My beard has reached 58 days of growth, but there is no photographic evidence to confirm this. However, due to my procrastination and a lack of Internet strength here at the sheep farm I failed to display my beard after 51 days of growth. After hitting the half-century mark my beard hiked Katahdin, the highest Mountain in Maine and the beginning of the Appalachian Trail in Maine. Katahdin stands 5267 feet high, lacking the 13 essential feet to officially be called a Mountain by the powers that decide these things. There is a structure at the summit that makes up those 13 feet, which means my beard officially hiked a vertical mile.

This is my beard in front of a rock painting outside of Baxter Park. My beard has not encountered a bear in Maine, nor has anyone else, and hopefully it stays that way. It doesn't stop us from talking about bears eating people in tents on a weekly basis.

This is my beard at 7 am before hiking the mountain that you see in the background. My beard woke up at the unholy hour of 4:45 am to hike this beast.


This is my beard at the summit of
Katahdin after four hours of hiking, with another three to go. Enough said.

This is my beard after playing some One-on-One basketball, and receiving an unfortunate head to the bridge of my nose. I defeated a beardless John Meyers, definitively proving that beards rule and non-beards drool.


These two pictures violate Rule #1 of the yet-to-be-written
SummerofBeard Manifesto stating that all pictures must feature a close-up of a beard. However, it is my blog, and climbing trees and Rob to set up the tarp is one of my favorite work activities.

The guest beard this week is Allan. Allan is from
Massachusettes and a Harvard man. Allan was a volunteer with us for four weeks, meaning he spent a month growing this beard and doing
trailwork without getting our meager living allowance. Allan enjoys eating cereal, as you can see, writing, and playing the occasional game of basketball.
Quotes of the week:"Man is born to die, his works are short-lived. Buildings crumble, monuments decay, wealth vanishes. But
Katahdin in all its glory, forever shall remain the Mountain of the People of Maine." -
Percival P. Baxter, Governor of Maine 1921-1924, for whom the State Park is named
"I don't get this whole lukewarm thing. Who is this guy Luke? And why is he so mediocre? And if he's so mediocre,
how'd he get to be so famous?" - Rob
"Grip it, rip it, shred it, tear it, kill it. If not, then
drivah (aka driver) - Rob, talking about anything requiring force, or anything at all really.
This week my beard is feeling:
One step closer to 30