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Summary of Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail
Summary of Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail
Summary of Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail
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Summary of Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail

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DISCLAIMER

This book does not in any capacity mean to replace the original book but to serve as a vast summary of the original book.

 

Summary of Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail

 

IN THIS SUMMARIZED BOOK, YOU WILL GET:

 

  • Chapter astute outline of the main contents.
  • Fast & simple understanding of the content analysis.
  • Exceptionally summarized content that you may skip in the original book

 

Andrea Lankford, a former law enforcement park ranger and investigator, embarks on a quest to find missing hikers along the Pacific Crest Trail. After leaving the National Park Service after twelve years, she discovers three young men have vanished from the trail. She joins an eclectic team of amateurs, including a mother of the missing, a retired pharmacy manager, and a mapmaker. They track kidnappers, murderers, cults, psychics, and international fugitives. The search for the missing is a brutal psychological and physical test, but their hardships lead them to unexpected places and people. The book explores hiker culture, determination, generosity, and hope, and the vast and treacherous nature of the natural world.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherBookRix
Release dateSep 17, 2023
ISBN9783755453451
Summary of Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail

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    Summary of Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford - GP SUMMARY

    title page

    Summary of

    Trail of the Lost

    A

    Summary of

    Andrea Lankford’s book

    The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail

    GP SUMMARY

    Summary of Trail of the Lost by Andrea Lankford: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail

    By GP SUMMARY© 2023, GP SUMMARY.

    All rights reserved.

    Author: GP SUMMARY

    Contact: GP.SUMMARY@gmail.com

    Cover, illustration: GP SUMMARY

    Editing, proofreading: GP SUMMARY

    Other collaborators: GP SUMMARY

    NOTE TO READERS

    This is an unofficial summary & analysis of Andrea Lankford’s Trail of the Lost: The Relentless Search to Bring Home the Missing Hikers of the Pacific Crest Trail designed to enrich your reading experience.

    DISCLAIMER

    The contents of the summary are not intended to replace the original book. It is meant as a supplement to enhance the reader's understanding. The contents within can neither be stored electronically, transferred, nor kept in a database. Neither part nor full can the document be copied, scanned, faxed, or retained without the approval from the publisher or creator.

    Limit of Liability

    This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. You agree to accept all risks of using the information presented inside this book.

    Copyright 2023. All rights reserved.

    Author’s Note

    DURING THE FOUR YEARS I JOINED FORCES WITH A GROUP OF AMATEUR

    The author has gathered over 60 hours of recorded interviews and files to search for three hikers missing along the Pacific Crest Trail. The narrative includes handwritten notes, case reports, news articles, emails, texts, screenshots, and photographs. The author has made minor edits to improve grammar and compressed statements for narrative efficiency. The geographic reference points are from the Pacific Crest Trail Data Book, fifth edition, published by Wilderness Press in 2013. The narrative includes reporting on suicide, with an early trigger warning indicating help is available and hope for recovery.

    Introduction

    In October 1995, a thirty-one-year-old supervisory park ranger for the National Park Service (NPS) found Gabriel Parker's abandoned vehicle at a trailhead near the Grand Canyon's North Rim. The park ranger, a supervisory park ranger with experience in search and rescue missions, spotted a cheap day pack filled with crushed cigarettes in the back seat. The park ranger, who had worked in Yosemite Valley, California, was in charge of coordinating and leading the physical search effort to find Parker. The search team focused on the paths that spoke out from Parker's vehicle and adjusted their search strategy accordingly.

    The park ranger became emotionally invested in reuniting the missing with their loved ones, especially when they met the family. The search effort was winding down, and the ranger had to hand over the operation to local rangers who would respond to new leads but discontinue active searching while the park ranger returned home to resume their normal duties.

    When the park ranger informed Parker's father about the impending change in leadership, he slumped, knowing that the NPS would soon call off the search. The park ranger tried to bridge the distance between them, but Doug, the park ranger's father, was left feeling helpless.

    The author recounts their experience as a first responder in the Grand Canyon, where they faced the challenge of finding a missing hiker named Gabriel Parker. The park is a busy and dangerous area, and the rangers are understaffed and overworked. They felt guilty for not finding Parker and felt that they did not deserve to be thanked.

    Eventually, they found Parker by accident, with two maintenance workers surveying a remote pipeline finding his body at the base of a three-hundred-foot escarpment of iron-stained limestone known as the Redwall. The author suspected that Parker had smoked a joint and lost balance while taking in the beauty of the Grand Canyon.

    Three years later, the author left the National Park Service (NPS) and found solace in hiking the Appalachian Trail. They also wrote a few books, returned to school, and became a registered nurse. However, their twelve years as a park ranger left them feeling sad and disappointed.

    The author is often approached by filmmakers or journalists seeking quotes about national parks, especially when a park visitor dies or goes missing. In 2017, they researched a case involving Chris Sylvia, who had vanished from the Pacific Crest Trail in California. Despite fifty professional searchers searching the area for five days, no sign of the missing hiker was found. The author advised the producers that the case was unique, compelling, and logistically practical, but the episode was dropped.

    Chris Sylvia, Kris Fowler, and David O'Sullivan, three unmarried young men, disappeared from the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) in 2017 and 2016, respectively. The unsolved cases on the PCT are shocking and unprecedented, as it has been the site of sixteen deaths in the last forty years. The trail, which travels 2,650 miles from Mexico to Canada, has been the site of various crimes, including water assassination, heat stroke, and falling trees.

    The PCT Missing hikers were initially thought to be nature's casualties, but their bodies were found. The author embarked on a quest to answer these questions and partnered with a dedicated group of amateur searchers. Their efforts led to the discovery of numerous leads, including cell phone pings, discarded gear, wrecked cars, and bleached bones. The volunteers helped three families learn about their missing loved ones and helped the author's ankle with a titanium plate and five screws.

    The story of Chris Sylvia, Kris Fowler, and David O'Sullivan serves as a reminder that on the trail of the lost, you may not find what you're searching for, but you will find more than you seek.

    PART ONE

    POINTS LAST SEEN

    An Antidote to the Ills of Civilization

    The Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) was a groundbreaking idea that began nearly a century ago when teaching supervisor Catherine Montgomery received a sales pitch from a mountaineer named Joseph Hazard. Hazard, a mountaineer, had been reading about the Appalachian Trail and was inspired by Montgomery's idea of a long-distance footpath across the Pacific Coast states. Montgomery shared her thoughts with the Mount Baker Club, and the idea was sparked by Clinton C. Clarke, a Boy Scout leader who had been toying with the idea for years. Clarke formed the Pacific Crest Trail System Conference, which united government agencies and sympathetic groups, including the Boy Scouts of America, the Sierra Club, and the YMCA.

    Montgomery's lofty idea and Clarke's passion led to the designation of the Appalachian Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail as the United States' first national scenic trails. Today, the PCT and AT are arguably the most revered long-distance footpaths in the United States, and neither of the PCT's earliest champions ever saw the fruits of their shared dream come to pass. Although they never met in person, Montgomery and Clarke may have enjoyed a hike together in the hereafter, as they departed this earth in 1957.

    The Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) was first officially established in 1968 by the United States Department of Transportation (DOT). Eric Ryback, an eighteen-year-old with a relentless drive to follow unknown routes, set out to trek the entire PCT in one continuous journey from Canada to Mexico. The trail taught Ryback respect for himself, nature, and humanity. His book, The

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