @Kari.F.
    @Kari.F. 4 месяца назад +46

    About the Scott Lily case: If someone in the area had to run from authorities in a hurry after a violent crime, the woods would be an excellent place to hide. But if they had to flee quickly, they may have been lacking in gear and killed him because they wanted his.

    • @cammeron.62
      @cammeron.62 4 месяца назад +4

      Or he had better gear. Maybe, someone buried the gear came back for it. He could have gotten lost.

    • @buds8423
      @buds8423 3 месяца назад +4

      I would worry about a misinterpretation of his Stonewall name-could be viewed as a 1969 thing vs an 1860 thing…? Just a different tack… leading to a homophobic attack.

    • @UnKnownn2520
      @UnKnownn2520 19 дней назад

      Hmmmmmm!!

    • @Pugetwitch
      @Pugetwitch 18 дней назад

      Or maybe he shouldn't be telling people that his name is the name of a r4cist Confederate general. I know people that would snap on somebody upon hearing that!

    • @Pugetwitch
      @Pugetwitch 18 дней назад

      ​@@buds8423The fact that he was obsessed with the civil war and he named himself after one of the Confederate general says a lot, who knows what type of tattoos he had. He sounds like he was a lot more than a history buff with a fantasy to live out his life as a Confederate general.

  • @ZootyZoFo
    @ZootyZoFo 4 месяца назад +77

    Grandma Gates hiked the AT using a gunny sack instead of a pack, an old shower curtain for raingear and Keds shoes and she did it 3 times.

    • @dinahbrown902
      @dinahbrown902 4 месяца назад +13

      Some are tougher than others 😊

    • @lisacolbert5987
      @lisacolbert5987 4 месяца назад +5

      I think it was the Sydney , Australia marathon that a gentleman completed it wearing rubber boots . Sure seems like he’d have had some awful blisters , right ? But , wow! , I’m pretty sure he only did it once !

    • @elipotter369
      @elipotter369 3 месяца назад +3

      She probably has a good sense of direction, and checks behind her to know what the trail looks like when she goes off it to toilet or camp.

    • @Oakleaf700
      @Oakleaf700 2 месяца назад +5

      @@elipotter369 This is so crucial. Look BEHIND you every so often to remember what the countryside looks like.
      As a child, I wandered for miles around Europe- parents would be at camp sites..I never got lost {seems amazing now} because I'd look behind me and remember what it looked like.
      I only once felt threatened as a girl by a man. a German who was sitting by the side of the deserted road...I think he'd followed me...and I ran back to the campsite as fast as possible - {South of France} which could be quite empty and remote back then.

    • @elipotter369
      @elipotter369 2 месяца назад +2

      @Oakleaf700 well said. You have good instincts and very sensible and intelligent. :-)

  • @Alyssasplants
    @Alyssasplants 4 месяца назад +46

    It’s makes me so sad how you don’t have OVER a million followers! You clearly do so much research and you put lots of time into your editing! I really hope you hit a million this year ! 🎉

    • @josieclarke460
      @josieclarke460 4 месяца назад

      not everyone can get a million, only so many people are interested in hiking stories. If you want millions you have to do true crime or finance.

    • @Alyssasplants
      @Alyssasplants 4 месяца назад +4

      @@josieclarke460 yeah I don’t think it’s impossible he’s already very close to having a million and he does do true crime stories he talks about hikers who have been murdered on the trail so yeah

    • @josieclarke460
      @josieclarke460 4 месяца назад

      its possible, its not a given though. Its kind of a niche true crime @@Alyssasplants

    • @jessmcnulty3043
      @jessmcnulty3043 4 месяца назад +3

      @@AlyssasplantsI agree 100%. Also, he WILL get there. I’ve been following lots of creators with content ranging from crafting to political, true crime and missing persons, and some creators have that one video go viral and they take off, while others build up their content and create sometimes several shows a day, and they take a bit longer but do get there when their stuff is interesting. Then, there are others who never get there either because their content is boring, or they give up too soon.

  • @Benleyy
    @Benleyy 4 месяца назад +66

    Geraldine Largay's disappearance is extra upsetting. Its proof that you can do extremely extensive searches, and still not find someone whos right near you. Thats another reason why i dont give a lot of credence to foul-play theories when someone goes missing in the wilderness, and searchers say they "looked everywhere". She also did what we are taught from an early age: if you're lost, stay put. But that also assumes someone is looking for you, and looking in the right places. If Geraldine had gone the opposite way, she also may have gotten more lost. Other hikers noted that she seemed very out of her element, and unprepared.

    • @juliefall2892
      @juliefall2892 4 месяца назад +2

      It's still sus I think, was her hand writing checked was it her writing.
      Why did the dogs not find her?
      Why didn't she hear them?

    • @littleblackpistol
      @littleblackpistol 4 месяца назад +5

      @@juliefall2892 Dogs aren't infallible, far from it. I have no idea why people think they are. Actually, sometimes they're utterly useless, a lot depends on training. She was older, she may have been hard of hearing (like my dad, you can speak loudly on his deaf ear and he won't hear anything at all), she may have been sleeping, who knows. The searchers maybe didn't make much noise. Not every search is professional or thorough.

