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When COVID-19 cases dipped in Vermont early last fall, Darren Sirkin joined Katelin Reeser (pictured) on the Long Trail, the country鈥檚 oldest established long-distance trail.
When COVID-19 cases dipped in Vermont early last fall, Darren Sirkin joined Katelin Reeser (pictured) on the Long Trail, the country鈥檚 oldest established long-distance trail.

The Year of the Missing Thru-Hiker

Hiking was in vogue in 2020, but COVID-19 closures decimated the thru-hiking ranks. What did prospective hikers do with their unexpected time back home?

Published: 
When COVID-19 cases dipped in Vermont early last fall, Darren Sirkin joined Katelin Reeser (pictured) on the Long Trail, the country鈥檚 oldest established long-distance trail.

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For 18 months, plotted her entire life around a single date: April 10, 2020.

That鈥檚 when the 21-year-old Netherlands native听planned to begin her 2,650-mile northbound hike of the Pacific Crest Trail, tracing the westernmost spine of the United States from Mexico to Canada. To get ready, she trekked between high-mountain huts in the Austrian Alps and bagged听a few of Norway鈥檚 highest peaks, work she hoped would听prepareher for the 鈥渟olitude, the cold, and the snow鈥 of the Sierra Nevada, she told me.

What鈥檚 more, she powered through nursing school in less than four years, graduating six months earlier than expected and even turning down two job offers to allow herself ample time to walk. By March 2020, Keuken听had a plane ticket, plus a clutch of online friends and fellow hikers she planned to meet in San Diego. This trip was going to change her life.

鈥淚 hated hiking as a child. I was the kid who, when my parents took me on hikes, would sit on a rock for hours听crying听until they would come back,鈥 Keuken remembers, speaking to me from her apartment in Amsterdam. 鈥淏ut I read Wild, of course鈥攕o cheesy鈥攁nd I got inspired.鈥

Twenty-five days before her hike was set to start, however, Keuken, like a lot of the world, woke up to devastating news out of the Oval Office: the United States was from Europe for at least 30 days in an attempt听to mitigate ballooning coronavirus caseloads. Sobbing and in shock, she roused her parents downstairs and vowed to wait it out, to travel to California the moment things reopened.

The Appalachian Trail Conservancy estimates that a little听more than 300 people finished the Appalachian Trail in 2020,听just a third of a recent annual average.

As the weeks ticked by, however, it became clear to her that the hiking season was all but canceled鈥攁nd听that her dream mattered less than a global crisis. When the case count in the听Netherlands eclipsed 10,000 before the end of March, she decided to put her new degree to immediate use. On April 6, four days before she was supposed to leave the PCT鈥檚 southern terminus near Campo, California,听she began her first day in her hospital鈥檚 acute care unit, where those with COVID-19 cases were sent. In the past year, she estimates she鈥檚 treated 1,000 people and explained to many families of dying patients that they鈥檇 never be able to see their loved ones again.

鈥淭hat was very difficult, and it still is,鈥 Keuken says. 鈥淏ut I felt like it was my duty. I had this degree. I was capable. And they needed people.鈥

Marijn Keuken, left
Marijn Keuken, left (Marijn Keuken)

Keuken has still not taken a step on the PCT, and she likely won鈥檛 in 2021 either. Though her story may seem extreme, it mirrors the experience of countless prospective long-distance hikers in 2020. When the World Health Organization proclaimed a pandemic in early March, people suddenly scrapped years听of planning or scrambled to get taken off-trail from some of the country鈥檚 remotest corners. The Appalachian Trail Conservancy estimates that a little听more than 300 people finished the Appalachian Trail in 2020, just a third of a recent annual average. They had to break laws and sometimes run from the cops to get there, with some even crafting bootleg blue 听typically issued by the conservancy听to dangle from their packs.

Lots of people did hike in 2020, of course. One recent report even discovered听that the number of miles logged on AllTrails听was up more than . A fever of attempts, many successful, smashed hundreds of speed records, getting people on and off-trail quicker听than ever before. And loads of hikers shifted their plans from prominent trails like the AT or the PCT to less traveled routes.

But as thru-hiking went, 2020 was largely the year not of the NOBO (northbound) or SOBO (southbound), but instead of听the NOGO鈥攁s in, well, not going. NOGOs like Keuken had to find other ways to change their lives.


, 28, chuckles when she hears NOGO.听The neologism has hounded her, after all, since last March, when her mother, Lisa, drove seven hours from Virginia to pick up听Pleban and her new trail friends not long after they finished the 72-mile AT haul through听Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

I befriended Pleban in 2019, when she offered generous support to my own trail family during my AT听thru-hike, even bringing a dozen gourmet cupcakes to abrewery for my birthday. As she moved from Georgia toward my home, 275 miles up the Appalachian Trail, I looked forward to returning the favor. When she got near, though, she fretted she鈥檇 never make it. 鈥淚 am having this grand adventure, but now I am worried about people back home, who may or may not be getting sick,鈥 she told me in an interview for 国产吃瓜黑料 just before she entered the Smokies. 鈥淚 am in the woods trying to survive, but should I even be out here at all?鈥

Pleban had hiked long enough to earn听a trail name, Tosser, and a trail family of her own, including听Ponder, Parmesan, and Amble. When Lisa picked up the four of them in Tennessee on March 21, they returned to Virginia, all cramming into the back seat, with the car windows down and their masks up, constantly sanitizing their hands.

