AS for rising at 6am...I need to get going early or I will be benighted on the moutain, for sure once we set our clocks back. Being a solo hiker, I don't like to play games with time as the sun is setting and my average drive time to the mtns is 2hrs minimum, and 3-4hrs if I go further north.
I also had a great dehydration experience, (most undesirable), which was confirmed by my cardiologist. Now I carry water with "Endurolytes" mixed in, most especially in the summer. I even remember to drink it.
Never want that to happen again.
I to like MJ. Have read his books and enjoyed them. I laughed as I read because I have lived thru some of these same experiences. I don't think it was meant to be a hikers "bible", but some folks new to hiking might just get a few pointers. I certainly experienced frozen wet feet when I did not wear gaitors. And I distinctly recall a friend and I sitting on a summit, trying to find the trail we wanted to down climb in the dark, arguing about the info our compass was providing us. We both believed it to be WRONG!
The article is easy to read and he makes some good points. At one time when I hiked and skied with several other people we had a strict rule. If you were not at your door when we arrived at your home, packed and ready to go, we were NOT waiting for you.
Guess what...it worked! And we never got to another ski area at 1pm, nor did I ever again have to hike down Mt Cardigan, or any other summit, in the pitch black of night, in 2 feet of snow and ice, unless it was by choice.
If nothing else, it was an article that brought back numerous found memories of all the bogus things I did before I became an "elitist expert"! At least now I have a strange belief that I know what I am doing, but even that is sometimes put to the test!