    • @mariawhite7337
      @mariawhite7337 4 месяца назад +14

      There is also the fact that the woods EAT sound. They literally eat sound. I'm used to hiking in canyons and you can hear people sometimes for miles. Not all the time (the wobbly ones can eat sound very well) keep in mind but I'm used to being able to hear very well. But even I have walked up in the mountains and trees and such. I couldn't hear a gods be damned elk the size of a minivan walking until the both of us basically saw each other. Elk ran off I had a panic attack and laughed.

    • @dudemorris7769
      @dudemorris7769 4 месяца назад +5

      @@mariawhite7337so very true. Sometimes the woods are alive & other times, deadly silent & when your heart can easily jump out of your chest, lol.

    • @abc-wv4in
      @abc-wv4in 2 месяца назад +2

      But she had wandered far too much before she finally decided to stay put. Had she stayed near her "bathroom" area and had had a whistle she would have been found fairly quickly, probably by other hikers. She wandered too far away before she made camp. Also, she should have made stick or rock piles or used chalk or something to mark her way back to the trail each bathroom time. It's easy to get lost 200 feet from a trail if the woods are dense.

  • @CM-sm6rs
    @CM-sm6rs 4 месяца назад +107

    Could be she didn't want to live anymore and saying she wanted to hike the AT sounds like a ruse. Sounds to me she decided to end her life but didn't want to have her death labeled a suicide. No body means it'll always be unknown what happened, it's possible that's what she wanted.

    • @graciemaca6996
      @graciemaca6996 4 месяца назад +5

      ​@@ImaRandomFemale- I'm wondering whether someone at the visitor center killed Louise Shapo, she was told which trail to go on by the person in that visitor center. It could be too, that someone with bad motives in there at that time overheard the conversation and quickly left and was 'lying in wait' for her.🤔

    • @graciemaca6996
      @graciemaca6996 4 месяца назад +3

      @@isabellind1292 - I think that you have gotten your stories mixed up here. I was talking about Louise Shapo from Canada, a Psycologyst who was murdered on the trail. It's the last story featured on this video. In the footage starting at: 2:58 02 she goes to "A Visitor Center" to get info. from the employee.
      Likewise, it was not me who made any comment about suicide, it was someone else who made that comment. Sorry😢

    • @victoriacope4113
      @victoriacope4113 4 месяца назад +1

      Sounds to me def of suicide

    • @sonyagower7224
      @sonyagower7224 4 месяца назад +1

      That's what I think too.

    • @christineb8537
      @christineb8537 4 месяца назад +2

      What she should have done was pinpoint a spot - maybe a tree - and tie something around it so you can recognize it. Then branch out different directions from there tying things to trees and bushes so you can find your way back. Eventually she would have found that logging road which wasn't too far away. Speaking from experience from being lost off a trail a small number of times.

  • @christinehorowitz9305
    @christinehorowitz9305 4 месяца назад +53

    This is tongue and cheek but a good drinking game would be every time Kyle mentioned he did the AT thru hike. 🤪

    • @coryrosalesd591
      @coryrosalesd591 4 месяца назад +2

      Or saying altso, I can´t unhear it 😆

    • @sandrahatherley2184
      @sandrahatherley2184 4 месяца назад

      New to his channel....did notice he said that alot.

    • @Priscilla-Prancercise
      @Priscilla-Prancercise 2 месяца назад

      Or you can drink every time he says “fou-well play”. In the second to last story, he said it correctly as “foul play” (one syllable), but then used two syllables again in the final story. Reminds me of the way Southerners add syllables to words like “mee-yulk” (milk), so I was surprised he was from the north.

    • @abc-wv4in
      @abc-wv4in 2 месяца назад +1

      Tough crowd here! I like his videos and think they're done well. These are separate stories, some have been uploaded on their own, and the fact that he has hiked the AT himself is important. Also, I don't think he has much of a regional accent, but then I'm from the South, LOL.
      I do wish he'd find out more about Christianity, though. Eternity is a long, long time.

  • @crazeecip
    @crazeecip 4 месяца назад +26

    Thanks for being so kind and respectful when telling these stories. Enjoy your channel!

  • @reidschott5517
    @reidschott5517 4 месяца назад +18

    Imma just take an educated guess and say that this kyle fella does in fact like hiking

  • @HighTideSoaps
    @HighTideSoaps 4 месяца назад +135

    For future, timestamps would be great since lots of us have seen some of these stories before!

    • @brendametube
      @brendametube 4 месяца назад +10

      Doesn’t matter to me… His take is awesome and his input and thoughts regarding each of the cases are unique. This guy is young and on top of his game! I’m an old woman and I’ve been following the most awesome channels on RUclips, regarding missing people and mysteries in the national forest, all over the US Canada and beyond. Kyle is one of the few who still hold my interest because he’s always taking a fresh approach and I’m always learning something new.

