Daniel Applegate

Daniel Applegate, Works at a Bike Shop and Outdoor Outfitter on the Appalachian Trail; Damascus, Virginia:

“A lot of hiking and biking was all I did growing up. Played sports in high school, baseball and football. In my graduating class there was only 75 people. This isn’t a very crowded place. Seems people living in other places are always in a rush. Everything is so chill and relaxed around here.”

“I think the media believes that people in Appalachia and the south are just a bunch of rednecks and hicks and stuff. In reality, we are just the same people, just going slower, you know. Living here is like living in a vacation spot. It really is. It’s a big tourist town because of the trails.”

“I’ve met quite a few interesting people on the trails. A few years back, can’t remember the year, I met a guy on the trail from Nevada, can’t remember his name. He used to be a lawyer. He had gotten into a car wreck with his family, his little boy and his wife. They ended up dying so he came out here. He was lost, just searching for answers. I haven’t seen him for the last couple of years but until then, he was on the trail for 15 years, just repeating it. He never went home. He was a really good guy. He was so nice. He couldn’t bring himself to go back home, to go into his house. He’s been on the trail ever since.”

“There are two kinds of people on the trail, those that love the outdoors, and those who are searching for answers.”

Corrie Hill Price

Corrie Hill Price, Educator and Maker; East Tennessee and Asheville, North Carolina:

“I have driven down HWY 1 from Oregon to Southern California. I have sailed from Auckland to Whangarei, backpacked across Europe, married and honeymooned in Central America and scaled the Rockies looking for gemstones. After all of that, I realized that the wonders of East Tennessee, my home, surpassed each destination I had yearned to see in my traveling days. It is only now that I plan to put roots down that I am truly grateful to be born and raised in Appalachia. Someday I hope my family will enjoy the same beauty, kindness, and comfort these hills offer.”

Tina Taylor Rose

Tina Taylor Rose, Cowgirl/Solid Gold Dancer/Campfire Singer; Alter Ego: Legal Assistant; Clintwood, Virginia:

“I am not the poetic or writer type, I am more of a hands-on country girl, self-sufficient. That is what we are; we are strong, tough resilient and able. We take care of our own.”

“Growing up we had few neighbors, no cable TV, but lots of room to roam and to ride horse and skinny dip in the creeks. Never wearing shoes, I left my footprints on that mountain and the mountain left it's footprint on me.”

“No place that I have traveled offers the peace I find here. My mind is still and quiet. I can appreciate God's gifts. I am just a country girl, Appalachian, and proud of all that I am and all that we are as mountain people.”

Julie Boggs

Julie Boggs, Mother of two teenage boys, Bank Teller/Customer Service Rep; Clintwood, Virginia:

“I’ve never had a burning desire to leave these mountains like so many others I've known. I guess not wanting to leave family or fear of change has kept me here in the past.”

“Everyday on my drive to and from work I pass by this one spot that I swear has to be one of the prettiest places in the world. I almost always remark on how beautiful it is as if I'm seeing it for the first time. There are breathtaking spots like that nestled all in the hollers and along the ridge tops of these mountains I call home. You may discover them on a walk through the woods or an evening drive. These mountains offer shelter, tranquility and a kind of beauty you won't find anywhere else.”

“That's why I stay...that's why I'll never leave. These mountains are my home.”