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Any disabled hikers here who stick to easy trails?
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>>2859520
>Do you think you could do longer trails with trekking poles?
No, I've tried them and I found them to be more trouble than help. It's a completely different stride than my stride with my cane. And double canes were not helpful either.
>What is a long hike for you?
anything over 3-4 miles flat or 1-2 miles with hills
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I have p intense fibromyalgia and need to use crutches/a walker sometimes. If it's a day where I think I'll be fine I'll do moderate hikes and if I end up in pain during it I just man through it, which I know I shouldn't be doing at all but I literally can't fucking live like this anymore man. I have places to go and shit to see, I've kind of stopped caring. it's either this or straight up killing myself lol.
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>>2859652
I've lived with chronic pain for almost 20 years now. It's related to my Ankylosing spondylitis, which is basically rheumatoid arthritis of the spine. I've got sciatic nerve pain, scoliosis(caused by the arthritis, not childhood scoliosis, my spine was normal until my 30s) and a couple spontaneous fusions in my neck and back. I've learned that, because I'm always in pain, some of it can be tolerated and ignored. I'm not doing damage to my body, I'm just getting erroneous pain signals. I'm in a similar situation when it comes to hiking or doing anything in general on my lower pain days. I go out and do something and may end up having to "man up" and keep going in spite of the pain in order to make it back to my car. But I know the difference between, this hurts and it sucks and I'm going to be laid up for a week after this. And that's something you only learn through experience. So, get out there and live your life. Learn what your pain signals mean. Try not to let it rule your life. It sounds like you're already doing that to some extent. Keep it up anon. Life stuck on the couch isn't worth living. Don't give up!
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I have a pretty unique case of IBS which means i'm on the porcelain throne for 4 hours minimum at a time, but usually good to go afterwards. It's a bit of a gamble but I try to do a few miles a day and on the better days, there's a disused railway line that was converted into a walking track that I take to the next village and back. I make walking canes and hiking poles as a hobby, so usually take one along to make sure everything is assembled properly.
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>>2858675
Kinda. I'm mostly blind in one eye after a cornea transplant. I have to take specialty eyedrops throughout the day to manage my eye pressure and to keep my body from rejecting the donor tissue. I don't really do extended trips anymore way offgrid; the logistics of keeping prescription meds like that which are sensitive to extreme temperatures and contamination is just too much for me to bother with.
I'm happy with my day trips mostly. If I wanted to spend several days /out/ I would make sure to bring a partner and have them carry a backup bottle or two.
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>>2859866
jesus
i had lasik and they said my corneal flaps were really thin and I might have a risk of damage to them if I did it but luckily all I got was just permanent dry eye which is also managed by drops but they aren't temperature sensitive, I keep them in my backpack (also use antihistamine drops)
I guess being blind in one eye would kinda ruin your depth perception and a lot of the hiking (tho easy) I do can involve scrambling and steps and that would not be fun with one eye
I bring a cooler everywhere with me. As long as you can get ice every 2-3 days a rotomolded cooler will be fine.