If all goes well, Sue and I will soon repeat this finish at Vatican City.
In the end, what really matters most?
What’s your answer? I’ll share mine—at the end. No fair skipping ahead.
As Sue and I prepare for two more distance treks in Europe, we’re nervous. As with each of our previous eight adventures, we wonder what we will discover on the Via Francigena in Italy. It will be our second walking pilgrimage to Rome. Of course, we have done some homework, but all trails hold surprises–weather, the terrain, and a host of other factors beyond our control.
Every walk has been challenging, but we have conquered. Actually, “conquered” may be a stretch, but we celebrated at the end anyway.
This time, after walking through the Tuscan countryside and (hopefully) arriving at Vatican City, we will rest up in York, England before beginning a second distance trail, the Cotswold Way. We have never attempted two trails, back-to-back. But, we figure, if we’re going to all that expense and effort to get to Europe, why not make the most of it? Besides, who can resist British fish and chips? Not me, even after a month of pizza and pasta. After another break in Bath, we will hop a train to Scotland to visit friends from our time living there.
I have written that I find comfort in being uncomfortable. Risk is one of my favorite words. I may not always like them in the moment, but I am passionate about tackling hard tasks, like writing books–and walking hundreds of miles. I thrive on change, which is a given on every distance path.
Since Sue and I arrived in Santiago after traipsing across Spain, I have walked the Camino de Santiago (in spirit) every day. Adventure is my drug. I cannot get enough of it.
That brings me to Hunter S. Thompson.
Who? The American journalist, author, and philosopher. Beneath his controversial lifestyle there was brilliance. This Hunter quote has captivated me for decades and it expresses what really matters most to me.
“Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming ‘Wow! What a Ride!’ ”
Reg’s note: Like other towns across America, our home of Ashland, Oregon lost its local newspaper several years ago, but our community has risen to support Ashland.news with an outpouring of interest and financial backing. I am honored that one of the site’s journalists,Lee Juillerat, read my latest book and posted this story and photos after our chat. I learned that Lee is quite the adventurer, summitting nearby Mount Shasta (14,180′) 40 times. He also walked the John Muir Trail…on his own.Congratulations, Lee!
Book review: Hiking book author approaches writing step by step-by-step
Reg Spittle’s trek on the John Muir Trail took him to the peak of Mount Whitney.
March 16, 2025
Reg Spittle’s wife, Sue, talked him into hiking Spain’s Camino de Santiago and taking a High Sierra trek; his latest book about their experiences is ‘Hoofin’ It on the John Muir Trail’
By Lee Juillerat for Ashland.news
Reg Spittle considers himself “the Reluctant Pilgrim.”
That’s because when Reg’s wife, Sue Spittle, suggested they hike the John Muir Trail, a 246-mile trail through California’s high-elevation Sierra Nevada, he staunchly resisted.
“The idea of not having showers, not having toilets, being in a tent — all these things I thought were impossible. I thought it was just absurd. We couldn’t do that.”
Sue and Reg Spittle stand beside the stone hut built in honor of John Muir at the top of the Muir Pass in Kings Canyon National Park, California.
But Reg eventually acquiesced, remembering words Sue had spoken several years earlier when she cajoled him into walking the Camino de Santiago, a network of trails in northwest Spain — “What if we can?”
So in 2021, when he was 69 and Sue was 64, they joined nine other hikers for a 30-day mule-supported hike along the trail, known as the JMT, from Horseshoe Meadows near Bishop, California, to Yosemite National Park.
“After a few days,” said Reg, who will celebrate his 73rd birthday in April, “I knew this was a book. The JMT almost writes itself.”
The book Reg — or Reginald — wrote is Hoofin’ It on the John Muir Trail, a memory of days spent with a cross-section of other hikers, people they met along the trail, and of the challenges of day-after-day hiking. It was published in January.
Reg and Sue Spittle stand before Cathedral Peak in Yosemite National Park, part of their John Muir Trail hike.
“Going in, I was nervous about going a month without showers, toilets and beds,” Reg said, laughing, in retrospect. “I thought why did I worry about all this stuff,” referring to pre-hike concerns that quickly vanished once on the trail. “All that matters is that you’re outside walking one step at a time. I’m totally addicted to it.”
And, as he learned, “Toilets are highly overrated, showers are highly overrated, beds are highly overrated,” he laughed, adding wistfully, “If there’s a heaven on Earth, that was it for me.”
The days were often blistering hot, some nights below freezing. Because they were supported by a mule team led by four packers, the hikers’ meals were prepared. Camps were routinely made near alpine lakes and cascading rivers, often with views of spectacular mountain peaks. There were challenges, climbs that included 14,505-foot Mount Whitney, the tallest mountain in the Lower 48 states, and mountain passes as high as 13,200 feet.
“It’s serious stuff. You just don’t know if you can do it until you get out and try. It was really hard,” Reg says of completing the JMT, adding with a sense of satisfaction, “There’s no place in the world more beautiful than the High Sierras.”
Along the way, Reg, Sue and the others — identified in the book as Hummingbird, Big Heart, Garment Girl, Jester, Knee Deep, Dozer, Fast Track, Sunbeam and Fluster Free — developed friendships.
Meeting new friends and hiking distance trails is something the Spittles have made a habit. Since they retired, Reg and Sue have walked eight distance trails, including seven in Europe, covering more than 2,000 miles. According to Reg, the “simplicity and unpredictability of hiking” has taught them the joy of hiking. As he puts it, “Staying in shape makes everything feel better.”
Hiking and writing are things Reg and Sue have done since he retired from teaching. Reg won a yearlong Fulbright scholarship that resulted in spending a year teaching in Scotland. He taught all seven elementary school grades during 20 years in California then taught political science for 11 years at a California community college.
During many of those years he worked part time as a journalist for five newspapers. He and Sue, who have been married 40 years, met when both were working at the Santa Barbara News-Press, where she was in the advertising department. She designed the covers, titles, maps and illustrations for all three books.
Potential material for a new book will come later this year when the Spittles take more overseas hiking adventures. “I’ll take my journal,” Reg said, adding, “I’m feeling like I’m done with hiking and adventure books.” But he may consider writing about outings in their RV — they’ve made five cross-country trips covering thousands of miles in 46 states.
Although he takes pleasure in writing about his experiences, Reg noted that writing, editing and rewriting each of his three books has taken nearly three years to complete.
Still, he said, “I’m addicted as much to writing as I am to hiking.”
Copies of Hoofin’ It on the John Muir Trail and Reginald Spittle’s two other books are available at Bloomsbury Books in Ashland and on Amazon.com. Spittle will give a talk, ‘All Paths Lead From Santiago,’ at the Phoenix Library, 510 W. 1st St., at 6:30 p.m. April 8. He will describe his experience as a reluctant pilgrim on Spain’s Camino de Santiago trail and how it led to a 30-day High Sierra adventure on California’s John Muir Trail. Spittle and his wife, Sue, have walked more than 2,000 miles on eight distance trails. The presentation is sponsored by American Pilgrims on the Camino, Southern Oregon Chapter.