Day Three
October 2, 2013
VA 601 to Rural Retreat, VA
15.6 miles
October 2, 2013
VA 601 to Rural Retreat, VA
15.6 miles
Partnership Shelter |
We left camp at 7:30 a.m.
Although it was a very nice, level walk through a rhododendron alley, I started thinking about how bad my feet hurt and how heavy my pack was. I was moping along not having a very good time. Two nights with not much sleep didn't help any. We hiked for 4 miles
before reaching Partnership Shelter.
I told Wait-up I wanted to call our shuttle driver to see if he could come pick us up at Mt. Rogers headquarters so we could quit for the day. He reluctantly agreed. We called True Brit (Nigel) from Fort Bastian, but he was unable to come. I guess it is a good thing because I probably would not have started back. The heavy load was killing me and my feet had been burning every day.
We had no choice but to keep going though.
Partnership Shelter is a popular shelter for thru-hikers because it is one of the few to have a shower. The water heater is propane-powered and is available during warmer months. The Mt. Rogers National Recreation Area headquarters is located just a few hundred yards north of the shelter. We found it closed due to the government shut-down. Even the restrooms were locked. We looked through the door and saw a soda machine beckoning to us. Waah! Sure would have been nice.
We had no choice but to keep going though.
Partnership Shelter is a popular shelter for thru-hikers because it is one of the few to have a shower. The water heater is propane-powered and is available during warmer months. The Mt. Rogers National Recreation Area headquarters is located just a few hundred yards north of the shelter. We found it closed due to the government shut-down. Even the restrooms were locked. We looked through the door and saw a soda machine beckoning to us. Waah! Sure would have been nice.
Partnership Shelter Shower |
Partnership Shelter bathroom |
See the deer? |
Chatfield Shelter |
Past USFS 86, we started climbing Glade Mountain through a
very narrow trail of Mountain Laurel and soon came to Chatfield Shelter where we chatted with a couple of day-hikers who were hiking the Rhododendron Trail.
We were concerned to see that someone had left a pile of dog food on a stump in front of the shelter. Probably won't be long before the bears find it and start hanging around this shelter.
At Highway 615, the trail comes out along the fenceline of the Settlers Museum. I visited the old one-room schoolhouse, which was in operation from 1894 to 1937. It still had all the furnishings in it. Outside I stole a few apples off the apple tree in the yard.
One-room schoolhouse at the Settler's Museum. |
One-room schoolhouse at the Setter's Museum |
The privy in back of the schoolhouse |
Back on the trail, it was downhill from the museum to
town. We walked through old farm land
and grassy pastures. We helped ourselves
to a few apples from the old apple trees and kept on walking down. At 5:00 p.m. we reached the highway and found ourselves looking right down on the
accident site. Traffic was backed up
quite a way trying to get onto the two-lane road. We walked over to the filling station to try
to get a ride into Atkins. We had been
advised not to stay at the hotel in Rural Retreat. We saw The Barn Restaurant, but didn’t want
to walk the short distance to get to it, so we sat on a bench in front of the
station and asked folks as they came by if they were going to Atkins. A gentleman who worked at the station agreed
to take us for $20, but he wanted to wait awhile to see if the traffic let up
some. We didn’t think it was going to get any better anytime soon, so we
continued to ask. Finally a nice young
man agreed to let us ride with him, he was getting off work and he lived in
Atkins. Plus, he knew the back roads and
we didn’t have to be detained by the traffic at all. In a short while we were in Atkins at the
Comfort Inn. This time we used a coupon this time from a coupon book that we had picked up at the gas station. It was $10 cheaper than our first night here, but we got two double beds so I think it would have been the same as the hiker rate for a king size.
We had a great hamburger at Atkins Tank restaurant located
inside the Exxon Station and then retired for the night at the Comfort Inn.
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