Miami Herald

Wander Women group gave up regular life to hike, bike, kayak

- BY JENNIFER MULSON

Retirement has been sweet for the Wander Women.

After saying goodbye to the old 9-to-5 in 2015, three former Colorado Springs residents didn’t sink back into the couch with a box of bonbons and their daytime stories and call it a day. Partners Kristy Burns and Annette Demel and their friend Lynn Edmiston sold everything they owned, including their homes, bought RVs and hit the road in search of adventure.

“We decided to retire so we could go do these big hikes and live our lives while we were young enough to do the things we wanted to do,” says Burns, 56.

The big life change probably came as no surprise to those who know them, as Burns and Demel have backpacked for decades. Edmiston, now 63, decided to get in shape when she was 50 and join the couple on their summer and weekend trips.

“We’re trying to age as gracefully as we can,” says Burns, a former mental health therapist. “We’re trying to get out of our comfort zone, so we’re using our brain all the time. When we’re traveling in the RV we’re in new places all the time. We’re looking at maps, trying to find new places to hike and bike. It’s always unfamiliar and changing.”

Getting uncomforta­ble looks different for everyone. Maybe it’s having a pebble in your shoe on a mile-long walk, or an early morning wake-up call to hike a fourteener. For these women, it means walking 10-plus hours a day for months on end, bagging long thru-trails around the country, visiting as many state and national parks as possible, biking as many Rails-To-Trails Conservanc­y bike paths as they can find and kayaking on national scenic rivers.

Altogether, they’ve accrued about 6,200 long-distance, thru-hiking miles since 2015, traveled to 39 states in their RV and visited almost 50 national parks, nearly 80 national monuments, six national scenic rivers, six national seashores and three national lake shores.

And there are zero plans to stop anytime soon.

COLORADO TRAIL

The Colorado Trail – all 500 miles of it from southwest of Denver to Durango – was their first big post-retirement accomplish­ment. In 2016 they checked off the Oregon Coast Trail at 425 miles. There was the Superior Hiking Trail in Minnesota, clocking in at 300 miles, and the 100-mile Lone Star Hiking Trail in Texas.

In 2019, they conquered the self-described grueling 2,200 mile Appalachia­n Trail, the oldest of the national scenic trails. It took them six months, nine days and five pairs of shoes each for Burns and Demel. Most recently, the couple finished the 2,700 mile Continenta­l Divide Trail, which saw them each go through six pairs of shoes, 70 packs of tuna, 130 cheese sticks and 18 10-ounce bags of peanut M&Ms. Edmiston was able to join them for 900 miles, but had to leave due to a job.

“What we would want for people is to go out there and do as much as you can,” Demel says. “You don’t have to go out and do a whole trail, but give yourself some kind of challenge. Go out and just try it. It’s such a great feeling to be out and have everything you need with you. Backpackin­g skills – those skills are pretty acquirable.”

Many of their adventures have been documented on the Wander Women’s increasing­ly popular YouTube channel, something Burns started in 2018 so their friends and family could tag along on their journeys. The videos are anywhere from one to two minutes to upward of 40 minutes, and detail not only their daily walks, but other often humorous side notes, such as caring for aging hikers’ feet, searching for Florida’s scrub jay and exploring the contents of

Burns’ 25-pound pack.

There also are regular appearance­s by Pesky, an annoying hiker who seems determined to ruin the Wander Women’s good times. Spoiler alert: Pesky is a character played by Demel just for laughs. Their YouTube fans can’t get enough of her, the women say.

“I remember on the AT when the Wander Women said they had a rule to not complain or whine as some do (definitely me at times) so that when something was really needing addressing it was taken seriously,” wrote fan Kelly the Fifth on their video documentin­g the completion of the CDT. “That really struck me, and when I hike, or even just in life, I try to think about that. Watching these films through COVID was such a bright spot.”

Burns believes it’s also their older age that attracts interest from others in a similar age bracket. Part of their plan has always been to encourage others to get out and try new things.

“People would write us and say I’ve joined the Y, I’m moving more, I’m getting outside and hiking,” she says. “Don’t be a victim to your life. Create it. Surround yourself with beauty and connect with people and create a tribe with people. Older people need something sometimes. You can really keep going and do amazing things.”

PANDEMIC HIKING

Before the pandemic and ensuing lockdowns chained many to their homes last year, the threesome had plans to do some long hikes in Scotland. That trip got canceled, so they headed to the Pacific Crest Trail, which snakes from Southern California to Canada, and was made famous in Cheryl Strayed’s best-selling 2012 memoir, “Wild.”

The group did two days worth before getting an email from a trails coalition recommendi­ng all hikers return home due to the virus. So they settled instead for the CDT, a hike that inspires great fear in some due to its proximity to grizzly country in Wyoming and Montana.

“You have to be OK living in the wilderness with grizzlies,” says Burns, who doesn’t seem easily scared.

“Even people we met on the Appalachia­n Trail who came out to do the Continenta­l Divide Trail don’t necessaril­y like it, because it’s so wild and you’re so high,” Demel says. “You have to deal with lightning storms and all of that stuff we’re totally used to in the West.”

In what’s called a flip-flop, the women started from the Colorado and Wyoming border and walked up to Canada before flying back to Colorado and walking the second half from Colorado to Mexico. They started in June and returned in October.

“When we first got on the trail we went three weeks without seeing another hiker – that’s how remote you are,” Demel says. “Thousands of people every year attempt the Appalachia­n Trail, but just a few hundred people do the Continenta­l Divide Trail.”

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WHAT WE WOULD WANT FOR PEOPLE IS TO GO OUT THERE AND DO AS MUCH AS YOU CAN. Annette Demel, 63

LEARNING TO TRUST

These are the ladies you want to gather with around the campfire late at night, as you sit back and listen to their colorful tales. Some are about the incessant hiker hunger and that bordering on anxiety feeling of knowing you don’t have quite enough in your pack to feel comfortabl­e. But this is when, the women say, the trail always provides. These are the teachable moments when one must surrender to life and trust.

Burns remembers one such nine-day stretch on the CDT. They felt weak and stopped to rest. They hadn’t seen another person in weeks, but suddenly four people on horses came clomping down the trail. They stopped to exchange pleasantri­es and, when they learned the women were running low on food, began pulling loads of goodies from their saddle bags.

“You definitely let go of worrying about what are we going to do?” Demel says. “You keep moving forward. We’ll figure it out.”

 ?? Courtesy of Kristy Burns/TNS ?? Kristy Burns, Lynn Edmiston and Annette Demel are the Wander Women. The former Colorado Springs residents have a YouTube channel where they document their adventures.
Courtesy of Kristy Burns/TNS Kristy Burns, Lynn Edmiston and Annette Demel are the Wander Women. The former Colorado Springs residents have a YouTube channel where they document their adventures.
 ?? Courtesy of Kristy Burns/TNS ?? Lynn Edmiston, Kristy Burns and Annette Demel completed the Appalachia­n Trail in 2019.
Courtesy of Kristy Burns/TNS Lynn Edmiston, Kristy Burns and Annette Demel completed the Appalachia­n Trail in 2019.

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