Raven
Well-known member
I find myself grateful that I began hiking at a time before gps, cell phones, and other screen technology. There was something pure about seeking the address to request NEHH info and getting a manila envelope filled with scratchy photocopies of route notes.
It was a slow, deliberate, enjoyable process. Finding USGS maps, marking routes, then eventually using the descriptions and terrain features along with map and compass to find the summits. Those experiences cannot be matched using a screen. It had meaning. It was authentic.
Now a phone with an arrow will show you where to go while you shut your mind off. The skill set has left the person and been placed into the phone. So the question then is, what do you have, if you don't have your screen?
If your head is buried in a phone, please look up periodically so you don't run into the hikers.
It was a slow, deliberate, enjoyable process. Finding USGS maps, marking routes, then eventually using the descriptions and terrain features along with map and compass to find the summits. Those experiences cannot be matched using a screen. It had meaning. It was authentic.
Now a phone with an arrow will show you where to go while you shut your mind off. The skill set has left the person and been placed into the phone. So the question then is, what do you have, if you don't have your screen?
If your head is buried in a phone, please look up periodically so you don't run into the hikers.