    • @Jaggerbush
      @Jaggerbush 4 месяца назад +20

      ​@@brendametubethat's fantastic it doesn't matter, to you. Most creators use time stamps for longer uploads particularly when it's divided up into shorts we've already seen. I too wish he would have used time stamps bc I've seen most of these. What an odd comment to make. Someone says, gee that would be helpful - and you say "yeah but not me"??? 🤡

    • @Kari.F.
      @Kari.F. 4 месяца назад +12

      ​@@brendametubeI'm an older woman, too, and I love this young man to pieces. (My own age and complete lack of orientation skills makes Geraldine Largay's story so relatable, and somehow extra sad.) But when I've heard his take on several of these stories before, I don't need to hear his take on them again. At the same time: Because I love his content and storytelling so much, I don't want to miss out on the ones I have NOT heard him talk about before, either. So I would love time stamps. It would save me a lot of skipping randomly around.

    • @lalli8152
      @lalli8152 4 месяца назад

      ​@@JaggerbushYeah it would be very convenient to lot of people, but people who doesnt need them wouldnt even notice they are on

    • @Jaggerbush
      @Jaggerbush 4 месяца назад +1

      @@lalli8152 again- such a weird comment - someone says that would be helpful only to have these strange comments saying "Yeah but not me..." This comment section is wacked 🤡

  • @shelbeyslaughter7977
    @shelbeyslaughter7977 4 месяца назад +16

    I love how transparent you are with your opinions, and facts. Great content

  • @lucsmith2092
    @lucsmith2092 4 месяца назад +27

    I woke my dog up snonking with amazement when you mentioned borrowing a phone if you didn’t have an iPhone in 1983!

    • @frockabyebabyshabbychic2611
      @frockabyebabyshabbychic2611 4 месяца назад +10

      I know, right? Youngsters these days 🤷‍♀️

    • @SUZSMITH
      @SUZSMITH 3 месяца назад +3

      Boy would I love for all of Gen z to revert back to 1982 for a week! I gave them MTV at least 😂

    • @mayamonroe
      @mayamonroe 3 месяца назад +3

      From what I have seen, every generation can’t survive without a phone now. I wish it was like how it used to be, maybe families would interact with each other more. This is coming from an older Gen Z.

    • @elipotter369
      @elipotter369 3 месяца назад +3

      I thought he meant at a shop or place of business where someone had a landline. You'd ask to use the phone and give some money to cover the cost.

    • @TwoBs
      @TwoBs 16 дней назад

      ⁠@@mayamonroe Very true. I was a teen right when everyone started having desktops in their home during the age of dial-up, and I do miss the days prior to having so much at our fingertips (mostly just for the simplicity of life back then, but that could also be the nostalgia blinders talking). However, I love and appreciate our advancements with tech - there’s no doubt in my mind that if I had what kids have nowadays, that I, too, would be using it just as much … just as I am certain those born prior to me would also have phones in their hands if the tech had advanced during their youth.
      I never understood when people did the whole “These kids and the newer generation, BACK IN MY DAY we didn’t have such a thing…” type of cringey snark to somehow mean that they’re more superior because they didn’t have certain things the youth has today. It comes off as being extremely bitter despite them desperately trying to act otherwise.
      It’s like okay, ya’ old farts, calm down … you’re just as attached to the internet as much as “these kids today” are considering you are also commenting online under numerous videos and probably even use social media sites like Facebook just as much as the next (all while likely holding a phone or tablet in their hands when doing it).
      Instead of people constantly playing the “my youth was better than your youth” games, it would be nice if the older generations would help guide the younger generations … instead of always complaining about them, pitting themselves against them as if their childhood experiences is some sort of competition, and trying to always put them down. Boomers constantly whined about Gen-X and Millennials as ruining society, Gen-X complained about Millennials being big softies, Millennials complaining about Gen-Z always being offended, and now everyone whines about Gen Alpha … but everyone is always wearing rose-tinted glasses and always trying to act superior. Even the Silent Generation complained about Boomers for causing degeneracy in society. Yet who is raising each of these generations we have collectively complained about? lol
      Boomers raised Gen-X and Millenials to be the way they are now, and they’re now having kids … yet each generation acts as if they totally didn’t have a hand in them being the way they are now lol. We selectively pick and choose what we want to be upset over and blame other generations for, all while knowing damn well the current generations’ faults lie within the prior generations before them.

  • @joannetaylor8778
    @joannetaylor8778 4 месяца назад +76

    Just a tip: if you are lost and don’t have cell service, change your voice message to say that you are lost and give your estimated location. When someone calls your cell they’ll hear your voicemail. Also, I believe that these days emergency numbers connect even if you don’t have cell service.

    • @melissacole1821
      @melissacole1821 4 месяца назад +14

      That's only if the bill hasn't been paid. There's a lot of dead zones where nobody can get a phone signal so without signal there's no way to call 911 either.

    • @missmodern
      @missmodern 4 месяца назад +3

      Brilliant!

    • @cccahli
      @cccahli 4 месяца назад +27

      you have to have cell service to change your voicemail lmao

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 4 месяца назад +3

      Sometimes you find a little spot where cell service actually works, so if in despair a different message indicating the situation would be most helpful.

