Understandably, the idea of hiking anywhere, really, can be intimidating. Companies specializing in outdoor equipment advertise hiking gear the same way they advertise equipment for more extreme sports like whitewater rafting and mountain climbing. Rest assured, hiking is for everyone healthy enough to enjoy a leisurely walk, and the most essential hiking gear can easily be found in a typical closet, but I will discuss the “right gear” in a separate post. Today, I’d like to focus on the experience of hiking in the forest.
I’ve been hiking the trails of the Forest Preserve District of Cook County for almost ten years. In my experience, the “difficulty” of each of these trails ranges anywhere from easy to moderate, without getting into the more complex rating system professional hiking publications use to rate the difficulty of a trail. I have yet to hike a trail in these forests that I would describe as difficult or challenging. This, of course, will differ from hiker to hiker, depending on your personal fitness level and any other physical limitations or considerations.
I can assure you, I am not a model of fitness by any stretch of the imagination, and would describe myself as only averagely fit with the occasional knee and joint pain. This is one of the many reasons why hiking is so appealing to me: it provides me with low-intensity exercise that is easy on my leg joints and that breaks with the monotony of exercising on a stationary treadmill. If you can endure a walk through a shopping mall or neighborhood park, you can very likely enjoy a hike through the woods with greater benefits to your health and fitness, minus the cost of a gym membership. After a long week of being stuck in a classroom or office, the last thing I want is to spend what little free-time I have confined to a gym.
Unlike the gym, the forest and its trails are truly ALIVE! They change with the seasons, the weather, and are constantly transformed by both nature and their woodland inhabitants. No two hikes, therefore, are ever the same. Even for two people sharing a hike, the trail and the surrounding forest are experienced differently. I, for instance, being a naturalist at heart, have an eye for the finer details of nature’s intricate web and will notice the smaller things my wife, and favorite hiking companion might miss. She, on the other hand, being an interior designer at heart, has an eye for the full tapestry of the forest, the lay of the trail, and nature’s rich color palette. We each get something different from the same trail, and come away a little richer spiritually, artistically, and psychologically, while enjoying the same physical benefits.
I like to treat each hike as a journey of discovery, whether that be a personal, internal discovery (finding a solution to a personal problem, reflecting on a past experience, or clearing my cluttered mind), or an external discovery of one of nature’s many treats (such as a previously unencountered woodland critter, or a previously unnoticed connection between members of the forest ecosystem). In this way, the benefits of hiking are always more than physical.
Carrying a journal on my hikes also allows me to document the trail, changes in a known trail, off-the-path hidden gems, and sketches of the local flora and fauna, all of which can turn a simple one-hour hike into a more profound, character shaping experience. Naturally occurring and man-made arbors or clearings at different points throughout the trail offer a great place to rest, maybe sit on a fallen tree trunk, and take in your surroundings. As a mind-clearing and centering exercise, I like to consciously focus on my breathing during these stops, cycling out the city air and filling my lungs with the sweet, aromatic air you can typically only find in the forest.
Another way to get even more value from your hiking experience is to come to the forest with some knowledge of the local history of the area or the trail itself. The Little Red Schoolhouse forest preserve, for instance, is so named for the one-room schoolhouse that once sat deeper within the forest, nestled among its trees. Though the structure itself has since been moved and renovated, a historical marker along the trail marks the original clearing on which the building rested. As an educator, I have always been captivated by the image this produces in my mind of early pioneer children walking to school through the forest along similar foot-carved paths as those that now mark the trail through those woods. These links to the past are not unlike the experience of visiting a national monument or museum exhibit, but instead add to that experience the thrill of discovery and a sense of being transported to a different place and time, given the seamless, undisturbed proximity to the location.
Being as how many closed or “circuit” trails often begin at a fork in the path, simply choosing to change the initial direction of travel can alter the experience of walking the trail. Unless you are the kind of hiker that pauses at intervals to do a 360-degree turn and take in your surroundings, you are not likely to look back on the ground you’ve covered or the sights you may have missed in passing that are now behind you. This makes revisiting previously hiked trails a great practice, certainly worth your time.
Ultimately, these are just some of the more memorable and noteworthy experiences I’ve had in my history of hiking through the local forests, without getting into too much detail about each finer experience therein. The important takeaway from my sharing this is the understanding that hiking offers both shared and unique experiences for everyone that can be as rewarding, if not more so, than the physical benefits of purposeful walking. If you are reading this blog because you’ve never visited your local forest but are considering it, I truly hope you’ll take the time to head out and experience the joy of hiking through the forest for yourself.
If like me, you’ve collected similarly impactful experiences over time, I would love for you to share them in the comments section. Thank you for choosing to be a part of the Forest and Trail community. Until next time.