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  • She Left A Note For Whoever Might Find Her on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#1) She Left A Note For Whoever Might Find Her

    Gerry Largay started her hike on the Appalachian Trail in April 2013 in Harpers Ferry, WV, planning to travel to the northernmost point of the trail at Mount Katahdin, ME. She kept a journal, and her writings and the accounts of other hikers provide a good idea of exactly how she spent her last days.

    Largay hiked with a partner, Jane Lee, and at the day's end, she went off with her husband, George, at trailheads or crossings. In late June, Lee had gone home for the day, and Largay was alone for the remainder of the trail. 

    In mid-July, things took a turn for the worse. Because the trail became increasingly remote, George wasn't able to meet his wife until three days and nights passed; he parked at Route 27 and waited for her. On July 22, Largay stepped off the trail to go to the bathroom. Unable to find her way back, she tried to text her husband, but there was no reception.

    George waited in the parking lot for her, even spending the night in his car. But the next day, he knew something was wrong and reported Largay missing.

    According to Largay's journal entries, on the first night, she only ate some Fritos, prunes, and almonds, trying to ration her food. 

    When the rescue attempts began, Largay heard the planes. She spent time reading and using dental floss to tie knots. She washed her clothes and waited. Eventually, she wrote a note to whoever would find her:

    When you find my body, please call my husband George... and my daughter Kerry. It will be the greatest kindness for them to know that I am [gone] and where you found me - no matter how many years from now. Please find it in your heart to mail the contents of this bag to one of them.

    Largay's last journal entry was dated August 18 - authorities, however, aren't clear if that date is correct. 

  • She Wrote Letters To Her Family Before She Passed on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#2) She Wrote Letters To Her Family Before She Passed

    As Largay's time drew to a close, she wrote a journal entry that included an apology to her family. She also wrote each of them letters, trying to help them move forward. Even at the end, she tried to put her family first. She cut up her credit card and buried it, kept her driver's license visible so she could be identified, and placed the letters and journal in a sealed bag with a note to her husband George. 

    In one of her last letters, Largay wrote, "My deepest love to you. And to all my friends. I pray to see you all in heaven." 

  • Rescue Teams Came Within 100 Yards Of Her Camp on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#3) Rescue Teams Came Within 100 Yards Of Her Camp

    A forester came across Largay's remains two years later; Largay was only two miles from the Appalachian Trail itself and 2,300 feet from a path that turns into a road. The walk to the street would have taken only 10 minutes

    However, because she was in a tent in a dense area, K9 search teams couldn't pick up her scent, and it was impossible to see her tent. 

  • An Innocent Mistake Threw Off The Entire Search on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#4) An Innocent Mistake Threw Off The Entire Search

    The search got thrown off when an inn owner relayed a voicemail to authorities from a hiker who said she was with Largay on Spaulding Mountain, but the message got garbled: "I spent the night at the Spaulding Lean-to with Inchworm, the missing hiker. Tell her husband she's going to be late." Inchworm was Largay's trail name, which she chose because of her slow progress. 

    Then three boys confirmed they'd seen a quiet woman with glasses on the trail, near the Spaulding Lean-to. The information led searchers to shift the area where they were searching. Largay's family, however, doubted the boys' report was about Largay, as she was talkative, not quiet.

    About two weeks later, another hiker, whose trail name was Ivanich, came through with valid information, confirming she and Largay had spent the night at the Poplar Ridge Lean-to. Largay left the next morning, followed by the other hiker. Ivanich, a faster hiker, said she should have passed Largay before noon, but that never happened. The rescue team then realized Largay had never made it to the Spaulding shelter. The mistakes became clear: the phone message was wrong, and the teenage boys had seen the other hiker, Ivanich, not Inchworm.

  • A Navy Training Camp Is Near Where She Was Found on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#5) A Navy Training Camp Is Near Where She Was Found

    The Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) school, operated by the US Navy, is in remote Maine off the Appalachian Trail. The school is intended to teach future Navy pilots how to survive in the wilderness and what to do if they become prisoners, though the institution has created some controversy for reportedly making participants undergo waterboarding and other harsh techniques.

    A few months after Largay's remains turned up, a report by Hutch Brown and Chris Busby for a Maine-based local magazine, The Bollard, caused a stir because they focused on the fact that Largay's camp was close to the Navy SERE school.

    According to their report, the Maine Warden Service said its team couldn't adequately search that area because they didn't have enough people who were fit enough to do so. However, based on a terrain map, the area doesn't appear to be strenuous. Also, a SERE class began the day after Largay was reported missing. 

    Busby suggested the area wasn't searched adequately because it is a military area with restricted access. 

  • (#6) The Reality TV Show 'North Woods Law' Filmed The Discovery Of Her Body

    North Woods Lawan Animal Planet reality show that originally followed members of the Maine Warden Service (and now focuses on Fish and Game officers in New Hampshire), captured on camera the discovery of Largay's remains. Largay was found by a forester surveying trees on the Navy's SERE school property. Once he saw her camp, he alerted authorities.

