Hiker with bionic leg begins A.T.

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MichaelJ

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From the Boston Globe AP Wire. I've copied the text here because it will vanish off the web in a day or two and does not appear to be archived anywhere.

Scott Rogers: http://www.onelegwonder.com

Hiker with bionic leg begins Appalachian Trail quest

By Duncan Mansfield, Associated Press Writer, 3/22/2004

MORRISTOWN, Tenn. -- Scott Rogers, the hiker with the bionic leg, set out Monday on a quest to be the first amputee to walk the entire 2,168-mile Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine.

"I am on my way," Rogers, 35, said in a telephone interview from Amicalola Falls State Park in Dawsonville, Ga.

His deaf companion, 32-year-old Allan Bernier of Phoenix, was waiting at nearby Springer Mountain at the trail's start.

The morning was cold but the sun was shining and Rogers said he was "rarin' to go." He said he was eager "to hike as far as I can in one day," but added that "just to get through Day One. That is my immediate goal."

"I have met tons of skeptics, people I don't know," he said last week. "But people who know me know that if there is any way possible for me to do it, I am going to do it."

The personal journey for the Washburn, Tenn., hiker gained national attention last fall when he first talked about making the seven-month trek with the aid of a high-tech artificial limb called a "C-Leg."

The strap-on, silver and blue prosthetic leg, knee and foot assembly is powered by a battery, driven by hydraulics and controlled by microprocessors that monitor his movement 50 times a second to create a natural, stable gate.

Otto Bock Orthopedic, the leg's German manufacturer, and Hanger Prosthetics and Orthotics, which fitted the leg, are supporting the hike with a solar-powered battery recharger and service along the way.

"Otto Bock has not given me a dime. What they have given me is the ability to hike this trail. Without Otto Bock there would be no amputee hiker," said Rogers, who is financing the trip on donations.

Rogers' wife, Leisa, will be following from campsite to campsite in a 27-foot motor home loaded with their six home-schooled children. Their oldest, 13-year-old Tyler and 12-year-old Hannah, plan to hike with their dad for short periods.

"We are looking at it as an adventure," Leisa said.

Rogers lost his left leg below the knee in 1998 when he shot himself while hunting a snake. He learned to water ski and fly an ultralight airplane despite the disability, but chronic pain forced him to quit his job as a paramedic.

Two years ago, the leg had to be re-amputated above the knee and he faced the prospect of having to use a wheelchair before Hanger Prosthetics steered him to the C-Leg.

Rogers took on the Appalachian Trail trek as a personal challenge, but with publicity has come a broader impact. People have written him with encouragement, advice and offers of help along the trail. He became a mentor to Lane Milliken, an 8-year-old Clarksville, Tenn., boy who lost the use of a leg in a lawnmower accident five years ago and will soon have it amputated in favor of an artificial limb similar to Rogers'.

"If I fell before, I'd just be falling in front of my wife and kids. Now if I am going to fall, it will be in front of everybody," Rogers said. "But that is OK, if I fall I get up."

Bernier writes in his Web journal that Rogers, whose trail name is "One Leg," gave him "a lot more confidence in hiking the trail with his experience and strength."

Hiking eight to 10 miles a day, Rogers hopes by July to reach Harpers Ferry, W.Va., about halfway up the trail. He will get off there and drive to the trail's end at Mt. Katahdin in Maine. There, he will get back on the trail and head south to the finish.

This "flip-flop" approach, intended to avoid wintry weather toward the end of the hike, is perfectly acceptable to the Appalachian Trail community. Around 2,400 hikers start the Appalachian Trail each year, but fewer than one in five finish.

The key will be to "set several small goals every day and find something to celebrate, something to be thankful for," Rogers said.

"And if I am not still hiking in November," he said with a laugh, "I will be OK."
 
While hiking with a bionic leg is impressive, I hiked last year with a man, Healer, who had the worst case of Multiple Sclerosis that I had ever seen. He had almost no vision and could feel almost nothing, but he ended up finishing the whole trail in a fairly fast time of 5 months.
 
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