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Army veteran's trek across US brings him to the Valley

Army veteran's trek across US brings him to the Valley

Yahoo08-04-2025
COLUMBIANA, Ohio (WKBN) — An Army veteran's trek across the country is taking him right through the heart of the Mahoning Valley. With his life at a crossroads, he wasn't sure where to go next.
There's an old saying that says you can't understand a person's life until you walk a mile in their shoes. But Jake Sansing has been through so much and walked so far.
'Everybody is going through something,' Sansing said. 'I ended up going from Tennessee to Delaware to California, to Florida to Alaska, back to Florida and back to California again. I just kept on walking.'Jake was in the Army from 2007-2011, serving two tours of duty in Afghanistan before returning home. He found re-acclimating to civilian life a bit challenging and fell on hard times, ending up homeless. But he picked himself up by his shoestrings and started walking.
'I've ran into a lot of people in general, and veterans included. We're all the same, we're all going through stuff,' he said. 'They can understand where I'm coming from. A lot of veterans get out of the service and have trouble finding jobs or just getting the mentality that civilians have. It's a different world being in the military and being out in the civilian world. Everything doesn't run the same. People are more chaotic. In the military, everything is more structured.'He wrote a book detailing his struggles, but with nowhere to publish it, he did the only thing he knew how to do.
'The reason I continued walking was to get my book out there. I self-published my book. A publisher wouldn't even read it unless it was professionally edited, which would've cost like $10,000 that I didn't have,' Sansing said.
Jake has pounded the pavement, slowly moving from one coast to the other. He's made the trip four times now, walking more than 16,000 miles.
'A lot of people have said that I've inspired them, even though that wasn't my intention,' Sansing said. 'It kind of confused me, honestly, because I didn't feel like an inspiration, I kind of felt like someone who was struggling.'
You may see him pushing his cart with the words 'Jake Walks America,' printed in big block letters. The cart weighs 200 pounds, packed with two gallons of water and 25 pounds of food. It's also equipped with a solar panel so he can charge his devices and has a tent to sleep in.
He slept in the tent strictly for the first few years he was walking.
'Dealing with the weather has been pretty bad, Sansing said. 'I've been through several tornadoes. Blizzards. I've been through all of it. I used to just get in my tent and hope for the best whenever there was bad weather. Or just keep walking through it and just pray that everything worked out.'
He said for the first five or six years, he stayed outside around the clock. Since he started making money from his book, he says he will get a motel if he needs to.Jake says this trip will be his last. His destination is New York City, and he sees another book down the road in his future. But right now his success is measured by how far he's come.
'Whatever you want to do, stay focused on it,' Sansing said. 'Keep pushing through.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Italy's Mount Vesuvius, a popular tourist destination, closes over wildfire
Italy's Mount Vesuvius, a popular tourist destination, closes over wildfire

CBS News

time7 days ago

  • CBS News

Italy's Mount Vesuvius, a popular tourist destination, closes over wildfire

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Paralyzed travelers reveal just what it takes for them to hit the road
Paralyzed travelers reveal just what it takes for them to hit the road

USA Today

time25-07-2025

  • USA Today

Paralyzed travelers reveal just what it takes for them to hit the road

Shaun Castle cannot imagine a life without travel. 'I love seeing the world. For me, there's no bigger fear than I'm stuck at home staring at a wall,' he said. However, it's not easy as a paraplegic. 'There's no room for spontaneity. There's no room for surprises,' he said. 'Every single portion of my traveling life – and pretty much my life in general, but my traveling life especially – is planned out.' The same goes for Anne Richardson, who is quadriplegic. Both are Army veterans who were paralyzed in training exercises years ago. For Castle, it was an L4 spinal cord injury in Heidelberg, Germany, in 2003. Richardson broke her neck at C4, 5, 6 in a training exercise in Alaska in 1999. Now they both work with Paralyzed Veterans of America, which describes itself as 'the only nonprofit Veteran Service Organization dedicated solely to helping Veterans with spinal cord injuries and disorders (SCI/D), and diseases, like MS and ALS.' 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Early Hawaiian petroglyphs on a beach are visible again with changing tides and shifting sands
Early Hawaiian petroglyphs on a beach are visible again with changing tides and shifting sands