    • @jlt131
      @jlt131 4 месяца назад +14

      no, you need cell service to change your voicemail, how else would the call connect? You also absolutely need cell service to call 911. there are areas that have "emergency calls only" service, but there are also millions of sq miles of land in north america that don't have cell service AT ALL. an even better idea is to carry a personal satellite beacon, or another satellite texting unit like an Inreach or Spot. but even those can be difficult in dense forest or deep canyons, as you still have to have line of sight to the satellites.

  • @andyw6399
    @andyw6399 4 месяца назад +24

    Living in Boone, NC, those of us that live along the trail, we pronounce it "Appalatchin" Trail and can tell if somebody doesn't live along the trail, they pronouce it the way you did...lol
    Keep up the good work with keeping these peoples dissappearances up front and not forgotten to time, you never know who's watching and might remember something or was in that area at some point and remembers seeing something out of the ordinary but didn't think it was anything.

    • @carlacook5181
      @carlacook5181 4 месяца назад +4

      I was going to say this, my smart ass ex husband and I were asked at a small dinner party how was it pronounced, this way or that way, before I could say anything he jumped in and loudly say it the absolute wrong way, I was so embarrassed because we lived in the foothills of the Smokies for over 30 years, he always knew everything, he was the smartest man he knew and would actually tell people that, one reason he is my ex husband.

    • @dukstedi
      @dukstedi 4 месяца назад

      @@carlacook5181sheesh. Hope life finds you well 😊

    • @NurseKayP
      @NurseKayP 2 месяца назад +3

      I live in the northeast along the Appalachian trail and we pronounce it the way he does in the video. “App -a -lay -cion” at least that’s the way I hear most people pronounce it up here. I have heard it the way you mention occasionally tho.
      Interestingly, I just looked up the correct pronunciation and the way you guys pronounce it is the correct way. “A -puh -la -chn” I will have to remember that going forward lol

    • @clairehann2681
      @clairehann2681 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@NurseKayPsouthern people pronounce it differently

  • @theprayingiguanabengalmomma
    @theprayingiguanabengalmomma 4 месяца назад +15

    I’ll be making sure to speak about Scott “Stonewall” Lily whenever I speak on the Appalachian Trail!
    God bless his family and my heart goes out to them and thank you for speaking on this story!

  • @AshleyMarie-mr4ry
    @AshleyMarie-mr4ry 4 месяца назад +27

    Geraldine's story always breaks my heart... I wish that she would have got help 😢

  • @thecatatemyhomework
    @thecatatemyhomework 4 месяца назад +25

    The first case, Jesse Hoover, i feel that she was suicidal (although there are far easier ways to kill yourself) or she had a mental problem. For her to do this to her family is very sad.

  • @reginadicicco4192
    @reginadicicco4192 4 месяца назад +8

    I just realized you not only got to 300k but shot past it. Dude….you 10000000% deserve to blow up on RUclips because I personally absolutely love listening to your channel and I feel like I’m not alone.

  • @riafitzgerald2988
    @riafitzgerald2988 4 месяца назад +16

    I've been on the Appalachian trail. Beautiful. Through TN to Georgia. Can be really creepy at times. Your mind can really scare you. It is so wonderful if you keep aware of surroundings. Oh yah, and bears.

    • @RessurrectionGraves
      @RessurrectionGraves 3 месяца назад

      What about the Bears??? Tell me more!!

    • @phonehome7349
      @phonehome7349 12 дней назад +1

      The woods can be a mindf*ck for sure. SW Virginia near Marion where the AT crosses Route 16 is where I used to day hike on the trail. Even on short hikes with no one else around in broad daylight it can be eerie. The woods are dark and deep and there are a few "places" - I can't describe them any better than that, they are just *places* - where you automatically take shallow breaths and move through quickly, as if lingering too long would disturb some spirit of the forest.

  • @katie195
    @katie195 4 месяца назад +27

    I cannot believe she went alone with even a controlled medical condition.

    • @susanschroeder3512
      @susanschroeder3512 4 месяца назад

      RIGHT. Mt Kathadin and that area even for skilled backpacker -- is challenging enough.

    • @dinahbrown902
      @dinahbrown902 4 месяца назад

      I can

  • @spazmonkey3815
    @spazmonkey3815 4 месяца назад +12

    Black Flies will come and sit on your face even with bug spray on. I will never again go hiking in the spring. I could see where they could set off Jesse's epilepsy . You get so used to swatting flies off that even when you go into your tent where there are no flies, you you continue swatting flies. I've never before experienced anything like it.

  • @ainorey882
    @ainorey882 4 месяца назад +7

    I can't even imagine the emotional pain Dennis' parents had to live with for decades. Having their small child go missing, no trace of him and living the rest of your life every day wondering what happened and could he still be alive out there and what they as a parent should/could/would do. I mean it sounds like a living hell. No closure.

