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Fellow CDT Finishers!

Posted on the 28 September 2013 by Erin "wired" Saver @ErinWiredSaver
It has now been almost a month since I finished the trail and almost all the northbound hikers have completed the trail with a few brave souls still left to brave the snow now falling in Glacier. I like to have an "ending credits" kind of post that includes all the hikers I spent extended time with on the trail. Here are their finishing photos along with a closing statement from them as many of them are settling back into society. It was a pleasure to share the trail with these hikers this summer and seeing all of their finishing photos just makes me smile with happiness and pride for them.  Hope you all enjoy hearing from them one last time...
Fellow CDT Finishers!
Drop-N-Roll(Click Here for DNR's trail journal) Finished Sept 16th
"As you know, the whole gang (myself, LoveNote, Ninja, Sweetfish, Burly Whites) stayed around East Glacier for a few days and went to the Hiker Hoopla party hosted by the Montana Wilderness Association. I then took the train back here to Portland (via seattle to get my car). I'm heading to Florida for a week to vacation with my parents in Key West, so I still feel like I'm not back in real life.  I have no definite plans, other than that I want to stay in Portland. I (still!) haven't decided if I want to get another engineering job or figure out something else. I also don't currently have any big hiking plans, but the southwest is always calling me. I should probably answer." ~DnR
Fellow CDT Finishers!LoveNote Finished Sept 16th 
"It's raining in Darby, MT -- the type of frigid valley rain that means snow in the higher mountains. And I am so happy to not be hiking but instead to be holed up in a cozy cabin, watching the rain fall from indoors while snuggling up with the new puppy that Burly and I took home with us when we left East Glacier finally a few days ago.(Click Here to see where this new dog came from...) His name (for now) is Huckleberry Pie a La Mode, but Huck when he's naughty (which he isn't). After a fun summer on the CDT, I'm looking forward to settling back into "normal" life -- going back to my same nanny gig, my friends and my little cottage -- and getting accustomed to life as a dog owner. Happily, my body handled the physical strains of the CDT much more easily than the PCT, and it doesn't feel like I even hiked border to border this time! Regardless, I don't have any immediate plans to hike another long trail. I loved the CDT, however! At times, it was a mental push (PUDs (pointless ups and downs) galore!), but I was in great company and felt grateful to enjoy laughter and friendship on those days. Other days I was amazed at the astounding beauty along the Divide (but often off of the official route, go figure) -- the Winds, the Gila River, and Glacier NP stand out as my favorites from the summer. Tonight my sister will arrive to drive me and HucklePup back to California, and we'll drop Burly Whites off at Chief Joseph Pass (which is under snow currently) to finish his missing section to Anaconda. Next project: sorting about 50gigs of photos and video from the past five months!" ~LoveNote
Fellow CDT Finishers!Burly Whites(formerly Stryder) Finished Sept 16th
My name is Burly Whites. I had a great time hiking the trail this summer. I am currently in darby waiting out a snowstorm to hike the stretch of trail I skipped for my sisters wedding. After that for the next month I will be hanging out in Colorado and California waiting until ski season starts in Colorado and thusly work. Love note and I have rescued a red heeler/lab puppy from the Blackfoot reservation on the south end of Glacier NP. The dog is pretty awesome and we think his name will be huckleberry. As far as the next travel plans go they could involve climbing all summer after ski season or maybe getting a job as a California lifeguard, but I would need a perm like David hasselhoff's. so if you know a good barber please let me know. Thanks. ~Burly
Fellow CDT Finishers!Ninja Finished Sept 16thNow that I've finished the CDT, I plan to retire from hiking...just kidding. Well, maybe. Who's to say how I will feel next spring when the days grow longer, the sun shining on my face feels noticeably stronger, and the trees start to leaf out? My hope, however, is that completing my triple crown will largely satisfy the wanderlust I have felt since first starting to dream many years ago of thru-hiking the Appalachian Trail. The answer I've given to others who have asked "what's next?" is simply: pursue domesticity. Maybe take up the piano, hang pictures on my(as yet unrealized) walls, volunteer with the local trail club...possibilities are endless. The core of my post-trail aspirations is to adopt a more settled lifestyle and contentment myself therein. Oh, and to travel to Patagonia and hike the Torres del Paine circuit. You know, just to keep it interesting. :-)~NinjaFellow CDT Finishers!
