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Melanie Knecht and Trevor Hahn work together to enjoy the outdoors: she鈥檚 his eyes, he鈥檚 her feet.
Melanie Knecht and Trevor Hahn work together to enjoy the outdoors: she鈥檚 his eyes, he鈥檚 her feet. (Photo: Melanie Knecht and Trevor Hahn)

These Adaptive Hikers Want More Accessible Trails

He's the legs, and she's the eyes. Together they're bagging peaks and working to make the outdoors more widely accessible.

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Melanie Knecht and Trevor Hahn work together to enjoy the outdoors: she鈥檚 his eyes, he鈥檚 her feet.
(Photo: Melanie Knecht and Trevor Hahn)

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Trevor Hahn, 42, had just returned from a trip to Nepal. There听he first lent a hand at a Katmandu orphanage, then joined an adaptive hiking team summiting Gokyo Ri, a 17,500-foot Himalayan peak.

Hahn, an artist who grew up hiking and rock climbing in his native Colorado, lost his sight to glaucoma five years ago. He made it up Gokyo Ri with the help of trekking poles and teammates who rang a bell and used spoken directions to orient him. He avoided altitude sickness and struggles that others on his team experienced, but he still worried he hadn鈥檛 pulled his full weight on the trek.

鈥淚 felt like I was more of a responsibility for the rest of the team,鈥 he told me via听Skype. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 feel like I had a bigger purpose on the hike, which has always been important to me.鈥

One Saturday last fall, Hahn found himself lamenting this fact while watching a Colorado State football game at home with a bunch of friends; he and his wife, Mandy, had invited a group over, and among those in attendance was听Melanie Knecht.听A 29-year-old music therapist, Knecht was born with spina bifida, a neural defect that requires her to use a wheelchair. She and Hahn had met at an adaptive boxing clinic in Fort Collins a few months earlier.

Like Hahn, Knecht grew up camping and adventuring outdoors. In 2012, she traveled to Easter Island, off the coast of Chile, with a friend. She knew there was no way she鈥檇 be able to get around theMoai statuesin her wheelchair, so she persuaded her friend to carry her in the kind of pack parents often use to schlep around small children.听It got the job done鈥攕ort of.

(Melanie Knecht and Trevor Hahn)

That friend, who Knecht describes as 鈥渁n older guy,鈥 had a hard time with the added weight. And Knech, meanwhile, was crazy uncomfortable.

鈥淭he pack we used was shit,鈥澨齭he says. 鈥淚t was clearly made for a toddler. I鈥檓 tiny, but I鈥檓 not a toddler. I have boobs, which the designers of those packs clearly didn鈥檛 plan for.鈥

But she kept听the pack anyway, figuring she could tough it out again听on future adventures if she found a fitter, younger guy to carry her.

While watching the football game together, as Knecht heard Hahn talk about his Nepal trip, she quickly realized he was just the guy she had been looking for.

He agreed. 鈥淚鈥檝e always believed that I can be the legs for someone听if they can be my eyes,鈥 he says.

Knecht, who is also a professionally trained singer, can belt it out for hours. And she is the queen of imaginative invectives. In other words, she was born to play the role of Hahn鈥檚 navigator.

He agreed that her original pack was shit听and began researching better alternatives. Eventually, he found his way to听, a portable-carrier company, which donated a larger andmuch more comfortable pack.

Next, they publicly announced their first major goal: to bag at least one of Colorado鈥檚 14,000-foot peaks this August, maybe even Mount听Elbert, which at 14,440 feet听is the state鈥檚 highest.

鈥淭o us, teaming up to do this just seemed like common sense,鈥 says Knecht. 鈥淚f two people who have a crazy idea find each other, it鈥檚 not crazy anymore. It鈥檚 just an idea.鈥

They鈥檝e spent the past few months taking increasingly longer training hikes and developing their own communications system.

Knecht is quick to admit that, while she鈥檚 spent her whole life outside, she听never learned to differentiate between scree and slab. So she鈥檚 invented her own glossary for natural features and obstacles, using听terms like 鈥渂aby head鈥 and 鈥渋ceberg鈥 to describe different听sizesof rocks that may trip up Hahn. Drop-offs are also graded,听either听as听鈥渄eath鈥 or 鈥渉ospital,鈥 depending on the consequence awaiting them if they tumble.

As for training, getting around in a wheelchairis afitness project in and of itself.

鈥淏asically, my whole life is a training regimen,鈥 laughs Knecht.

When he鈥檚 not making art, Hahn spends much of his time snowboarding or biking. He鈥檚 a superfit guy who has always preferred being on a rock face to an indoor听gym. But he鈥檚 added an upper-body weight routine to help build his shoulder strength so he doesn鈥檛 get tired as quickly.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the human spirit,鈥澨鼿ahn听says. 鈥淚f you want something bad enough, and you find the right people who also want what you want, you can do anything.鈥

Hahn and Knecht have听launched a听 and an听, both under their project name: Hiking with Sight.听A major aim for both is raising awareness about the lack of accessible trails for those with disabilities,听in the U.S. and around the world.

鈥淭here鈥檚 still so much exclusion for people with different abilities who want to get outdoors,鈥 says Knecht. 鈥淒o we still really believe that people in wheelchairs don鈥檛 want to be on the top of mountains?鈥

Both she and Hahn say they鈥檙e OK听with people听appreciating the fact that they鈥檝e found a way to make that happen. And you can call them badasses or even think that they鈥檙e empowering鈥攂ut whatever you do, don鈥檛 call them inspirational.

鈥淚鈥檝e always hated it when I鈥檓 out snowboarding and someone shouts down from the lift to tell me that I鈥檓 inspiring,鈥 Hahn says. 鈥淚t can feel demeaning. You鈥檇 never say that to someone shredding the mountain who can see.鈥

As far as he鈥檚 concerned, everyone鈥檚 life is ultimately about figuring out your听own capabilities.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the human spirit,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f you want something bad enough, and you find the right people who also want what you want, you can do anything.鈥

Knecht agrees. She鈥檇 like to see an end to what she calls 鈥渋nspiration porn.鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e always hated being seen as the woman in the wheelchair. I want to be seen for my accomplishments alone听and not through an ableist bias.鈥

Last month, the duo attended an adaptive sports summit at Lake Tahoe, California, sponsored by听. While there, Hahn tried out whitewater paddling and sea kayaking, and听Knecht discovered she鈥檚 lousy at archery but has a mean karate chop.

The best moment of all, though, was when she heard a couple of other participants gossiping about her.

鈥淭hey called me 鈥榯hat fit brunette,鈥欌 says Knecht. 鈥淭hat felt pretty great.鈥

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Lead Photo: Melanie Knecht and Trevor Hahn

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