Liz Thomas

Elizabeth Thomas (born 1987) is a thru-hiking champion and former women's unassisted speed record holder for the 2,181-mile (3,510 km) Appalachian Trail.[1][2] She holds the hiking "Triple Crown," having completed the Appalachian Trail, Pacific Crest Trail, and the Continental Divide Trail.[3][4] She is the pioneer of the Chinook Trail in Washington and the Wasatch Range in Utah.[5] She is Vice President of the American Long Distance Hiking Association-West, an ambassador for the American Hiking Society,[6] and an outdoors writer for Wirecutter, a New York Times publication.[7] She is also Editor-in-Chief of Treeline Review, a hiking gear publication.[8] As of 2018, she completed 20 long-distance wilderness hikes.[9]

Early life

Thomas was born in Sacramento, California and experienced a "typical suburban upbringing."[10] As a child she was "really drawn to nature, but [...] wasn’t really that active." However, a first-grade trip to a mile-long nature trail made a big impression on her, and from then on she attempted to get her parents to take her back to the trail on weekends. (Cascade Hiker Podcast, Ep. 127, 4:30) Thomas's mother was born and raised "in a Japan that--and even now--is not really for equality...not a great place to be a woman. Women didn't really do physical activity, they didn’t run or anything;" therefore, Thomas's "becoming physically active, becoming adventurous was a way [she] rebelled as a teenager."[10] Her first extended urban hike was in Los Angeles, during which she traversed a 180-mile route that connected 300 staircases.[9]

Education

Thomas attended Claremont McKenna College.[5] During her years there, she became involved in outdoors clubs with fellow students and met professors who were also enthusiastic about hiking. (Cascade Hiker Podcast, Ep. 127, 5:42) After graduating, she earned a Master's in Environmental Science from the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies.[6][11] In the process, Thomas received the Doris Duke Conservation Fellowship for her research on long-distance hiking trails, conservation, and trail town communities.[11]

Career

Thomas had never been backpacking as of 2007. A year later, the summer after her senior year of college,[12] she completed her first thru-hike, the Tahoe Rim Trail, solo in six days. At the time, she "had a lot of experience dayhiking solo and doing big peakbagging trips with <24 hour goals" and had "car camped" and led a five-day backpacking trip in the Grand Canyon, but had never "overnight-in-the-woods" hiked.[12] She later completed her first major thru-hike: the 2,181-mile (3,510 km) Appalachian Trail.[4] In 2010, Thomas completed the 3,100-mile (5,000 km) Continental Divide Trail.[4]

Thomas has worked with the American Hiking Society since 2010, when she attended Hike the Hill in Washington D.C., a national event that unifies trail organizations, agencies, and politicians to advance the American trail system.[13] In 2011, Thomas hiked the 2,181-mile Appalachian Trail, from Georgia to Maine, in 80 days and 13 hours.[2] Her trek set a record for the fastest female thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail.[9][12] The female record was broken by Heather “Anish” Anderson in 2015,[14] who simultaneously broke the male record held at the time by Matt Kirk.[15] In 2018, Karel Sabbe beat Anderson's record.[16]

In 2013, Thomas near-completed a thru-hike of all of Denver, Colorado's breweries.[17] In 2014, Thomas, Whitney La Ruffa, and Brian Boshart pioneered the approximately 290-mile Chinook Trail in Washington.[18] In 2015, Thomas trekked the Sierra High Route. In 2017, Thomas published her book, Long Trails: Mastering the Art of the Thru-hike.[19] In August 2019, Thomas was featured in Condé Nast Traveller's feature story 14 Globetrotters Redefining the Way We Travel.[1] In March 2020, Thomas will be the keynote speaker at the Texas Trails and Active Transportation Conference.[20]

Thomas leads groups on urban hikes of 11 American cities.[1] One of the tours is the eight-day Urban Brew Thru,[5] her thru-hike of every brewery in Denver, Colorado,[17] totaling 60 establishments,[5] the course charting in at 88 miles.[1] She also leads the six-week online course Thru-Hiking 101[21] for Backpacker Magazine[4] and speaks at "colleges, outdoor clubs, hiking clubs, [and] women's groups."[10]

Bibliography

  • Long Trails: Mastering the Art of the Thru-hike (2017)[6]

