ABSTRACT

This volume reports on the encounters between hikers and wildlife on the Appalachian Trail. Based on narratives provided by trail hikers, it explores the ways in which humans relate to the animals with whom they temporarily share a home. With attention to the themes of pilgrimage, the changing perception of the animals encountered and reactions to them, risk, auditory experience, and a sense of wildness, the author considers the meaning constituted by nonhuman animals in the context of the walkers’ narrative journeys. A phenomenologically informed study of the ways in which people perceive wild animals when in an unmediated wilderness setting, how they navigate interactions with them, and how they experience living among them, Blogging Wildlife will appeal to scholars across the social sciences with interests in anthrozoology and human–animal relations.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|41 pages

‘Real’ wilderness needs a ‘real’ predator

Hikers and black bears

chapter 3|21 pages

Cuteness on the trail

chapter 4|36 pages

Ugly, scary and disgusting

Uncomfortably close encounters with mice, snakes, insects, and other ‘critters’ on the trail

chapter 5|19 pages

Chirps, quacks, croaks, howls, and “what was that?”

Animal sounds on the trail

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion