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Solving the mystery of the Appalachian hiker Mostly Harmless
It s believed he started walking the Appalachian Trail sometime around April of 2017. From a state park in New York, he hiked south and, about a thousand miles and 10 months later, crossed into Florida. I saw a man walking on the side of the road, said Kelly Fairbanks, a so-called trail angel offering help to weary hikers. The thing that stood out to me first was his beard. Also, his trekking poles. His trekking poles let me know that he was a hiker.
Nicholas Thompson, of the Atlantic Magazine, asked, Why did he make an impression on you?
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Sometimes the most alluring stories we tell are the ones with the details left out. Objects and faces can be prettier in the half light. We see a faint shape and we add the lines and shadows we want. We hear one part of a story and add another part that we hope might be true.
I first learned of the man called Mostly Harmless this past August. A WIRED reader sent a note to my tip line: The body of a hiker had been found in a tent in Florida in the summer of 2018, but scores of amateur detectives, and a few professional ones too, couldnât figure out who he was. Everyone knew that he had started walking south on the Appalachian Trail from New York a year and a half before. He met hundreds of people on the trail, and seemed to charm them all. He told people he was from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and that he worked in tech in New York. They all knew his trail name, but no one could figure out his real one.