Sweetfish Finished Sept 16thThe finish through glacier was phenomenal, hiker hoopla was lots of fun, train ride back to Boston was long, but whenever I looked out the window I just felt that I should be walking it.  Seeing my family again was very nice, and after getting home and sleeping for an entire day, I'm just picking up where I left off, and thinking about the next adventure.  Probably the Camino de Santiago. - Sweetfish
Rockin' & Silly Chili Finished Aug 2nd at Old Faithful
(Click Here for Rockin's journal)
"We experienced cold, heat, bugs, snow, lightening, wind, hail, high altitude, and lots of elevation ups and downs. But most of all we experienced a friendly and supportive hiker community. We shared our journey with Wired, Drop n' Roll, Ninja, Burly Whites, Sweetfish, and Love Note. Without this important component the CDT would have been just another long trail. Thanks guys for the shenanigans and the long breaks! 
Fellow CDT Finishers!
Hiking long trails has a way of grabbing a body's soul and refusing to let go. It is a gift I cherish daily. After coming home, I have to admit the adjustment back into the real everyday life has been an uphill battle. The CDT forced me to grow and change in many areas that were not natural for me. I am currently in the process of using these new strengths to develop a simpler work and personal life and healthier body. Part of this plan includes lots of upcoming trip plans and dreams. I am teaching, hiking, climbing, and started Cross Fit. Right now I am looking to hike through Scotland on the TGO Challenge next May and to finish hiking my last large section of the Pacific Crest Trail through Oregon and Washington next summer. Silly Chili started a year long graduate nursing program at Concordia University in the middle of August. He loves it and is very challenged. In his spare time he is studying and working out at a lot rock climbing gym. As for right now, I am on my way to explore the fall colors in the Eastern Sierras and maybe even climb a peak or two." ~Rockin'
Fellow CDT Finishers!Mtn Rat(Click Here for Mtn Rat's journal) Finished Aug 17th "I finished my CDT thru hike over a month ago. Did it actually happen? Hard to say. Sometimes the memories are vivid, sometimes they are vague and distant. Came off the trail full of energy,but that soon changed as I embarked on a two week holiday. It was perfect as I just ate all the time and had about a 3 hour nap everyday. Had weird dreams though. I would be walking a section of trail with about 3 miles to get to where I wanted. I would walk and walk and never get any closer. That happened every night for a little over 2 weeks then stopped. Just over a month out I am back to normal with just a little foot soreness in the morning and a couple of toes still displaying some lingering numbness. I am back to running and have started flipping a heavy timber end over end to get some functional strength back. Man thru hiking is hell on the upper body strength for me.
As for the mental part. No changes. No epiphanies. No life changes. Maybe I am more patient and discomforts are no longer uncomfortable. I just do stuff and don't let it get to me. I also have a renewed appreciation for the automobile. :)" Cheers, Mtn Rat
Fellow CDT Finishers!Estero Finished Sept 9th"Im still traveling around and visiting family and friends before I go back to Florida for the winter. Currently I'm riding a train from Washington state to Pennsylvania.
I have done the AT 2011, PCT 2012, and of course CDT 2013. I am considering the PCT or AT again next summer but work this winter will determine that." ~Estero
Fellow CDT Finishers!
Stopwatch & Optimist (Click Here for their trail journal) Waterton Aug 29th*
*Stopwatch and Optimist hit Waterton and returned to CO to complete the couple hundred miles they had to skip due to a fire. They completed that and tried to return to the remaining section where Stopwatch still had some miles to complete, but the weather did not cooperate and they headed home.
"Since finishing the trail, we have returned to Seattle where Optimist is taking the opportunity to learn a new skill by attending nursing school. While Stopwatch is headed back to work, most likely in the field of finance, she will also be writing her third self-published book, this time about the CDT. Her first two books are about their PCT and AT thru-hikes from 2007 and 2011. Though we will be hanging up our hiking boots for now, we are getting back into running and plan on racing anywhere from the half marathon up to 100 mile trail races. While in Seattle, we will be taking sailing lessons so we can take our adventures off-land, and lastly, we hope to soon embark on the adventure of parenting, something that scares us both more than a grizzly bear in Glacier." ~Stopwatch & Optimist
Fellow CDT Finishers!Bloodbath & Rampage Finished Sept 3rd"We are spending a month in Phoenix with Rampage's family. In October we will be leaving for our next adventure - a teaching job in Changwon, South Korea. Being off trail has been strange and the adjustment back into daily life has been an interesting one. The hardest part of being off trail is how easy it seems to slip back into the 'daily grind' and how quickly the trail and the entire thru hiking experience seems to fade into the background. Perhaps this is why we continue to seek out experiences that involve travel and change and challenge - so that we don't lose ourselves in the civilized, corporate American machine so to speak. So off we go! We have been offered a one year English teaching contract on the southern tip of South Korea. After which we plan to hike the PCT (again for Bloodbath, first time for Rampage) and eventually start nursing school in 2015. We can say that out of all the adventures in our future, we can't wait to get back out into the backcountry!" ~Bloodbath & Rampage

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