[To see the original journal entries recorded during this leg of our adventure, click here! But this post has all the photos.]

Our hostel host dropped us back at the trailhead (TN91, if anyone is keeping track) around 8:30am, and we set off across the first (and only) unshaded meadow we’ve encountered on this trip.






The sun was already hot, so while the change of scenery was pleasant, I wasn’t sorry to see the dark, shady tree-line coming back into view.


Our hike today was incredibly laid-back. Well, except for how I forgot to refill my water before we left the hostel on a day with maybe no opportunities to refill so that we had to skim water off the top of a stagnant spring, and those two times we walked past hornet nests.


You can see the hornet nest in the photo on the left (barely – top right corner), but it’s much more impressive in the closeup on the right.
(Hornet nest closeup photo credit: Hobz)
[Alt text: Hobz, bottom left of the photo, faces away from the camera and holds up his right hand with thumb and pinky extended. In the top right of the photo, you can see a small point that is a hornet nest. Right photo is a closeup of the spherical paper hornet nest.]
The first hornet nest was visible before we got there, so that Hobz (new trail name: Hornet Bait) could work his superpowers (born of all the hornet venom he’s absorbed already on this trip) on them and persuade them to leave us alone.
The second time, the nest was fiendish-sneaky, and we had a repeat performance of Day 3’s “OWW!! OW! RUN RUN RUN!!” event, wherein Hobz got all the stings and Dustin had to bushwhack a detour to avoid the same fate.


(Photo credit: Hobz)

(Photo credit: Hobz)
There was also that one extremely giant, carnivorous mushroom we walked past. I’ve been trying to save most of my mushrooms for photo-candy at the end, but this one was just SO COOL.



A five-minute google search reveals that this mushroom is probably a bondarzewia berkeleyi, and that it is probably not actually carnivorous. In fact, in response to the question “is it edible?”, the internet notes: “Although Bondarzewia berkeleyi has been compared to eating shoe leather, some field guides list it as edible.”
I will not be doing any first-hand research.

Around our now-typical seven-“mile” marker, we stopped for lunch at a spot where the AT crosses a small highway. A shady pull-off even featured a picnic table, which was a serious lunchtime luxury.

(Photo credit: Hobz)
The best luxury of all, though, was the cold little spring that ran right by the road. The flow was not fast, but it was regular, and cold, and that water looked really, really clean.


We chucked the stagnant pond water and started over. Saved from my own stupidity through no credit of my own!
Onward we trekked, up and down several more mountains. Okay, possibly not several, but we did at least as much elevation gain and loss today and we had done on the first day, and my little hummingbird heart hardly even minded. If this is how much easier hiking gets after just six days, I can only imagine the wonders several months work on a body.

And so we arrived at Abingdon Gap Shelter, finally catching up with the plan from our original itinerary on the last night of our trip.

Dustin volunteered to go down the steep, nasty hill for a water resupply (possibly the last one available on our trip), so I made camp.

I also got to eyeing the fire ring, and got to thinking maybe we deserved a camp fire on our last night out on the trail. Turns out Hobz is a Fire Master. I wandered around picking up tiny sticks and came back to discover him dismembering an entire downed tree he found behind the shelter.



Another first for the evening was the company that joined us. A couple had been at the shelter before we arrived, but moved off to set up their tent a bit farther up the hill. Not long after, Hashtag and his dog Dozer* rolled in. They also elected to set up a tent (well, Dozer didn’t elect anything – he was down for sleeping any ol’ where), but they joined us for dinner and fireside festivities.
* this name may have been made up due to lack of proper remembering.

Eventually, we let the fire die out and put ourselves to bed. The tiny mouse that lives in the shelter was not as polite as her entry in the log-book implied. She did not go to bed at hiker midnight (9am) at all, and so I laid awake and listened to her scuttling about for far too long into the night.

Hornet Bait: Lord of the Flame.
DAY SIX STATS:
- Trail Map Says: 11.4 miles (cumulative: 55.8)
- Laura’s Watch Says: 11.95 miles (cumulative: 64.37)
- Elevation Gain: 2,262 feet
- Elevation Loss: 2,070
- Start Time: 8:39 am
- End Time: 4:15pm
- Active Hiking Time: 5:39
- Average Pace: 27:32!
- Average Heart Rate: 118bpm (high 150)!
- Calories Burned: 3,035
And now for today’s trail photo-candy:

DAY SIX STATS





(Photo credit: Hobz.)