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ET Phone Home Or how to stay in touch with the folks back home.
The issue of technology usage on trail has reached a fevered pitch on crowed trails like the Appalachian Trail. Where there is a contingency of hikers who look down on technology enabled hikers much the same way as civilized folk looked upon lepers a century ago. For them, use of any technology in the backcountry is a major breach of the unwritten "Hikers Code of Ethics". For the rest of us who are not as fervent in our feeling about technology, we must walk a fine line between the world of the wild we're drawn to and the world of civilization that can never let us go. There has been and always will be a certain amount of tension between those of us who wish to escape and our friends and loved ones at home who what make sure we're safe. Back in the late 70's my father-in-law was so concerned about me dragging his daughter into the wilds of Maine that he insisted that I carry a CB radio in cases of emergency. It took many discussions before I was able to persuade him that CB's would be totally in effective deep in the Maine Wilderness. Eventually he relented, though I know he was quite concerned until we were safely back in the mountains of Virginia.
Taking a hint from some of the previous seasons thru-hikers, I settled on the Sharp TM-20 PocketMail device. With a list price at about $120 and even cheaper on eBay or through some of the discount houses, it certainly was in my price range. Of equal importance to this lightweight hiker was weight. Last thing I needed was to spend months meticulously shedding ounces only to waste it on some heavy device. At eight ounces, with two AA batteries, it came about the same weight as the paper notebook I was planning on carrying. Plus it is a lot more useful. Now I could write my journals at night as I hiked, emailing them when ever I got to town. When they arrived in my wife inbox. At least they would be legible, even if she had to spend time spell checking and proofing them. Otherwise, she would have been forced to re-key my somewhat illegible handwriting. The built in address book feature allowed me to store all those names and address of people I planned to call occasionally from the trail. That is if I ever found some time. It did come in handy for collecting all those thru-hiker names. Instead of trying to write them down and misspelling half of them, I'd simply hand over the PocketMail and ask them to enter their particulars. There are a number of locations along the PCT that have Internet access. With more coming online each year. Regrettably they are hard to schedule your hike around. If you're lucky enough to get to a library while it's open, frequently you'll need to wait quite awhile while its few terminals are being used by other hikers or town's folk. A built in modem, allows the PocketMail to communicate on virtually any pay phone. Though there were times when we'd need to try two or three phones to get one that would send our message through. Since we weren't bound by the laws of common decency that say is it's not nice to wake up mom and dad or the spouse at 5 in the morning to ask for more money in our next mail drop. We could dash of that last email and post it before leaving town. By the time I'd hiked several hundred miles up the trail, half of the people in the groups we were hiking with had acquired the devices. They were especially useful for my foreign hiking friends that had the added burden of overseas long distance rates mixed with the wide time zone differential. So if you need to take a bit of technology into the backcountry to help
you keep in touch, you may want to consider one of these devices. But
for the sake of your companions, learn how to turn off the button clicking.
As least then, they can look at the gorgeous sunset with the illusion
that civilization is miles away. |
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Copyright (C) 1999...2001 Ron "Fallingwater" Moak |