My goal in wanting to ride the HCM Trail was two fold. First, I wanted to see what it was like for myself. Using Google Earth and Map you can still see the scars the bombing has left on the land. Areas around "The Chokes" (Choke points on the Trail) still show massive bomb cratering... at least in the view from Google.
The second reason was to visit as many of the Search and Rescue (SAR) locations as I could. My planned route would take me to the locations of the largest SARs of the war as well as to the places where some of our air crews died. One of my "must go" places is Harley's Valley. Captain Lee Harley and Airman First class Andre Guillet flying in a O-1 FAC were shot down there, went MIA and never seen again. The area where they were shot down became known to American Fliers for evermore as "Harley's Valley". (I claim it should be known as Harley-Guillet Valley, but that's not how it happened.) Anyway... I want to explore around "Harley's Valley" just so I know first hand what it's like on the ground there.
The same goes for the other areas I want to visit. A friend of mine, (Col. Bill Bagwell, ret) was flying an A-1 from NKP when he was shot down. He had to spent the night in "Indian Country" before a SAR could pull him out the next day. My plan was to spend the night in the jungle where he "camped out" hiding from guys with AK-47s. OK... I had a sleeping bag, modern MREs, and all the modern camping stuff so it wouldn't be like Bill's "adventure". Still, I want to get the understanding of what it must have been like for thousands of our Airmen that were shot down in Laos. (By the way... Bill Bagwell wrote his biography that includes chapters about this and his time at NKP... It's "Plagued By Good Luck". Check out the cover depicting his rescue on Amazon.com -
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B006BHKWFY )
This is a long way to say that I love the idea of re-enacting a SAR. Our efforts to rescue our downed airmen may have been the most noble events of the war. Most have seen or heard of the movie (and book), "Bat-21" with Gene Hackman and Danny Glover. Well... those rescue efforts went on time after time throughout the war. I'll be there if a "Duck", Sandy, Nimrod, and Jolly Green Giant are flying in the same airspace again.