While many states exempt hiking from shelter-in-place orders, that doesn’t mean you should hit the road before you hit the trail.
We’re all getting familiar with “shelter-in-place” orders and what they mean for daily life. You’ve already read the one for your home state, city, or town a dozen times. Don’t leave the house except for exempted work, to get groceries or medicine, or for outdoor exercise.
But that last one seems to cause a lot of hiccups in people’s daily lives. Can I drive up to the mountains to get on my favorite trail? Can I head to a national park or forest?
Increasingly, the answer is “no.” And the Superior Hiking Trail Association has given the “hike local” movement a name: “hike in place.”
Hike in Place: What It Means
Hike in place does not mean to literally walk in place. No, instead, the Superior Hiking Trail Association encourages people to rediscover hikes and nature in your neighborhood.
“Northern Minnesota counties are asking non-residents to avoid coming to recreate there. They’re afraid of a lot of things, but in particular, they fear their small and few hospitals could get overwhelmed if the virus takes hold here,” a release from the SHTA reads.
“We should all take their concern seriously. The Trail itself and thousands of annual visitors who enjoy it depend on these small communities to remain healthy. We all must do our part to protect them; they are a vital part of our trail community.”