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Tabor uses his feet to help him carve these wooden spoons for AT hikers.
Tabor uses his feet to help him carve these wooden spoons for AT hikers. (Photo: Courtesy of Jim Tabor)

Meet the Appalachian Trail’s Most Generous Trail Angel

Jim Tabor began stashing hand-carved spoons along the AT six years ago as souvenirs for through-hikers. His creations have come to symbolize the generosity of the tight-knit trail community.

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Tabor uses his feet to help him carve these wooden spoons for AT hikers.
(Photo: Courtesy of Jim Tabor)

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On a gloomy morning in early April, Jim Tabor聽parked聽his blue pickup truck in a lot off Highway 16 in southern Pennsylvania, then hiked聽north through along the Appalachian Trail. His morning shift at the聽nearby rock quarry started in an hour, so he wasted no time. A few hundred yards into the woods, he聽pulled聽from his pocket a hand-carved聽spoon聽whittled from a block of cherry wood that聽he made the week before. He slipped聽it into a Ziploc bag, along with a Snickers bar and a card with his email address,聽then draped the bag on a nearby log鈥攋ust visible to any passersby. Mission accomplished, he聽backtracked聽to his truck and聽drove聽to work.

With any luck, Tabor will hear from a hiker that stumbles across the cache. Regardless, in a few days he鈥檒l be back聽to stash聽a new spoon聽or two.聽鈥淚 just want to know where the spoons go and who gets them,鈥 Tabor says.

Tabor has been leaving spoons for hikers on the AT since 2011, when he dangled one from a leafy branch near the trail, not too far from his home in Mont Alto, Pennsylvania. The first one was simple and unpainted, the nicks from his knife evident and scattered across the slim handle down to the oval bowl. 鈥淚 left that spoon and never heard from it again,鈥 Tabor says with a laugh.聽

Tabor estimates he鈥檚 given away 200 spoons in the past six years since he started. This season, he鈥檒l give away 50 to 60 more.
Tabor estimates he鈥檚 given away 200 spoons in the past six years since he started. This season, he鈥檒l give away 50 to 60 more. (Courtesy of Jim Tabor)

For more than a year, he stashed spoons along the trail without hearing from聽anyone. Then, during the next spring through-hiking season, messages began trickling in from gracious hikers.聽The more time Tabor spent hiking that summer, he began meeting people who, to his surprise, knew of his spoons.聽鈥淚t kind of spread by word of mouth on the trail and took off,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople would . They started to know to look for the spoons once they got to Pennsylvania.鈥 Since then, he鈥檚 continued his ritual every year.

Dropping wooden spoons on the country鈥檚 most high-profile wilderness trail seems聽a bit quirky. But for the AT, it's business as usual. The footpath is riddled with hundreds of trail angels providing acts of kindness for the thousands of through-hikers who traverse it each year. What sets Tabor apart is that each of his spoons is a unique work of art that takes him hours to produce. For hikers, the rare gift is聽a morale booster, a keepsake, and a practical tool. But most of all, it's a physical representation of the . After all, Tabor doesn't ask for money or even seek recognition for what he does鈥攈is goal is to brighten a hiker's day.

Folks in the through-hiking community call him Spoon Man or the Barefoot Carver, because he occasionally hikes or carves without shoes.聽Most days, he crisscrosses a roughly three-mile segment of trail near his home, where he maintains a pair of lean-to trail shelters. In addition to handing out spoons, he聽also removes blowdowns from the trail, picks up trash, and doles out ice cream sandwiches to hungry hikers. Occasionally, he鈥檒l cover ground in Maryland or upstate Pennsylvania.聽He estimates he鈥檚 given away 200 spoons in the six years since he started. This season, he鈥檒l give away 50 to 60 more.聽

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 carry home the sign from with you, but this spoon has become a symbol of my hike,鈥 says 2015 through-hiker Robert Capo. He found a spoon on a log beside the trail one morning. He toted it with him for the duration of his hike, 1,000 miles from southern Pennsylvania to Maine.聽While he occasionally used it to eat with, he cherishes it more as a memento,聽a tangible reminder of his life-changing journey.