Awards and recognition

Podcasts

Date Show Episode Role
June 18, 2019 Tough Girl Challenges[22] "Liz Thomas, Queen of Urban Hiking" Guest
Nov. 19, 2018 Cascade Hiker Podcast[23] "135: Treeline Review with Liz Thomas" Guest
Nov. 5, 2018 By Land[24] "Episode 52: Learn To Thru Hike with Liz Thomas" Guest
Sept. 24, 2018 Cascade Hiker Podcast[25] "127: Liz "Snorkel" Thomas—Her Story" Guest
Feb. 19, 2018 The Adventure Sports Podcast[26] "Ep. 350: Mastering the Art of the Thru-Hike--Liz 'Snorkel' Thomas" Guest
Jan. 4, 2018 Dirt in Your Skirt[27] "#78: Liz Thomas - Author, Thru-Hiker, Environmentalist" Guest

References

  1. Jordan, Rick. "14 Globetrotters Redefining the Way We Travel". Condé Nast Traveler.
  2. Nelson, Glenn (September 19, 2017). "Liz "Snorkel" Thomas Wants You to Thru-Hike Your City". Outside Online.
  3. "Urban Speed Hiking With Liz Thomas". The Mountaineers.
  4. Murray, Emma (June 7, 2017). "How to get a name like Snorkel".
  5. Shikes, Jonathan (March 16, 2017). "Liz Thomas Is Visiting Sixty Denver Breweries on an Eight-Day, 88-Mile Hike". Westword.
  6. "Introducing American Hiking Society's NextGen Trail Leaders". February 2, 2018.
  7. "Gifts between $0 and $50 - The New York Times". www.nytimes.com.
  8. "Who We Are". Treeline Review. Retrieved Jun 20, 2020.
  9. "This master thru-hiker is trekking across a city near you". The Trust for Public Land.
  10. "Liz Thomas". By Way Of.
  11. "Liz Thomas x Crown Trails Headwear | SGB Media Online". sgbonline.com.
  12. "Wild Woman: Liz Thomas - Trail to Summit". www.trailtosummit.com.
  13. "Exhilarated by my own human power". May 13, 2015.
  14. Arcement, Katherine. "How this woman broke the record for hiking the Appalachian Trail". Washington Post.
  15. Michelson, Megan (November 18, 2015). "Q&A with Heather Anderson - Speed Record Holder of the AT and PCT".
  16. "Belgian Dentist Breaks Appalachian Trail Speed Record". Runner's World. August 29, 2018.
  17. Bortz, Dan (March 9, 2017). "Liz Thomas' Urban Thru-Hike of Every Denver Brewery". PorchDrinking.com.
  18. "The reality of the Chinook trail". The Columbian.
  19. Gear, Gossamer. "Book Review - Backpacker Long Trails: Mastering the Art of the Thru-Hike". Gossamer Gear. Retrieved Jun 20, 2020.
  20. "Keynote Speaker Liz Thomas". Texas Trails and Active Transportation Conference. October 3, 2019.
  21. "Learn Online Classes for Any Outdoor Adventure | AIM Adventure U". www.aimadventureu.com.
  22. "Tough Girl Podcast: Liz Thomas - Queen of Urban Hiking, triple crown hiker, whose completing over 20 long distance hikes in the USA!". toughgirlchallenges.libsyn.com.
  23. Host, Rudy Giecek Hiker Backpacker Radio. "Cascade Hiker Podcast - Backpacking and Hiking - 135 Treeline Review with Liz Thomas". Google Podcasts.
  24. "Episode 52 Learn To Thru Hike with Liz Thomas". By Land. Retrieved Jun 20, 2020.
  25. FM, Player. "127 Liz "Snorkel" Thomas- Her Story". Retrieved Jun 20, 2020 via player.fm.
  26. "Ep. 350: Mastering the Art of the Thru-Hike - Liz "Snorkel" Thomas". Retrieved Jun 20, 2020.
  27. "#078 - Liz Thomas - Author, Thru-Hiker, Environmentalist, Record Holder, Talking Urban Thru-Hiking from Dirt in Your Skirt - The Podcast". www.stitcher.com. Retrieved Jun 20, 2020.
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