Push On

My Walk to Recovery on the Appalachian Trail

Nonfiction, Sports, Outdoors, Camping, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Push On by Niki Rellon, Sanwald Press, Inc.
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Author: Niki Rellon ISBN: 9781732054028
Publisher: Sanwald Press, Inc. Publication: March 20, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Niki Rellon
ISBN: 9781732054028
Publisher: Sanwald Press, Inc.
Publication: March 20, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

My name is Niki Rellon, and I’m a trained chef, a paramedic, a boxing and kickboxing champion, a ski instructor, and a motivational speaker. I’m also the first woman to have hiked the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine on a prosthetic leg. I was born in Germany, but I’m a U.S. citizen now. Shortly after I came to America, I logged more than 15,000 miles on my bicycle as I rode from Alaska to Mexico City, from the west coast to the east coast, from Key West to New York City. In 2006, I hiked the Pacific Crest Trail from Mexico to Canada, a journey of 2,600 miles that lasted six months. And then in 2013, disaster struck, and my life was forever changed. While I was rappelling down a canyon wall in Utah, I fell out of my harness and plummeted 45 feet to the rocks below. The fall broke a vertebra in my back, fractured twelve ribs, cracked my sternum, collapsed a lung, shattered my pelvis, mangled my middle finger, and made splinters of my left leg. My foot was so badly damaged that the doctors had to amputate my leg below the knee. Most people probably would have given up on extreme sports after such a horrible accident, but I opted to push on with my life. Against the advice of doctors, friends, and family, I decided to hike the Appalachian Trail just over a year after my amputation. Armed with hiking poles, a new prosthetic leg, and bags of determination, I set out on the journey of a lifetime. Nine months later, I became the first woman to hike the entire Appalachian Trail on a prosthetic leg. Its memoir about my accident, my rehabilitation and my recovery on the Appalachian Trail. I survived a rappelling accident in 2013 that probably should have killed me and that cost me my left leg below the knee. I’ve been an athlete and an outdoor adventurer since I was a teenager, and I was convinced that the life I knew was over. I struggled through a long bout of depression as I recovered from my injuries. There were many times I was tempted to give up, to settle into a wheelchair and to retire from the outdoor lifestyle I loved so dearly. But a voice in my head told me not to succumb to the darkness, so I fought back, little by little. Fourteen months after my accident, I set out to hike the Appalachian Trail (AT), both as a way of strengthening my body and healing my spirit. And nine months after I started in Georgia, I completed my hike of the 2,200-mile trek, becoming the first female amputee to hike the entire AT on a prosthetic leg! s

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My name is Niki Rellon, and I’m a trained chef, a paramedic, a boxing and kickboxing champion, a ski instructor, and a motivational speaker. I’m also the first woman to have hiked the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine on a prosthetic leg. I was born in Germany, but I’m a U.S. citizen now. Shortly after I came to America, I logged more than 15,000 miles on my bicycle as I rode from Alaska to Mexico City, from the west coast to the east coast, from Key West to New York City. In 2006, I hiked the Pacific Crest Trail from Mexico to Canada, a journey of 2,600 miles that lasted six months. And then in 2013, disaster struck, and my life was forever changed. While I was rappelling down a canyon wall in Utah, I fell out of my harness and plummeted 45 feet to the rocks below. The fall broke a vertebra in my back, fractured twelve ribs, cracked my sternum, collapsed a lung, shattered my pelvis, mangled my middle finger, and made splinters of my left leg. My foot was so badly damaged that the doctors had to amputate my leg below the knee. Most people probably would have given up on extreme sports after such a horrible accident, but I opted to push on with my life. Against the advice of doctors, friends, and family, I decided to hike the Appalachian Trail just over a year after my amputation. Armed with hiking poles, a new prosthetic leg, and bags of determination, I set out on the journey of a lifetime. Nine months later, I became the first woman to hike the entire Appalachian Trail on a prosthetic leg. Its memoir about my accident, my rehabilitation and my recovery on the Appalachian Trail. I survived a rappelling accident in 2013 that probably should have killed me and that cost me my left leg below the knee. I’ve been an athlete and an outdoor adventurer since I was a teenager, and I was convinced that the life I knew was over. I struggled through a long bout of depression as I recovered from my injuries. There were many times I was tempted to give up, to settle into a wheelchair and to retire from the outdoor lifestyle I loved so dearly. But a voice in my head told me not to succumb to the darkness, so I fought back, little by little. Fourteen months after my accident, I set out to hike the Appalachian Trail (AT), both as a way of strengthening my body and healing my spirit. And nine months after I started in Georgia, I completed my hike of the 2,200-mile trek, becoming the first female amputee to hike the entire AT on a prosthetic leg! s

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