• The Shot You’ll Never Forget Giveaway - Enter To Win A Barrel From Rifle Barrel Blanks!

    Tell us about the best or most memorable shot you’ve ever taken. Contest ends June 13th and remember: subscribe for a better chance of winning!

    Join contest Subscribe

More story on the Veteran killed on the Appalachian Trail

Don't know if this article had previously been posted, if so, disregard.

This Vet survived three tours in Iraq to get killed by some degenerate while hiking the AT. He was able to fight the bastard long enough for the other hikers to escape but died from his wounds.

We need constitutional carry nationwide. Places like the AT suck for concealed carry because it traverses so many states, several with little to no reciprocity.
 
If Appalachian Trail is Fed. NPS controlled ? . And NPS controls that land under US Contitution property clause . Then you should be GTG since 2010 on carry of handgun and longgun as long as you don't leave the Fed. Property, that you are traveling on .
.
 
Last edited:
If Appellation Trail is Fed. NPS controlled ? . And NPS controls that land under US Contitution property clause . Then you should be GTG since 2010 on carry of handgun and longgun as long as you don't leave the Fed. Property, that you are traveling on .
.

Not sure exactly what an 'Appellation' is, but the Appalachian Trail is beautiful this time of year. ;)
 
Not sure exactly what an 'Appellation' is, but the Appalachian Trail is beautiful this time of year. ;)
-
fuckin Spellcheck ....LOL

I hate to look like a radical on the interweb, but Carry everywhere you can . Fuck Fed. Laws of control ... WTF ? A man is expected to live two lives to even hike public property with family and friends, One life for himself and one life for his government .
.
 
  • Like
Reactions: earthtrekker1775
Appalachian Trail may be a NP but it is exceedingly narrow in some areas, has varying sections of state and private land connecting some stretches and hikers must hike through numerous small towns, cross public bridges, etc. as well as the many side trips to Post Offices or grocery stores to resupply.
 
Appalachian Trail may be a NP but it is exceedingly narrow in some areas, has varying sections of state and private land connecting some stretches and hikers must hike through numerous small towns, cross public bridges, etc. as well as the many side trips to Post Offices or grocery stores to resupply.
Damn, that's heartbreaking. ☹

Its not that bad, most of it is beautiful, scenic, country.
 
  • Like
Reactions: earthtrekker1775
Concealed Carry Reciprocity NOW...

This kind of shit is enough. Machete-boy should have been Swiss-cheesed through the chest with multiple 9mm or .45 Auto when he started menacing the campers, toe-tagged and thrown into a potter's field without any more drain on the taxpayers.

And it is also time for elected officials to stop using the mental illness excuse on perpetrators of similar violent crimes. As if gun control is not already enabling those scumbags enough, the 'mentally ill' label is giving them an even more brazen sense of immunity against justice. A couple of weeks ago a NYC subway conductor was lucky to escape with his life when a homeless addict walked up to him, told him: "Suck my dick", and then stabbed him without any warning or prior confrontation. The blade of the knife missed the aorta by mere millimeters. These incidents are only growing in numbers every year because there is absolutely no fucking deterrence.
 
  • Like
Reactions: W54/XM-388
I had a buddy that hiked it from the start in GA up to PA and almost to the end but had to stop for some reason I can't recall. He wanted to do it again, all of it. I wanted to also, I spent a ton of time hiking in the foothills and what not. It is beautiful country, but it runs through some of the most draconian and fucking backwards states in the union.

If govt. isn't gonna provide me a personal security detail, then they can fuck off with their goddamn carry laws. Besides, if they can't get there fast enough to save my life, they probably ain't gonna get there fast enough to catch me either. Dindu nuffin, din-see nuffin. Also, I've never been searched or hassled for carrying concealed. Nobody needs to know you have it unless you draw to fire anyway. I carried the whole time I was at university (against policy, but they couldn't give me an answer, just a blank stare, when I asked what to do if a guy walked into class cutting off all exits on the 3rd floor and started mowing fuckers down with an AK). Somehow my pistol managed not to ignite another school shooting, sheesh, guess I was lucky there. And nobody knows it when I carry it in a place that serves alcohol. I don't drink much. But drunks do, and those are one of the few places where I've come close to needing it in the last decade.

My buddy was telling me it's company policy he can't carry a firearm as a truck driver. Interstate truck driver. They want 'em to be all unarmed. More worried about having their "good corporate name" associated with guns, don't give a fuck about my buddy's life, but hey, if he gets killed he won't affect profits like he would if he fought for his life and maybe won. I told him policy doesn't trump rights and that those policies were made by greedbags in an office in NY or some shit with absolutely zero consideration given for him or anyone else not sitting at that table. He still intends to walk the line. Whatever, his life. He survived Iraq but he hasn't had pistols held to his head like I have right here at home, or experienced hardcore violence personally. Witnessing is one thing, come out the other end alive from a bad situation is entirely another. You tend to not let others make security decisions for you after that.

FWIW, I installed one interstate trucking company's owner's security system. I can say for a fucking fact he doesn't apply that policy at home. He's just a hypocrite.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Redmanss
I've hiked the Appalachian Trail here in Maryland, and I heard on the grapevine that crazy lunatics sometimes prowl the trail for victims that can be murdered, raped or robbed.

Best advice: If you plan to go camping overnight on the AT, it is best to set-up camp not within sight of the Appalachian Trail; so nobody hiking on the trail can see your camp.
 
  • Like
Reactions: earthtrekker1775
I've hiked the Appalachian Trail here in Maryland, and I heard on the grapevine that crazy lunatics sometimes prowl the trail for victims that can be murdered, raped or robbed.

Best advice: If you plan to go camping overnight on the AT, it is best to set-up camp not within sight of the Appalachian Trail; so nobody hiking on the trail can see your camp.

And have your sidearm out of site but with in instant reach.
 
  • Like
Reactions: earthtrekker1775
You can carry in national parks if you are able to carry in the state the national park is in.

Just carry regardless, if you think you need to. There was a time I would have gone on the AT unarmed, but not now. As far as I’m concerned, I don’t care what law there is, it shouldn’t trump your right to protect yourself. At minimum carry a good knife with you or better yet, do as I always do and carry both!
 
I've always dreamed of me carrying my Sterling L2A3 9mm Type 2 Mark 4 carbine, with the stock folded in my daypack, on a trail like the AT.



 
Last edited:
The sad irony is that I was very close to hiking that exact section almost that exact time with a buddy. Our plans changed because of issues with his kids. We were going to do a section hike for about a week. Gun laws of the north end certainly keep me from even considering that end of the trail.