  • @Hanniballinda
    @Hanniballinda 4 месяца назад +11

    I've just recently discovered you and am obsessed 😍 literally binge watched all your videos about disappeared hikers and also enjoy your other videos. I've always been super interested in these kind of stuff and I must admit, that your expertise in hiking makes you a super unique channel with a perspective I don't want to miss anymore when it comes to these stories. Best wishes from Switzerland 🇨🇭❤

  • @elizabethbrown5651
    @elizabethbrown5651 4 месяца назад +18

    Re: 12 Tribes. You can learn a hella ton by listening to podcast “Inside the Tribe”. Sketchy doesn’t BEGIN to describe these folks.

    • @jodimaenot
      @jodimaenot 4 месяца назад +4

      I'm glad someone finally mentioned them. They've been accused of human trafficking. NEVER get on that bus.
      They frequent festivals as well, where they seek out people who they think won't be missed & could be on altering substances for a reason.

    • @Pugetwitch
      @Pugetwitch 18 дней назад

      ​@@jodimaenotwho?

    • @TheFunkybert
      @TheFunkybert 6 дней назад

      Thank you.. I’m going to listen. They are an intriguing study on how cults exist in modern times

  • @laikanbarth
    @laikanbarth 2 месяца назад +5

    It’s so easy to get lost when hiking. I remember when my sister was young and took my two grandmothers hiking. They got lost. We all went to the trail to look for them. Luckily they were all found by the next morning. It was so scary.
    I love hiking. We have a lot of beautiful trails here in Texas and Arkansas. I live on the border of both states. Louisiana is about 45 minutes away and Oklahoma is about an hour away. I haven’t had the opportunity to hike a lot in Louisiana and Oklahoma. I love to go hiking but I’m always afraid of getting lost.

  • @HikingHalfdead
    @HikingHalfdead 4 месяца назад +13

    Hey Kyle I just wanted to say you’ve been an inspiration not to mention hilarious over the years . I’m disabled which blows , but I’m heading out in April to attempt the pct , and wanted to thank you for the inspiration. Great job on everything.

    • @carenblomgren6486
      @carenblomgren6486 4 месяца назад +4

      I was a PCT trail angel, and I am disabled as well in a few different ways actually. I was thinking about thru-hiking myself and I met a lot of people on the trail when day hiking it/trail angeling. They all encouraged me to do it as long as I had an emergency device (I dislocate my joints a lot so I'm high risk for bad falls on the trail). So pack that Garmin or whatever emergency device you choose and DO NOT LOOSE IT and most importantly have fun ❤! The only reason I haven't done it is not having a good situation to take care of my animals and financial constraints.

    • @HikingHalfdead
      @HikingHalfdead 4 месяца назад +3

      @@carenblomgren6486 hey thank you for the advice, yes it’s maddening when you don’t know if your body is going to function really affects you, I believe anything is possible you just have to find the right equation, that’s to say the equation already exists to make anything possible we just have to uncover it . But hey lol just a thought. I wish you luck and healing.

    • @carenblomgren6486
      @carenblomgren6486 4 месяца назад +2

      @HikingHalfdead good luck to you! Everyone's hike is different and you'll find your way 🥰

    • @mom.left.me.at.michaels9951
      @mom.left.me.at.michaels9951 2 месяца назад

      I feel this. I used to hike quite a bit. Nothing as extreme as a multi month thru hike, but I did prefer hike in campsites and have already section hiked most of the PCT in Oregon (where I live) and some in Washington. Then I messed up my ankle and it just rolls all the time. I might be able to have the time and freedom to next year. But my ankle... But I really want to... But I would be SO slow. I read the reddit threads and people pushing for 15 to 20 miles a day and I think I would be lucky to hit 5 maybe. So I would definitely have to carry more between resupply, making me even slower. There's a lot to consider. But the I think with an emergency device and maybe a buddy that's just as slow as me, lol it might be possible with proper planning. Just keep a lot of water on you and a GPS device, be careful and you'll probably be okay.

  • @georgemartin1498
    @georgemartin1498 4 месяца назад +15

    Really good Kyle, as always😊. Not going to watch this whole episode tonight but here’s two comments regarding what I’ve seen. Jessie: possibly suicide by trail (passive or active)? Geraldine: we’ll never know how she got two miles off the trail but in those dense woods, in the absence of really good navigating skills, two hundred feet can be your end.

  • @sofialuna5270
    @sofialuna5270 20 дней назад +1

    A three-hour long video on the atrocities that happened in my most favorite trail in the United States recommended to me when I'm at the peak of procrastination? You really cooked with this one, yet again.

  • @superpooh715
    @superpooh715 Месяц назад +3

    I just started listening to your channel. You're telling the story of these people and it's important they do not fade into history.

  • @michellekenny9637
    @michellekenny9637 4 месяца назад +4

    ❤ Thank you Kyle!
    Really Love the Marathons!

  • @missroxanne7123
    @missroxanne7123 4 месяца назад +9

    I bet Bismark was a good guy. I mean just watch your stuff around him. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @markferguson3745
    @markferguson3745 4 месяца назад +23

    If you didn't bring something as critical as insect repellent, you have to wonder what else was missing.That one item alone is make or break, the difference between doable and impossible.
    Not saying that it was the specific case here, but it appears to me that such sojourns into nature often are chosen for final moments, consciously or subconsciously.

