Setting off on a six-month hike right after your baby turns one might seem like the ultimate sufferfest. But Bekah and Derrick Quirin, both 25, who will launch their bid to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail on March 20, think the timing is perfect. Twelve-month-old Ellie isn鈥檛 walking yet, still loves to ride in the child backpack, and naps reliably for long periods of time while being carried. Plus, she鈥檚 still breastfeeding six times a day, which means less food to carry. When you break it down like that, the couple鈥檚 logic starts to make a weird sort of sense.
鈥淲e want to immerse Ellie in the outdoors and have it become normal for her from the beginning, and this is about as early as we can manage,鈥 says Bekah, who, along with Derrick, studied outdoor leadership at North Greenville University and logged lots of trail time working as backcountry guides for at-risk teens. 鈥淭ime flies so much faster after you have kids. People always say, 鈥業 wish time could slow down.鈥 This is the best way I can think of to do that.鈥

The Appalachian Trail is ten minutes from their backyard in Roanoke, Virginia.聽Bekah and Derrick grew up seeing thru-hikers and hiking sections of the trail themselves. Still, nobody鈥檚 done it with a baby鈥攜et. 鈥淚 called the Appalachian Trail Conference looking for resources, and they鈥檇 never heard of anyone doing it,鈥 says Bekah. (The youngest person to thru-hike the AT on his own two feet is Christian Thomas, aka 鈥,鈥 who walked the trail in 2013 with his family at age five.) Now that Derrick has left his job as a local outdoor guide (Bekah is a stay-at-home mom), the two will begin their effort in March.
Talking to Bekah, Derrick, and Ellie by Skype was almost enough to make me want to have another baby, if only so I could bundle it onto my back and hike 2,190 miles with 465,000 feet of elevation gain and loss. Then I remembered changing diapers in the tent, sitting on the ground to breastfeed, and dusting off the dirty pacifiers the baby dropped over and over鈥攚hile giggling, of course鈥攁nd I鈥檓 entirely psyched to live vicariously. (You can, too: follow them on and on their .)
OUTSIDE: What inspired you to try this now?
鈥婤贰碍础贬: It鈥檚 always been a dream of ours to do the AT, and when we had a child, we thought, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not going to be anytime soon.鈥 But then I joined the group Hike It Baby out of Greenville, and I started going on short hikes and then longer ones with Ellie. Meeting other like-minded moms was a huge help when I left work to stay at home. That鈥檚 when I realized that maybe now is the time to do it.
DERRICK: And we鈥檝e got to go now while we still only have one kid!
How long do you think it will take you?
DERRICK: That鈥檚 a really tough question. We鈥檙e thinking six months but allowing for longer. We think realistically Ellie won鈥檛 slow us down a lot, but we don鈥檛 know what the unexpecteds will be. Technically for a thru-hike, you have one year.
Do you plan to do it straight through, point-to-point?
DERRICK: We鈥檙e going to flip-flop, which means starting in the middle聽and going south. Then we鈥檒l come back聽and go north.
BEKAH: The has requested that people start from other places than Georgia because it gets really crowded there in the spring. The campsites get overloaded, and the privies get overloaded. We both have family in the area. So, for the first 100 or so miles, we鈥檒l be close to family as we鈥檙e sorting things out. Most of the way, we鈥檒l be so close to towns that if we get major snow or rain, we can always hop off the trail and take a break.
What kind of mileage are you aiming for?
DERRICK: We鈥檙e hoping to start out averaging 12 miles a day. With 12 hours of daylight, this seems relatively achievable.
Have you gotten any pushback from people who don鈥檛 understand why you鈥檙e taking a baby backpacking?
DERRICK: Not much. It鈥檚 honestly not any different than if we weren鈥檛 taking a baby. We get the same questions from our families, about what we will do if we see a bear and how we鈥檒l take showers. The only question we get that鈥檚 different from other thru-hikers is about diapers.
What are you doing about diapers?
DERRICK: We use a brand called with an outer cloth cover and compostable insert. They鈥檙e eco-friendly, but we鈥檙e not going to bury them. They will be disposed in trash cans every two days or so when we go through towns or pass a trailhead.
How will you carry all your gear?
DERRICK: We鈥檙e planning an ultralight hike [laughter]. Except for Ellie鈥檚 things. Bekah will carry Ellie with a little stuff鈥攖heir clothing and diapers鈥攁nd I鈥檒l carry a lot of stuff.
How much weight will that be for each of you?
DERRICK: We weighed everything the other day, and it鈥檚 about 35 to 40 pounds per person. Ellie weighs 18 pounds鈥ight now. Our sleep system is a double system, a that combines two sleeping pads with a Vela HD Double quilt. Ellie will sleep with us. We鈥檝e got a Triplex tarp that goes up using trekking poles. We鈥檙e bringing a Patagonia full-down baby bunting for Ellie, a , and wool base layers from . Our stove is an with a Snow Peak titanium 1.5-liter pot.
What will you eat?
鈥婤贰碍础贬: In each of the towns where there鈥檚 a place to mail something, we鈥檒l send a box ahead. We鈥檙e packing them all now. It鈥檚 like a warehouse in here. We鈥檙e doing a combination of rice, beans, freeze-dried veggies, and noodles in a quart-size freezer bag. All we have to do is add water. Also organic, non-GMO, low-grain bars. Ellie will breastfeed as long as my supply stays good, and to supplement, I鈥檒l pack freeze-dried organic baby food from in resealable, reusable pouches. Other than that, she eats what we eat.
What鈥檚 the longest stretch you鈥檒l be out of range?
DERRICK: The Hundred Mile Wilderness in Maine. At the farthest point in, we鈥檒l be three-and-a-half days from a town. We still need to figure out logistics for that section, but we鈥檒l obviously have a that allows us to send emergency beacons if we need to.
Besides remoteness and distance, what do you think will be your biggest challenges?
鈥婤贰碍础贬: We want to be considerate of others. The stereotypical thru-hiker is a single person. If there are nights when Ellie鈥檚 fussy, we鈥檒l put our tent farther from others. In camp, we鈥檒l have to take turns watching over her. There are cottonmouth snakes. We can zip up the tent and she can play there.
How are you mentally preparing for the unknowns?
鈥婤贰碍础贬: I鈥檓 trying to look at it as though they鈥檒l be the same as if I were at home. The baby mood swings, the temper tantrums, the teething. We鈥檙e just in a different environment. Honestly, I think it might be easier than at home. There鈥檚 so much to look at on the trail. Ellie鈥檚 always happier when we鈥檙e outside.