    Wardens were initially hesitant because they had received many tips saying someone had spotted Largay. However, the forester had taken pictures to prove his claim.

    Two years after Largay disappeared, Maine authorities uncovered Largay's tent and found her in her sleeping bag. Wardens and officers also discovered her cell phone, journal, and other supplies - these provided evidence that Largay had survived until at least mid-August - three weeks after she was reported missing. 

    The North Woods Law segment shows the emotional members of the Maine Warden Service reacting as they carry Largay's body away. "We figured we were there from the beginning; we were gonna take her down off that mountain," says Sgt. Scott Thresher.

  • She Reportedly Didn't Know How To Use A Compass on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#7) She Reportedly Didn't Know How To Use A Compass

    Though Largay's family said she prepared extensively for the hike, some may argue otherwise. Jane Lee, the woman who hiked with Largay initially, told investigators Largay didn't know how to use a compass. Rescuers were alarmed someone would try to hike the Appalachian Trail alone without such crucial knowledge. 

    Largo also left a GPS in her hotel, which would have worked even when her cell phone failed. Experts say she also should have carried an emergency locator beam that would have transmitted her coordinates. 

    Lee also told investigators Largay frequently got lost when they hiked together, and Lee had to search for her. According to Lee, Largay was afraid of the dark and "got flustered easily." 

  • She Loved Life, Her Family, And The Outdoors on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#8) She Loved Life, Her Family, And The Outdoors

    Largay was a retired nurse from Brentwood, TN, who, according to family and friends, spent her spare time in the woods. She attended a hiking camp, took her grandson hiking, and even made a quilt that featured a hiker walking on a path.

    Largay's husband George said his wife prepared extensively for a year and a half before attempting her Appalachian Trail trek: She read seven books on the trail, took a specialized Appalachian Hiking course, and did 200-mile practice hikes in Georgia and North Carolina.

    George also recalled his wife as someone who was always there for others, and hiking the Appalachian Trail was one of the only things she ever did for herself:

    I knew her reputation as a nurse before I knew her as a person. It was always about other people. It was never about Gerry. It was always about you. She was the best listener I've ever met. Very caring. She loved life. We'd kid that she put the "joie" in "joie de vivre."

    She was tons of fun to be around. I'm probably the typical guy [who's a] "just give me the remote and the game on" [type of person], but she would search for new horizons.

  • 11 Hikers Were Slain On The Trail on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#9) 11 Hikers Were Slain On The Trail

    Authorities ruled Largay's passing an accident, as she expired from thirst, starvation, and exposure. No foul play was involved. About 3 to 4 million people trek the Appalachian Trail each year, and most end their trip safely. But since 1974, 11 people have lost their lives on the trail.

    One incident, from 2011, is unsolved: Scott Lilly succumbed to oxygen deprivation, but the culprit is still at large. In 2001, someone took the life of a woman in New Hampshire. In 1975, a man offed a woman because he wanted her backpack.

    For anyone concerned about hiking solo on the Appalachian Trail, plenty of tips are available. 

  • The Long Search Was In One Of The Most Remote Parts Of Maine on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#10) The Long Search Was In One Of The Most Remote Parts Of Maine

    The search for Largay was complicated by the fact that she was in a remote, densely forested part of Maine. Known as Maine's 100-Mile Wilderness, it was one of the last legs of Largay's trip. Helicopters and planes searched from overhead; others searched on ATVs. 

    K9 search teams also joined the rescue mission, but the area was so treacherous and hard to walk through that the dogs' handlers had to at times pick up the animals and carry them. According to Largay's journal, she heard the rescue planes and tried to wave, but it was no use. Eventually, the rescue groups stopped using aircraft. 

  • Maine Is The Toughest Portion Of The Appalachian Trail on Random Final Journal Entries Of A Hiker Who Died While Hiking Appalachian Trail

    (#11) Maine Is The Toughest Portion Of The Appalachian Trail

    Maine is known for being a difficult part of the Appalachian Trail, with rough terrain and steep climbs. Maine is also the part of the trail where hikers lose cell phone reception. On an REI list entitled "The 7 Hardest Day Hikes on the Appalachian Trail," two are in Maine: Mahoosuc Notch and Mount Katahdin, the highest mountain in Maine and the northernmost point of the Appalachian Trail. 

    Largay was about 200 miles from Mount Katahdin when she went off the trail. 

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About This Tool

The Appalachian Trail is a 3,500 kilometer-long hiking trail located in the eastern United States, spanning 14 states from Georgia to Maine. Over the years, this steep and beautiful trail has attracted countless hikers to explore, but unfortunately, many people lost their lives on this trail, one of the famous heartbreaking stories is about Geraldine Largay who died there.

66-year-old  Largay was a hiking enthusiast. She died in one of the most famous hiking places in the world. It was not until two years after her disappearance that her remains and relics were discovered by accident. The most heartbreaking thing was the diary she left behind. The random tool explained 11 haunting final journal entries of  Largay.

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