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 4 месяца назад

      I won't leave the house w/o bug repellent on me or w/me and I live in a city.

  • @mucccvhorob4596
    @mucccvhorob4596 4 месяца назад +33

    People go missing on that trail often. If they live nearby its not counted for some reason. My cousin lives where they see thru hikers all the time. She cud name half a dozen unsolved disappearances just from her area. Theres far more than one!

    • @michelewalburn4376
      @michelewalburn4376 4 месяца назад +6

      That's sad.

    • @emilykro1
      @emilykro1 4 месяца назад +5

      Do you have any names so Kyle can cover them and raise awareness about this? :)

    • @420drew5
      @420drew5 22 дня назад

      I think a lot of people do a lot of crazy shit and when they get found they kill the person

    • @Pugetwitch
      @Pugetwitch 18 дней назад

      If they live nearby it's because the local authorities assume that they know the trail well enough to stay off of it and that they likely have disappeared on their own accord. You would have to really have reason to push for a missing person's report like an abusive relationship or something going on with that individual.

  • @badkarmaclagg
    @badkarmaclagg 4 месяца назад +7

    Hello! I'm new here, found your video in my recommendation list and thought it looked good. I was right! I loved every minute of this video, I even played it in my car going to pick up my kid from school. Was able to listen on the way and while I was waiting.

  • @ihas23crayons58
    @ihas23crayons58 Месяц назад +2

    Scott Lilly does get talked about, at least here in Indiana. His case is one of the many that kept me from hiking seriously when i was younger, especially being a female. I love it when you said, "Only 13 homicides." lol, one is too many, in my opinion, even if they aren't connected. I'm sure it's not your intention, but your videos help me feel better about my decision lol. Thank you for that.

  • @Tina-si1gz
    @Tina-si1gz 4 месяца назад +19

    I was born and raised in Fort Worth. How awful to disappear like that. Can’t imagine an inexperienced woman going off on a hike anywhere but especially one like this one. This is a sad story.

    • @bevcamren1316
      @bevcamren1316 4 месяца назад +5

      She may have intentionally done this to be with husband again

  • @joyseralph
    @joyseralph 4 месяца назад +5

    Thank you for sharing Mr Lilly’s story

  • @Thatonegirl989
    @Thatonegirl989 4 месяца назад +4

    I was just binging your videos, perfect timing!

  • @sandrarawn2147
    @sandrarawn2147 18 дней назад +1

    Hello from Ontario Canada
    Im a new subscriber. Just want to thank all that were involved in the making of this video. I can just imagine all the work and time spent putting these videos together for all of us to watch, its alot of work, im sure. I look forward to watching more from your channel! ❤ 😊

  • @olddad67
    @olddad67 4 месяца назад +1

    outstanding guys, I’m glad to see you guys were able to work it out and get back together. Good luck to both of you. Keep up the good work

  • @susans5581
    @susans5581 4 месяца назад +4

    I just subscribed to your channel. I've never listened to your channel before, and I'm glad I came across it! You are a great storyteller. I live close to the App Trail, which is gorgeous! Some dark and mysterious things have happened, but look at all the hikers who have not encountered anything awful! This is such beautiful country! Thanks again for your channel!
    I look forward to more stories!

  • @SuperBotanica
    @SuperBotanica 4 месяца назад +6

    I would never have given this man, who was wanted for 6 years for embezzling money, to the FBI.

  • @GrowLLLTigeRRR
    @GrowLLLTigeRRR 4 месяца назад +27

    It seems like most of the murders are happening in Virginia, where I live. Given the prevalence of violence on the AT, I'm wondering why these people were not packing heat. I always do because you just never know what may happen.

    • @cammeron.62
      @cammeron.62 4 месяца назад +5

      Always. Better to not need it than not have it. A matter of life or death.

    • @crankyoldbroad4635
      @crankyoldbroad4635 3 месяца назад +2

      I found that strange too. You should never go into the wilderness without a large caliber firearm (preferably two of them, but definitely multiple extra clips). You never know what you might encounter - bears, wild boars, large snakes, dangerous humans even - so I've never done that, though I've been a hiker since the early 1980s. Folks really need to think about all the potential scenarios, but I suspect those who don't live in VA/WV don't realize how dangerous the AT can be. We both know people are living in the AT, completely off grid - it's not just hikers there.

    • @GrowLLLTigeRRR
      @GrowLLLTigeRRR 3 месяца назад

      There is only one animal that concerns me. Homo sapiens @@crankyoldbroad4635

    • @LADavis-ih3ok
      @LADavis-ih3ok Месяц назад

      I've never thru-hiked. I've section hiked without a human companion but not alone. I have two very close German friends, always with me: Mr. Sig & Mr. Sauer.

    • @fincarosa
      @fincarosa 24 дня назад +1

      I would pack my passport and travel somewhere else

  • @Stephen-gp8yi
    @Stephen-gp8yi 4 месяца назад +11

    Great channel buddy✌️

  • @DarkGodSeti
    @DarkGodSeti 4 месяца назад +5

    Drinking game!: Take a shot every time he mentions that he walked the Appalachian trail. Edit: This was a very interesting watch (Did not mean any ill intent btw.) Subbed!

