Aging and hiking
As people who have hiked with me can attest, I am a moderately slow hiker. Years ago, at age 45 I was a trail runner and had no problems except for the occasional pronated ankle. Now at 65, I have to maintain my heart rate below 120 or I get really fatigued due to reduced blood flow throughout my system. I keep my aerobic capacity up by a daily 30 minutes on my Stairmaster 4400, but there is nothing I can do when my heart gets up in its rate but the flow is not there. I correct this on the trail by 15 to 30 second breaks when I feel this happening. I am pretty sure that my stopping every few minutes bugs my hiking companions, but I thank them for their patience. I take a Beta-blocker to reduce my heartrate, and if I forget this medication, I have an awful time on long duration uphills.
Hopefully, I won't code out on any of my hikes with partners. I expect to expire on a hike someday, I only hope that I have maybe fifteen more years to go and, it will be accepted as a normal part of my life if I am hiking with others.
My first solo overnight was Mount Major in 1954 in a thunderstorm. What fun hiking all these years!
Tom W