{"id":45098,"date":"2022-11-14T22:36:58","date_gmt":"2022-11-15T03:36:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.realstylenetwork.com\/lifestyle\/?p=45098"},"modified":"2022-12-14T17:23:24","modified_gmt":"2022-12-14T22:23:24","slug":"melanie-vogel-is-the-first-woman-to-complete-coast-to-coast-to-coast-journey-across-the-trans-canada-trail","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.realstylenetwork.com\/lifestyle\/2022\/11\/melanie-vogel-is-the-first-woman-to-complete-coast-to-coast-to-coast-journey-across-the-trans-canada-trail\/","title":{"rendered":"Melanie Vogel Is The First Woman To Complete Coast-To-Coast-To-Coast Journey Across The Trans Canada Trail"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Photo: Trans Canada Trail<\/p>\n
The Trans Canada Trail is a 28,000 kilometre trail that travels across the Canadian landscape, linking three oceans and 15,000 rural, urban and Indigenous communities. It’s the longest recreational trail in the world, connecting the country from one end to the other across a vast variety of terrains.\u00a0 To see it all seems almost impossible, and to travel it twice an epic no one could accomplish. Yet on Saturday, November 12, that’s exactly what German-born and raised hiker Melanie Vogel did, becoming the first woman to make the coast-to-coast-to-coast journey on foot.<\/p>\n
Vogel’s unplanned, spontaneous journey started five years ago in June 2017, in Cape Spear, Newfoundland, and if not for the travel restrictions created by the pandemic she would have finished it a year and a half ago. Before her journey Vogel’s longest hike had been a 10-day adventure in Nepal, which was nothing in comparison to the 20,000 km of land routes she walked across Canada. It took 26 million steps to accomplish, through weather of all four seasons. While she started the hike alone, she adopted a lab-husky named Malo while in Manitoba, who became her lone companion.<\/p>\n
“When I set foot on the Trail in Newfoundland, I had no idea or expectation of how this walk would unfold. I did not know that kindness and my connection to nature and this land would become such major talking points,” Vogel said in a press release. “People stepped up when support was needed: the repair of gear, an invitation to stay at someone’s home to rest up, a sandwich handed through a car window, encouragement from afar, or sometimes just a simple hug or high five on the roadside. Those moments and the stories we shared have shown me the true soul and spirit of this country.”<\/p>\n