(Originally posted to social media on May 5, 2023)
I am shocked to hear about the death of Larry Adkins. Larry and I have been friends for more than 50 years. However we have lost track in the last 5 or so. I understand he has had some serious health issues. I fully expected to see him at the recent Conclave. He liked to wear the old red scout jacket that so many of us wore. His hair was black and he had a ready smile for anyone that he knew. He was full of lies and stories and memories and maybe that is why we got along so well. I do not know how old Larry was but I think we were about the same age.
Many years ago during the first season of the High Knoll Trail Camp Larry led a crew out of Camp Ottari. It was the first day on the trail and they were hiking out across the North Ridge trail that led up to the peak of High Knoll Mountain. His crew was headed into my base camp at white Oak Creek, Logging Days. After a while I began to get worried about the crew. I radioed base to find out if they left in time. Larry was supposed to have taken a trail off the right side of the mountain that would bring him down to me. But he had taken this steep shortcut trail that I had cut just for my own use. It was barely marked and it was so steep that it was almost cliff like. It dumped into a vast Rhododendron thicket that sprawled across the vast flow of White Oak Flats.
At the bottom the trail vanished because I did not need to know where I was going. I had a bad feeling that Larry and those poor kids were stranded in that snake infested hell. I got in my truck and rode to the closest point to the bottom of the trail and I cut loose with a long scream. Almost right away I heard the sounds of a crew lost on High Knoll. They would not be the last. I ran cross country to where they were still screaming. I led them out and I have to admit that I laughed just a little bit. Larry took it in stride but the kids were about to die.
Back at my camp I let the base know that I had the crew and then I ran them through the whole program. I let them know that they were trailblazers in a new program. The next day I sent them on the way to Huff Farm. They all thanked me for a great time and for getting them out of that patch of ground. The other option would have been to climb back up that mountain and that was almost unthinkable. Larry will be missed. He had a tall, lanky frame and he seemed to be everywhere at once in the old days. Tonight he is breaking in some new trail, swift travels my friend.
(Copyright by John Hankins; all rights reserved. Published here by permission of the author.)



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