The Trails Lead to Love

by Roger Dubin
This is the story of
two couples whose love has a special connection to the trails and nature. One
couple was married on a mountaintop in Harriman Bear Mountain State Park, the
other deep in the Catskills amidst 300-year-old birch trees and 400-year-old
spruce. Coincidentally, they both got engaged in canoes.
Love
Survives
David and Jessica met
in early 2014, when Jessica scored a Groupon for a survival program run by
David’s company, Destination Back Country Adventures. David taught the class.
David immediately felt
an attraction to Jessica but quickly suppressed it. Then approaching 40, he had
vowed that he would only get serious with someone if the relationship could
lead to permanence and marriage. He didn’t think that possible with a
23-year-old. Jessica was attracted to Dave’s outdoorsy nature and
adventurous lifestyle, but she also saw the age difference as a problem.

They finally changed
from co-workers and friends to partners after a particularly intense
backpacking trip that they led together. The emotions ran high with this
group of 25 New Yorkers over nine nights in Utah, but Jessica persevered and
Dave was impressed. Rather than fly home alone, Jessica accepted Dave’s
invitation to drive back to New York with him.
After a particularly
rough stretch of driving, they decided to camp in a wooded area in Tennessee.
That’s when Jessica really saw David’s passion for nature. It still makes her
melt.
“Here’s this rugged guy
who turns to mush when he sees a waterfall or hikes through an old-growth
forest. And we get into the woods and he starts screaming, ‘Ferns! Ferns! Oh,
how I missed you ferns!’”

The
Long Path
Daniel and Ayla grew up
together. His dad was Ed Bieber, founder of the Nature Place Day Camp, now in
its 35th year. Her dad was Scott Dunn, the camp’s program director for 30
years. Daniel and Ayla shared the sense of wonder that comes from constant
exposure to the outdoors.
They began dating 10
years ago and married in 2015. Asked about the importance of hiking and nature
to their relationship, Daniel says, “Consider where we had our wedding. We
were looking for a special place in nature to get married, and Dad suggested
the site of the Raymond Torrey memorial on top of Long Mountain, where the Long
Path crosses. What a metaphor that is for marriage and life! We started the
journey of life together on the Long Path, which was conceived in 1931 and
extends over 350 miles, from New York City to Thatcher State Park in Albany
County.”
The wedding took place
on a blustery October day that started off mild and quickly turned cold. The
rain blew horizontally at times, and the mile-long trail up the mountain
was so slippery that guides were strategically located to keep the 100-plus
guests from falling.
“Overcoming the
challenges and weather to get to the top made the ceremony that much more
meaningful,” Ayla says. “We’ll never forget that day and the start of our lives
together as husband and wife on that mountaintop.”
Some trails lead into
the woods. Others, to love.
Happy trails!