K
KYHeirloomer
Guest
Whoa, Darlin'!
I didn't mean to imply that I did 400 miles all at once. That was the total number of foot miles traveled while doing the book; and includes some trails that didn't make the cut for one reason or another.
I don't know how it is in Georgia, but 'round heah we don't, as a rule, hike in the summer. Too many bugs. Too much heat and humidity. And too much foliage to be able to see anything.
But if you want to come up for about a week around Christmastime, I'll be glad to show you some of our scenic climaxes.
The year I researched the book was like this one, only more so. Non-stop monsoons all spring. So I couldn't get out on the trails until mid-June. And my first deadline (at which point half the book should have been ready) was September 15. So I probably did more than 300 of those miles in the heat of high summer.
Complicating things was the fact I was pushing a wheel, and stopping often to make notes, and taking pictures. None of which lets you break through to that personal walking rhythm that makes hiking so enjoyable.
If you're serious about buying the book just go on line. Search under "Hiking Kentucky," by Brook Elliott and Barbara Elliott. You'll get about a hundred hits from places that sell it.
Believe it or not, we've sold almost 8,000 copies so far, an incredible number for that type of book (or any book for that matter. The average book doesn't sell 2,000 copies, and doesn't even earn back the advance paid to the author). And it's in it's second printing. The year it came out it was the most popular non-fiction title in Kentucky.
I didn't mean to imply that I did 400 miles all at once. That was the total number of foot miles traveled while doing the book; and includes some trails that didn't make the cut for one reason or another.
I don't know how it is in Georgia, but 'round heah we don't, as a rule, hike in the summer. Too many bugs. Too much heat and humidity. And too much foliage to be able to see anything.
But if you want to come up for about a week around Christmastime, I'll be glad to show you some of our scenic climaxes.
The year I researched the book was like this one, only more so. Non-stop monsoons all spring. So I couldn't get out on the trails until mid-June. And my first deadline (at which point half the book should have been ready) was September 15. So I probably did more than 300 of those miles in the heat of high summer.
Complicating things was the fact I was pushing a wheel, and stopping often to make notes, and taking pictures. None of which lets you break through to that personal walking rhythm that makes hiking so enjoyable.
If you're serious about buying the book just go on line. Search under "Hiking Kentucky," by Brook Elliott and Barbara Elliott. You'll get about a hundred hits from places that sell it.
Believe it or not, we've sold almost 8,000 copies so far, an incredible number for that type of book (or any book for that matter. The average book doesn't sell 2,000 copies, and doesn't even earn back the advance paid to the author). And it's in it's second printing. The year it came out it was the most popular non-fiction title in Kentucky.