wardsgirl
Active member
From time to time, members of my family, including myself, are given unsolicited advice while hiking. Whether it is on a 4000 footer, or in the middle of nowhere, other hikers seem to overflow with unnecessary information that they feel compelled to share with me/us. This happens so frequently that it was the focus of my son’s 4000 footer completion essay, which he wrote when he was 12 years old. I fondly recall his topic sentence:
“This is just one of the many stupid things I have heard a hiker say to me as I pursued my 4000 footers.”
I don’t remember the numerous incidents he referred to in his essay, but these advising incidents occur far too often for me, and maybe for you too!
VFTT member “New Hampshire” gives a great example of this in his TR “Day of Days.” It is the best description of this phenomena that I have seen in a TR. You may want to re-visit it to get a feel for my poll question.
http://www.vftt.org/forums/showthread.php?t=28378
Some good examples of people treating me like an idiot:
1.About 0.1 from the summit of Chocorua in winter, a couple hours before sunset, a descending leader of a large group pulled me and my BF aside as we ascended. He shouted over the wind, “You have just enough time!”
“Just enough time for what?” my BF asked.
“Just enough time to get to the summit and back to the parking lot,” said the guy.
We must look like idiots.
We joked about it as we enjoyed our hot chocolate at sunset before hiking down by headlamp.
2.“You can’t drink that!” exclaimed a woman on the side of the trail, as my BF drank from his water bottle that he filled from a trickling spring.
“Why not?” he asked.
“You have to treat the water first! Don’t you have a filter?”
“Nope,” glug, glug, glug.
Yup, looking like an idiot, again.
3.”What? You’re hiking alone? Where’s your group? You’re all by yourself?”
I often look like an idiot, especially when I’m alone.
Hopefully, you get the picture. Usually, I look like an idiot. I could go on all day about these infuriating situations that we try to accept with good humor, but enough, already! How does unsolicited advice sit with you?
“This is just one of the many stupid things I have heard a hiker say to me as I pursued my 4000 footers.”
I don’t remember the numerous incidents he referred to in his essay, but these advising incidents occur far too often for me, and maybe for you too!
VFTT member “New Hampshire” gives a great example of this in his TR “Day of Days.” It is the best description of this phenomena that I have seen in a TR. You may want to re-visit it to get a feel for my poll question.
http://www.vftt.org/forums/showthread.php?t=28378
Some good examples of people treating me like an idiot:
1.About 0.1 from the summit of Chocorua in winter, a couple hours before sunset, a descending leader of a large group pulled me and my BF aside as we ascended. He shouted over the wind, “You have just enough time!”
“Just enough time for what?” my BF asked.
“Just enough time to get to the summit and back to the parking lot,” said the guy.
We must look like idiots.
We joked about it as we enjoyed our hot chocolate at sunset before hiking down by headlamp.
2.“You can’t drink that!” exclaimed a woman on the side of the trail, as my BF drank from his water bottle that he filled from a trickling spring.
“Why not?” he asked.
“You have to treat the water first! Don’t you have a filter?”
“Nope,” glug, glug, glug.
Yup, looking like an idiot, again.
3.”What? You’re hiking alone? Where’s your group? You’re all by yourself?”
I often look like an idiot, especially when I’m alone.
Hopefully, you get the picture. Usually, I look like an idiot. I could go on all day about these infuriating situations that we try to accept with good humor, but enough, already! How does unsolicited advice sit with you?