  • @BlazedandCornfuzed
    @BlazedandCornfuzed 4 месяца назад +2

    Thank youuuu!! This is the only thing that gets me to sleep at night. Then I wake up and watch what I miss! Hiking is my favorite thing to do but my biggest fear is some of the stories u talk about. Going missing, getting lost, getting murdered or attacked by bear, shit even aliens! Thanks for teaching me how to stay safe out there ❤

    • @mom.left.me.at.michaels9951
      @mom.left.me.at.michaels9951 2 месяца назад

      Bears aren't so much of an issue with all the noisy activities of the hikers and generally avoid groups of people. Getting lost is pretty impossible if you stay on the obvious trails and don't go for shortcuts. Get one of the GPS services with the emergency beacon just in case for pretty much anything else. Carry a good amount of water and everything will be fine. Take a chance out there! You won't regret it.

  • @Scorpio848
    @Scorpio848 4 месяца назад +1

    Love your stories. Everyone could make a drinking game out of it too! A shot every time you say "Appalachian Trail". LOL

  • @VanessaScrillions
    @VanessaScrillions 4 месяца назад +2

    Yay!!!!! I love this!!!! More extra long content pleeease 😊

  • @princessinmittens4783
    @princessinmittens4783 4 месяца назад +6

    I hope that couple's announcement wasn't a pregnancy one. That would be even more saddening

  • @coldbloodC
    @coldbloodC 4 месяца назад +8

    I think he may have hiked the AT in 2018..... Just pulling your leg Kyle, thanks for all you do! Loving the content from over in UK ❤️

  • @blank157
    @blank157 4 месяца назад

    Love your content. Saw you on another podcast talking about your journey. My favorite is probably the crime stories. You’re really good at it.

  • @jennifersmith4405
    @jennifersmith4405 4 месяца назад +1

    Love this marathon Kyle, i watch all your stuff, and i do subscribe ;)

  • @mahakranga7093
    @mahakranga7093 4 месяца назад +4

    I have no idea why but every time I sit down for my watercolour art, I always watch your videos..

  • @cindyhesson9213
    @cindyhesson9213 4 месяца назад +4

    My health has made my hiking impossible, for now. But listening to your show helps remind me why I loved it. ❤ Thank you, Zach, for bringing back lovely memories ❤ But also letting everybody know the dangers out there!! Be safe and blessings all !!

  • @fincarosa
    @fincarosa 24 дня назад

    Great video. Very informative and respectful to the memories of these poor people who ran into terrible luck or foul play on the AT

  • @thelastgeneration5862
    @thelastgeneration5862 28 дней назад

    Your channel randlomly popped up while i was doing other stuff. Instantly subbed! Been looking for another good storyteller, and i think i found one❤

  • @mattkeene3084
    @mattkeene3084 4 месяца назад +7

    I live near Dismal Falls. I remember when that attack happened on Sean n Scott. I was actually over in there during that time working on my hiking merit badge. It was crazy realizing that after all that afterwards.

  • @sheritamac87
    @sheritamac87 4 месяца назад +8

    Kyle, you are such a wonderful narrator/speaker/story teller. Thank you.

  • @BarnabusWestwood-lk3nf
    @BarnabusWestwood-lk3nf 4 месяца назад +9

    Bro the editing on this lmao. Voice randomly cutting out and shit haha

  • @thecatatemyhomework
    @thecatatemyhomework 4 месяца назад +7

    The editing of this video🤯

  • @MexicoAdventurer
    @MexicoAdventurer 4 месяца назад +10

    When I hiked the Appalachian Trail, it started bad. I came face to face with a 400 pound black bear halfway up Amicolola Falls approach trail, got struck by lightning 200 yards shy of Springer summit, and the next day, some young guy wanted to try to rob me while my stuff was hanging everywhere drying out. I *ALMOST* quit. Thank God I didn't. It was the richest experience of my life outside of mission work. I won the Damascus Trail Days thru-hiker talent competition and met some of the coolest people on earth.
    I went back the next year with an award winning (they won the Peabody Award once) film crew and filmed the entire Trail Days festival and parade. We were going to put it on Discovery Channel, but... things took a sour turn in my life for a couple of years. I got very depressed, and it took 4 years to get my sh¡t together.
    By then, I'd lost all desire to do anything with the Appalachian Trail for many years.
    For a few months in 2013, I was a "Trail Angel," paying for lots of hikers' food and medical care... and I day hiked all over, up and down from the point I was staying at. I made a spaghetti and meat dinner for almost 100 hikers one weekend.
    I ended up spending close to $7,000 and man was it rewarding.
    It's my intention to hike the AT once again in the next year or two, and complete it in less than 5 months, while in my 60's.
    Ill probably do a video log on this channel and create another channel when I'm done hiking, to put the edited movie and portion clips on it.
    I started a book during my first hike but when I got depressed, I threw it in the trash.
    Not this time.
    Ill be hiking with a handicap; I had a heat stroke in late 2013 and almost died. I've had a half dozen heart attacks since then, too. One of them 10 days ago.
    But I'll be fine.

