Andrew Skurka went to Duke University with intentions of ending up on Wall Street. Then, the summer before his senior year, he thru-hiked the Appalachian Trail, his first ever backpacking trip, alone and in only 95 days (that’s 23 miles a day). He had caught the bug. He returned to Duke for his senior year, knowing that finance was no longer in his future. Soon after graduating, he became the first person to hike the 7,775 miles from Quebec to Washington in 11 months, carrying with him a vial of water from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. Two years later, he set another first by hiking the Great Western Loop — which links five long distance trails together over 6,875 miles — a feat that has yet to be repeated. He was named the 2005 “Person of the Year” by Backpacker Magazine and the 2007 “Adventurer of the Year” by National Geographic Adventure. We managed to catch him between guiding hikers through the canyons of Utah and jetting off to the Appalachians Mountains for a talk about success and failure on the trail.
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Q. What’s one thing every man should know?
A. How to navigate. With this skill, you can leave the established trails and crowds behind.
Q. What’s the hardest thing you’ve ever done?
A. My most recent big trip — a 6-month 4,700-mile solo effort around Alaska and Yukon — was no easy feat.
Q. What are you working on right now?
A. I just returned from guiding trips in the canyons of southern Utah, and in a few weeks I head east to guide a series of intro-level trips in the Appalachians.
I generally do what I want. And if others want to find value or inspiration in that, great.
Q. Name one thing you can’t live without.
A. On average I travel for nearly half of the year. It can be exhausting, and I’ve come to adore my home as a place of stability and recovery.