Washington Post

time25-07-2025

  • Washington Post

Early Hawaiian petroglyphs on a beach are visible again with changing tides and shifting sands

WAIANAE, Hawaii — Hawaiian petroglyphs dating back at least a half-millennium are visible on Oahu for the first time in years, thanks to seasonal ocean swells that peel away sand covering a panel of more than two dozen images of mostly human-looking stick figures. The petroglyphs are easy to spot during low tide when gentle waves ebb and flow over slippery, neon-green algae growing on a stretch of sandstone. This is the first time the entire panel of petroglyphs are visible since they were first spotted nine years ago by two guests staying at a bayside U.S. Army recreation center in Waianae , about an hour's drive from Honolulu. Native Hawaiian cultural practitioner Glen Kila , who traces his lineage to the aboriginal families of this coastal Hawaii community, said he believes the resurfacing of the traditional marvels are his ancestors sending a message. 'It's telling the community that the ocean is rising,' said Kila, a recognized expert on the local culture and history of Waianae who is consulting with the Army on the protection of the petroglyphs. Army officials are trying to balance protecting the petroglyphs with their accessibility on a public beach. John and Sandy Stone consulted tide charts and drove about 30 minutes from their home early Tuesday to get a glimpse after a watching a local TV report about the petroglyphs. 'It was so interesting to touch them,' said John Stone, who splits his time between Hawaii and California. 'It felt interesting to kind of have a connection with the past like that.' It is difficult to date petroglyphs, but an archaeological site in the area is from about 600 years ago, said Laura Gilda, an archaeologist with U.S. Army Garrison Hawaii. According to Kila, Hawaiians arrived in Waianae at least 1,000 years ago. The beach here fluctuates in size and profile each year, with low-pressure weather systems that form in the eastern Pacific between May and November causing waves that cut away loose sand from shorelines and redeposit them further out, according to an Army report on the petroglyphs. That shift is likely what causes their temporary exposure. Archaeologists identified a total of 26 petroglyphs. Of the 18 anthropomorphic stick figures, eight are depicted with possible male genitalia and the remainder are of undetermined gender, the report said. The entire panel stretches about 115 feet (35 meters) long, Gilda said. When the petroglyphs first reemerged in July 2016, it was after late spring and early summer storms, including hurricanes, with a lot of wave action that swept the sand away, Gilda said. They remained visible for a period and then got covered again. 'So there's been portions that have ... been exposed since then, but this is the first summer that the whole panel has been exposed again,' Gilda said. Based on the teachings Kila learned, the lineal petroglyphs appear to be telling a religious, ceremonial story. He interprets the largest figure, which appears to include hands and fingers with one arm raised and the other down, to represent the rising and setting sun. Kila said that when the military in the 1930s took over the area and evicted Native Hawaiians, including his family who lived there for generations, his great-great grandmother refused to leave so his family exchanged mountain lands with a coffee plantation so she could remain near the bay. In an interview included in the Army's report, he recalled growing up in Waianae without television. So 'the ocean and mountains were our playground,' he said. The Army recreation center was off-limits to the public, and the seawall was the barrier between Native Hawaiians and the military, Kila said. Kila, now 72, recalled that if they walked on top of the wall, they were clubbed and pushed off by military police. 'We were proud and knew where we came from, so we never fostered any hatred for the military because one day we believed that the land will eventually return to us,' he said. Kila, while visiting the petroglyphs earlier this week, told The Associated Press that the Army's protection of them represents a shift in that community relationship. Officials have been grappling with how to share the petroglyphs with the community while also protecting them, Gilda said. 'How much attention do you want to bring to this area? You don't really want people to go digging for them when they're not exposed,' she said. 'But they're certainly awesome to come and see on the public beachscape.' Donald Kauliʻa, a Native Hawaiian who was born and raised in Waianae, snapped photos of the petroglyphs Tuesday. Seeing them, he said, feels like 'validation that our ancestors were from here.'

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