The quartet spent the next two weeks locked in the basement of Pleban鈥檚 parents鈥 house, watching Harry Potter and The Lord of the Rings while trying to cobble together an exercise routine. As it steadily dawned on Pleban that she wouldn鈥檛 be returning to the听trail in 2020, she became more depressed than she cared to admit. She recognized her feelings through how much she ate. Boxed Oregon Chai lattes, home fries, bagels鈥攖his was more than mere refueling after a long hike cut short. She gained 20 pounds in a month.

鈥淚 felt like I鈥檇 found my home on the trail, and I didn鈥檛 want to leave,鈥 says Pleban, who had largely avoided the news while hiking so she could focus on the 2,200 miles in front of her. 鈥淏ut when I got home, it got surreal.听Are we dying and turning into zombies? Is this the zombie apocalypse? That鈥檚 how it felt.鈥

When her basement lockdown ended, she took her suddenly open schedule as an opportunity to acquire new skills. After her job as an expert makeup artist at a theme park was eliminated, she worked on a hemp farm in northern Virginia, living in a yurt and finishing her online certification as a yoga instructor. When the winter came, she enlisted as a ski and snowboard instructor at the Wintergreen Resort in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Nearly a decade earlier, she鈥檇 torn her left ACL during an accident there, an injury that led to a long battle with addiction. So the ski season was more than just a job; it was a chance to reclaim her former self after overcoming an obstacle that cost her so much.

Kaley Pleban, right, and her mom, Lisa
Kaley Pleban, right, and her mom, Lisa

At long last, Pleban听was ready to return to the听trail with new resolve and . In early April 2021, bolstered by a few mid-length summer hauls through West Virginia鈥檚 and Pennsylvania鈥檚 , the two听began heading north on the PCT. For three decades, Pleban says, her mom has been focused on the family and the family鈥檚 tech business, managing one as a parent and the other as a chief financial officer.

When they started walking together, she says she saw her mom鈥檚 鈥渓ayers of fear being peeled back one by one.鈥 And when word came that the ATC , they decided to aim for the PCT鈥攅specially poignant since Lisa is a Northern听California native. If all goes well, Lisa will turn 60 just after they finish. Pleban says her听mom gave her the motivation to pursue her goals, and听she鈥檚 thrilled that, in turn, she could听reciprocate.

鈥淪he has always had this role of provider and doer, and finally she鈥檚 living life for herself. Hearing her say, 鈥榃hat can I do for me?鈥 has been very healing for both of us,鈥 says Pleban. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 always get along, and we have gone through all this shit together in the past. And now she鈥檚 like my best friend, calling me every day to tell me about some PCT video.鈥

鈥淎re we dying and turning into zombies? Is this the zombie apocalypse? That鈥檚 how it felt.鈥

Katelin Reeser had a somewhat different experience with her boyfriend of nearly a decade, Darren Sirkin. While planning her 2020 PCT thru-hike, she pled for him to join her, perhaps to the point of nagging, she says. They had done several extended trails together, including the John Muir. But last year听he was in the middle of a job hunt, so he worried that disappearing into the wilderness for five months would dash his momentum.

鈥淥ut of the blue, I would just say, 鈥楽o, are you going to hike with me?鈥欌 says Reeser, laughing. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big thing, five or six months outside. I think he likes it, but he just doesn鈥檛 always want to admit it.鈥

At last听he did. When COVID-19 cases dipped in Vermont early last fall, Sirkin joined Reeser on the听, the country鈥檚 oldest established long-distance trail. When the Pacific Crest Trail Association finally announced it听would be offering permits for 2021 thru-hikes, he relented.

Reeser has struggled with regret over canceling her trek last year, though it gave her a chance to experiment with novel jewelry-making techniques and art projects. Having a new hiking partner helps make up for that feeling of lost time.

鈥淟ast year听he knew how much effort I put into planning,听and how much I had tried to convince him to come with me,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 had decided to go by myself. Now听he鈥檚 ready.鈥


Last March, when I first talked to Keuken about the moment she realized she wouldn鈥檛 be making it to California in 2020, the hurt sounded a lot like heartbreak: 鈥淪aying it out loud caused an incredible amount of pain,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t stung in my chest.鈥

A few months earlier, in November 2019, she noticed a cute man with blue hair from Portland, Oregon, on a Facebook group for 2020 PCT hikers. He intended to start the trail around the same听date. They exchanged Instagram handles, then phone numbers. By January, Keuken and Dani Odelson realized they had stumbled into a long-distance relationship, even though they鈥檇 never seen each other in real life. They made plans to travel to the start of the trail together and have, hopefully, a five-month first date. The pandemic scuttled those notions.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 when we realized we really wanted to be with each other鈥攚hen there was no way to travel to one another,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat made it very clear we were in love, because we missed each other.鈥

Keuken, left, with Dani Odelson
Keuken, left, with Dani Odelson (Marijn Keuken)

On August 24, Odelson arrived in Amsterdam, his belongings in tow. Their first date became the act of moving in together, out of her parents鈥 house and into her first apartment. They made contingency plans in advance鈥攊f it didn鈥檛 work, he would simply go home. They haven鈥檛 discussed that emergency exit since, as the relationship has been even better than she expected. During a ten-day hike in the French Alps, she giddily realized they share a pace.

鈥淚t was way, way more than I could have hoped for,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e have the same norms and values, both not leaving any trace. Just good vibes.鈥

For now, Keuken continues to treat COVID-19 patients in Amsterdam. Since she鈥檚 vaccinated, she picks up extra shifts from nurses who haven鈥檛 received their dose. She and Odelson, meanwhile, are talking about the long-distance hikes they鈥檒l take when the pandemic ends鈥攁nd a move to the United States.

She calls him听鈥渕y NOGO.鈥

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