Short film “Trail Brothers” launches myATstory video series
Gordon County Saddle Club held their annual Saddle Up for St. Jude charity ride at Dry Creek Trails on Saturday, Sept. 24, 2016.
It was a successful event with cowboys and cowgirls of all ages coming out to help support St. Jude’s kids. The group of horseback riders took to the trails at approximately 11:30 a.m., returning from a two-and-a-half hour ride to a nice lunch, compliments of the GCSC, followed by a raffle prize drawing and live auction for great items. There were many happy winners with wonderful prizes taken home from the club’s fundraiser event.
Through event participation, t-shirt sales, auction and raffle festivities, the grand total raised came to $4,000 for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and its mission of finding cures and saving children from cancer and other deadly diseases.
GCSC would like to thank everyone that came out to participate and enjoy the day’s event and they’re also very appreciative to the local vendors, as well as the many individuals who contributed various items to the auction and prize tables to help make their annual fundraising efforts for St. Jude a wonderful success.
For more information with how to help support St. Jude, visit their website at www.stjude.org
GCSC meets the fourth Thursday of each month at the Gordon County Agricultural Service Center in Calhoun at 7 p.m. For future club events, activities, and trail rides, visit www. gordoncountysaddleclub.com or www. facebook.com/gordoncounty.saddleclub
HARPERS FERRY, W.V. – The Appalachian Trail Conservancy (ATC) is pleased to announce the release of “Trail Brothers,” the first short film in the new myATstory video series. This five-film series will showcase the stories of several unique members of the Appalachian Trail (A.T.) community, focusing on the transformative role the Trail has had on their lives.
“The Appalachian Trail has been a source for so many awe-inspiring tales, with more being created every year,” said Javier Folgar, director of marketing and communications for the ATC. “We at the Appalachian Trail Conservancy are proud to show the inclusiveness and personality that make the A.T. such a great place to make your own story in the future.”
“Trail Brothers” chronicles a five-day journey with Derick “Mr. Fabulous” Lugo, a New Yorker attempting to rekindle the magic of his 2012 A.T. thru-hike and reconnect with his brother, Carlos Velez.
I wanted him to experience what I experienced when I thru-hiked, at least a part of it,” Lugo said. “There’s this feeling you get. It just flows through you, where everything is just right. And I’m getting chills just thinking about it.”
Through a series of emotional and literal ups-and-downs, the film follows these brothers on their trek from the heart of New York City to the depths of the forests lining the A.T. Derick and Carlos experience companionship, blisters and, ultimately, a greater appreciation for each other and the benefits that the Trail provides.
“It’s just calming being out here,” Velez said. “Even though it’s exhausting sometimes.”
The myATstory video series is a part of a larger campaign to showcase that the ATC mission is also the Trail community’s mission. The series will not focus exclusively on hikers, instead showing how other groups and individuals have become involved with the A.T. — sometimes without even setting foot on the Trail itself.
“We want to highlight that the Appalachian Trail community isn’t exclusive to experienced hikers or adventure junkies,” said Folgar. “Future videos will show a variety individuals who want to preserve the unique experience that the Trail provides, whether that means protecting an entire mountain from destruction or simply lending a helping hand to the hikers passing through their town. So few places foster such a love both from and for the community, and we’re pleased that the A.T. has that effect.”
The myATstory video series is developed through the collaboration of the ATC, Horizonline Pictures and executive producers Rubén and Valerie Rosales. To view “Trail Brothers,” see the schedule of upcoming videos and learn about the myATstory Contest — where visitors can share their own A.T. stories for a chance to win great backpacking prizes — visit myATstory.org.
The ATC was founded in 1925 by volunteers and federal officials working to build a continuous footpath along the Appalachian Mountains. A unit of the National Park System, the A.T. ranges from Maine to Georgia and is approximately 2,190 miles in length. It is the longest hiking-only footpath in the world. The mission of the ATC is to preserve and manage the Appalachian Trail – ensuring that its vast natural beauty and priceless cultural heritage can be shared and enjoyed today, tomorrow, and for centuries to come. For more information, please visit appalachiantrail.org.