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As working adults with busy schedules and limited vacation days, we have to seize travel opportunities where we can get them. Both lucky enough to have a week-long Christmas break from our respective jobs, we decided to drive to Georgia to hike the first section of the Appalachian Trail: Springer Mountain to Neel Gap. Planning around the holidays, we had just enough time to drive from Wisconsin to Georgia, spend three days on the trail & have an extra day to explore.


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Aside from trip logistics, we focused on our gear and outdoor preparedness to get ready for our first ever winter camping trip. Aware of the cold conditions and unpredictable mountain weather, we researched winter camping tactics and gear that we would need to comfortably complete the hike. Additionally, strategically packed and purchased the select gear we would need for all potential weather conditions. We, as most beginners do, erred on the side of caution and packed to much.

We had an amazing experience on the trail filled with challenge, triumph, and the mesmerizing beauty of the Appalachian Mountains. Originally, we allotted four days to backpack the 31.2 miles from Springer Mountain to Neel Gap, but found ourselves on pace to finish it in three. We have compiled a breakdown of our original plan as well as how we actually spend our days on the trail.

Common weather apps are usually not accurate to the trail since they tend to monitor the closest cities to the AT, not the trail itself. We used AT Weather to find the best & up-to-date weather predictions along the Appalachian Trail. AT Weather allows you to select exact points along the trail, not general areas, ensuring the most accurate weather forecast. The weather can change drastically from day to day or even hour to hour so check the forecast frequently before heading out.

Located 400 meters down the road from Mountain Crossings, the Byron Reece parking lot fit our needs perfectly. The lot is small, sheltered, and has a solid safety record according to multiple forums on White Blaze. There are no required fees or stamps for overnight parking and no posted tow signs. The lot is fairly small, so it is important to arrive early if you plan on leaving a vehicle for an extended period of time. We arranged our shuttle to meet us in the lot at 5:30 a.m., early enough to get a spot and a strong start on our first day hiking.

To schedule a shuttle you can simply select one of the many phone numbers with a good review listed in a hiker forum or in any of the below general resources. Simply call, share the details of your trip, confirm a pick up location and agree on a price. A standard shuttle fee does not seem to exist, so just go with what seems like a fair price. As a reference, we paid $80 total for a 90 minute ride from Neel Gap to Springer Mountain.

Don shuttled us for this trip and his phone number is 772-321-0905. He provided professional service, friendly conversation, and an on-time pick up. Additionally, the AT Conservancy provides a list of transportation and shuttle services for you to arrange your trip from.

White Blaze contains practical advice from real people on various topics about the AT including forums where other hikers and enthusiasts share tips and advice for various trail sections as well as general trail information.

Nature Research Editing Service and AJE have been helping researchers meet their goals since 2008 and 2004, respectively. Thousands of academics from over 160 countries have benefited from these services.

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With the multi_campus_inventory_management customer parameter set to true, you can have multiple Springer integration profiles. When you have obtained multiple Springer token IDs from Springer, you may want to create multiple integration profiles using that identification information.

This is officially becoming a trend: Springer is pulling another 64 articles from 10 journals after finding evidence of faked peer reviews, bringing the total number of retractions from the phenomenon north of 230.

We have further strengthened our the checks in our editorial offices as a result of this. We are working to support our external editors to make them aware of the issues and ensure that thorough checks of peer reviewers are completed. Credentials from peer reviewers will be increasingly checked by our editorial office, which support our editors-in-chief, and some journals may request more information in the form of an institutional e-mail address and/or SCOPUS ID of the suggested reviewer.

Thank you for your comment, Gary. I believe there may be a bit of a misunderstanding about the 15% quoted in the blog post. The 15% represents all of the 230 retractions because of peer review manipulation for the last three years, as a percentage of the total retractions reported by Retraction Watch. This includes journals from many publishers, not just those published by Springer. The 64 articles that we have retracted represent less than 0.05% of the more than 100,000 articles Springer published in 2014. Overall, over 1 million articles are published in academic journals each year.

Back in the 1920s & 30s the South was lacking in both hiking trails and groups to maintain them. Also it so happens that many of the main pushers for the Trail were mostly northerners. For example, Mackaye himself was from Connecticut while Myron Avery hailed from Maine. As a result these chaps did not possess the greatest knowledge of southern Georgia wilderness. So the southern path depicted on the 1925 plan was largely determined from looking at maps as opposed to actual knowledge of the lay of the land. Further scouting and planning for the route in the south was carried out by a forester by the name of Roy Ozmer.

Eyes then turned to Springer Mountain. Springer possessed a convenient access point via a blue-blazed approach trail from Amicalola Falls. The approach trail allowed access to the remote mountain, but was still challenging enough to prevent public crowds to easily reach the summit. This would hopefully limit potential vandalism to the site. More importantly Springer Mountain resided on public land rather than private land. This would help prevent Springer from succumbing to the land rights issues that plagued its predecessor. The mountain was so conveniently positioned to allow the terminus to retain the remote feeling of wilderness so many hikers seek on the trail without the need for huge miles of new trail construction and land acquisition battles. Therefore, the ATC crowned Springer Mountain the new Southern terminus of the Appalachian Trail in 1961. Since then the title has remained unchanged.

Springer Nature Open Access API - Provides metadata and full-text content where available for more than 649,000 online documents from Springer Nature open access xml, including BMC and SpringerOpen journals.

The SpringerOpen portfolio has grown tremendously since its launch in 2010, so that we now offer researchers from all areas of science, technology, medicine, the humanities and social sciences a place to publish open access in journals. Publishing with SpringerOpen makes your work freely available online for everyone, immediately upon publication, and our high-level peer-review and production processes guarantee the quality and reliability of the work. Open access books are published by our Springer imprint.

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Springer, New Mexico- located on the Santa Fe Trail- offers an affordable, friendly rural lifestyle and pleasant climate. The population of the town hovers around 1,200 ft. despite its size, Springer is close to many cultural and outdoor opportunities. within an hour is the town of Taos, a famous art destination - and three snow skiing venues: Angel Fire, Sipapu, and Taos Ski Valley. The Santa Fe Opera is one and a half hours away. many additional recreational opportunities include fishing in springer lake (prize-winning pike); camping, picnicking and hiking in the Maxwell Wildlife Refuge.

Located on the Santa Fe Trail, Springer is the "old west town" that celebrates its history. The Santa Fe Trail Museum and Historic society is located in the old court house. The museum includes a fine collection of artifacts and memorabilia from the history of the trail and local ranching pioneers. As with many town in the west, Springer came to life in 1879 with the arrival of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroads. The community was a hub of trade for the region. Many buildings from this period still stand.

Julius Springer founded Springer-Verlag in Berlin in 1842 and his son Ferdinand Springer grew it from a small firm of 4 employees into Germany's then second-largest academic publisher with 65 staff in 1872.[2][3] In 1964, Springer expanded its business internationally, opening an office in New York City. Offices in Tokyo, Paris, Milan, Hong Kong, and Delhi soon[when?] followed.[citation needed]

In 1999, the academic publishing company BertelsmannSpringer was formed after the media and entertainment company Bertelsmann bought a majority stake in Springer-Verlag.[2][4] In 2003, the British investment groups Cinven and Candover bought BertelsmannSpringer from Bertelsmann.[4] They merged the company in 2004 with the Dutch publisher Kluwer Academic Publishers (successor of D. Reidel, Dr. W. Junk, Plenum Publishers, most of Chapman & Hall), and Baltzer Science Publishers) which they bought from Wolters Kluwer in 2002,[5] to form Springer Science+Business Media. e24fc04721

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