Tabor isn鈥檛 sure what to make of his nearly . The 57-year-old has worked as a maintenance mechanic for 24 years at a mining supply company. He鈥檚 a quiet family man with four children and a wife of 34 years. He鈥檚 naturally reserved and humble, passing off his extracurricular spoon gestures like they鈥檙e no big deal. 鈥淚鈥檓 not doing it other than for the pure enjoyment and seeing people happy,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen I see the smiles on people鈥檚 faces, that makes me happy.鈥

Tools of the trade.
Tools of the trade. (Courtesy of Jim Tabor)

Tabor has always had a natural gift for working with his hands. In high school, he started working with wood, making bowls and furniture. 鈥淔or as long as I can remember he has been consumed by hobbies,鈥 says Tabor鈥檚 younger brother, Tom. 鈥淗e gets almost like obsessed with things and it鈥檚 all he can think about.鈥澛燨ver the years, that's extended to photography, model trains and HAM radios.

Tabor started carving spoons in 2009 when Tom introduced him to the craft through YouTube. 鈥淗e made new designs and tried to figure out faster ways to make a spoon,鈥 Tom says. Not long after,聽Tabor started taking day hikes along the Appalachian Trail to lose some weight.聽One day the idea clicked, and he left that first spoon聽in the tree.

鈥淚鈥檓 not doing it other than for the pure enjoyment and seeing people happy.”

The spoon Tabor gives to hikers is based off a design he鈥檚 perfected over the years, what he calls a trail spoon, and can usually produce in just under two hours. He also makes sporks and spoons with elongated handles for eating from freeze-dried food pouches. He works with maple, birch, or聽cherry wood, the聽latter the聽most attractive timber due to its straight grain and amber tint. He starts with a chainsaw to shorten logs, then splits and refines them with an axe. Carving knives make more precise cuts to shape the block of wood, and a hook knife digs the bowl. He soaks the spoons in food-safe mineral oil for a few days, and the final touch is leaving them to dry, although he may paint the handle and drill a hole in it to hang a loop of raw hide.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a basic, simple wooden spoon but carries a lot more meaning to it because someone took the time to make it,鈥 says Michael Begansky, who met Tabor on the trail while through-hiking in 2013. 鈥淔or a hiker using it and carrying it with them, it can be a pick-me-up if you鈥檙e having a bad day. It鈥檚 like you鈥檙e connected with Jim through the spoon.鈥澛


In May 2013, Lerin O鈥機onnell had just started a weeklong section hike along the AT in Pennsylvania when she encountered Tabor, who was picking up trash near one of his shelters. O鈥機onnell relayed her hiking plans, while Tabor discussed his now-deceased father, who at the time was ill with frontotemporal degeneration corticobasal syndrome, a rare neurological disease. Although Tabor didn鈥檛 have a spoon to give to O鈥機onnell, he promised to mail her one. Tabor took off down the trail, and O鈥機onnell settled in for the night.

The two stayed in touch, trading messages on Facebook about O鈥機onnell鈥檚 hike. One day Tabor received a note from O鈥機onnell, letting him know that her聽father, Dan, had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. 鈥淲e started messaging back and forth to support each other through our dad鈥檚 illnesses,鈥 she says.聽

When Dan began treatments of chemotherapy, he struggled to eat. Utensils left a metallic taste in his mouth that he could hardly tolerate. 鈥淭he doctor recommended he could use a wooden spoon,鈥 O鈥機onnell says. 鈥淚 knew if I asked Jim, he would make one for me.鈥澛

“It鈥檚 a basic, simple wooden spoon but carries a lot more meaning.”

Tabor didn鈥檛 waste any time. Within the week, he had mailed O鈥機onnell a spoon with a purple handle鈥. It helped O鈥機onnell鈥檚 father stomach the otherwise nauseating tastes for months until he passed away in July 2014. Tabor continued crafting the purple spoons as a way to honor Dan, handing out dozens to hikers over the years. Today, if O鈥機onnell is on his mind, he鈥檒l whittle a purple spoon.

鈥淥ne of the things my dad was afraid of when he was dying was that people would forget about him,鈥 O鈥機onnell says. 鈥淎ll of these people have purple spoons in remembrance of my dad, so he鈥檚 not being forgotten.鈥 O鈥機onnell describes Tabor as altruistic and uplifting, apparent even after their one, brief meeting. 鈥淗e鈥檚 just somebody who would really do anything for anybody, so long as he didn鈥檛 get recognition for it.鈥

It's the human connections Tabor cares most about. His spoons are simply a vehicle that allows him to step into the lives of a few of the millions who hike the AT every year.聽When asked if he鈥檒l through-hike one day, Tabor laughs and says,聽鈥I鈥檝e probably logged 1,500 miles on the Appalachian Trail and never went anywhere.鈥澛燗nd that鈥檚 where he figures he鈥檒l stay, trekking back and forth near his home in southern Pennsylvania, hiding spoons along the way.

Lead Photo: Courtesy of Jim Tabor

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