    • @nicholaswarner1143
      @nicholaswarner1143 3 месяца назад +1

      Good luck, sir. You are doing a really good thing.

    • @RessurrectionGraves
      @RessurrectionGraves 3 месяца назад +2

      I’m still stuck on 400lb Black Bear! Good Lord!! I hope you’re safe and achieve your goals. ♥️

    • @noturdad5354
      @noturdad5354 3 месяца назад

      Hey you can’t be struck by lightning and walk away like nun happened brother.. you’re a liar

    • @MexicoAdventurer
      @MexicoAdventurer 3 месяца назад +1

      @noturdad5354 You weren't there, constipation.

    • @MexicoAdventurer
      @MexicoAdventurer 3 месяца назад +1

      @noturdad5354 no turd ad you just proved your ignorance.

  • @larrydirtybird
    @larrydirtybird 3 месяца назад +6

    There is one thing from this video that I will never, ever forget: You THROUGH-HIKED THE APPALACHIAN TRAIL IN 2018.

  • @MichaelWagner-oi5uw
    @MichaelWagner-oi5uw 4 месяца назад +2

    Love the ADK 46er sign. Before I moved out of CNY, I was hiking quite a bit of the ADK Mts. Knocked out 37 of the 46 high peaks. Great stuff and enjoyable memories with good friends.

  • @laurabentzinger200
    @laurabentzinger200 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank u for making this I appreciate you.

  • @DaytonPruet
    @DaytonPruet 4 месяца назад +6

    Glad to see you hit 300k subs. 🎉

  • @lydiabarry8153
    @lydiabarry8153 4 месяца назад +7

    Just go to the bathroom on the dam trail! If someone catches you going oh well, your still alive! 😢

  • @heartshapedcherry
    @heartshapedcherry 4 месяца назад +2

    YES! I love your longer videos❤

  • @Julia-Julia
    @Julia-Julia 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for the video! You definitely put efforts into creating it. Even went out to the woods!

  • @ritahassing2533
    @ritahassing2533 4 месяца назад +4

    Actually it is more dangerous hiking than in the city streets because of the elements, weather, wild animals, hiking rocks, crazies, getting disorientated...

    • @Pugetwitch
      @Pugetwitch 18 дней назад

      I take it you've never been to hunters point😂

  • @KuptisOriginal
    @KuptisOriginal 4 месяца назад +7

    When you put up a long video like this please use chapter markers or whatever they're called so viewers can go directly to where a certain video/clip starts.

  • @shelleytremper5940
    @shelleytremper5940 4 месяца назад

    Fascinating!! Just found your channel, love it!!

  • @ednasierzant3682
    @ednasierzant3682 Месяц назад

    Great videos new subscriber I luv these videos I respect your experience in hiking and can honestly make a judgement always fair and honest😊😊

  • @user-ld5tm6uh3m
    @user-ld5tm6uh3m 4 месяца назад +4

    Congrats on 300k

  • @fooshampoo904
    @fooshampoo904 4 месяца назад +3

    I have lived in pretty remote areas out West. Things can go bad. And even tho i did hike alone for shorter hikes, i generally dont recommend hiking alone.

  • @fred6059
    @fred6059 4 месяца назад +2

    I will stay home thank you. This stuff is beyond any horror movie. I like this channel.

  • @debbiefahey6069
    @debbiefahey6069 2 месяца назад

    God Bless you two for the work and heart you put in to your work. I have such admiration for you both❤

  • @EfficientRVer
    @EfficientRVer 4 месяца назад +4

    The lesson from Mostly Harmless, is to carry ID even if you don't want to be identified while you're alive. Failure to do so can result in a composite sketch artist thinking you were a wolfman.

  • @Hootncozy
    @Hootncozy 4 месяца назад +4

    Alrighty, I have my lunch, coffee and my blanket. Lets watch!

  • @WendyJoJohnston
    @WendyJoJohnston 4 месяца назад

    I am subscribed and looking forward to liking many stories to come.

  • @sandrarawn2147
    @sandrarawn2147 18 дней назад

    Hello from Ontario Canada
    I'm new to your channel. I could listen for approximately an hr and half. I could listen to this young man's narrating forever! He has a great voice. I always follow and listen to the first 10 minutes before I hit the like and subscribe buttons but after only 2 mins I was subscribed and loved this channel. The stories, although sad and so unfortunate are so interesting. Thank you so very much for these videos. I know there is alot of time and effort on your part editing

  • @Smokymountainhike
    @Smokymountainhike 4 месяца назад +6

    Thought about Dennis when I was up at Spence Field a few days ago in the snow. Many sad stories in this.

  • @rigosend86
    @rigosend86 4 месяца назад +3

    What’s crazy is that while searching why no one was blowing a whistle for anyone in hearing distance to be alerted.

  • @jessicaduncan9309
    @jessicaduncan9309 3 месяца назад +1

    Bro, your laundry is on fire. 😂 Love the series ❤

  • @joylynnloyd3183
    @joylynnloyd3183 4 месяца назад +2

    Great vid