erugs
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Most excellent, Ellen. Give yourself a greenie.
Kevin
And how many groans?
Most excellent, Ellen. Give yourself a greenie.
Kevin
Exactly
I guess I'm an eternal optimistic -- if I am turned off a peak, I don't consider my hike unsuccessful - I just redefine my expectations such that I still feel gratitude for having a day in the mountains :/)
Hey, does this work with work? You know, deadlines and such? "The software delivery date was a success, Boss. I had to redefine it to have fewer features and more bugs though."
I will always regret never having won a bicycle race. Came in second/third a handful of times, many top-10s, but I never stood on the top stair of the podium.
Tim
I'm actually not so sure that's true. I used to think that anyone who spent considerable time outdoors must simply love the outdoors in and of itself. Two conversations changed my viewpoint:Peakbaggers and Nonlist Hikers are like peas and beans. We're a little different, but we're all just legumes.
I mean no offense with what I am about to say, but regarding the Peakbagging // Peakbragging note, isn't that exactly what it is when signatures are posted w/ NE 69/100; NH48; NY46; etc.?
Should I look at a poster differently if it says that, vs. just "I walk in the woods"?
I'm actually not so sure that's true. I used to think that anyone who spent considerable time outdoors must simply love the outdoors in and of itself. Two conversations changed my viewpoint:
1. Several years ago I was soliciting advice (from another message board) on the best place to camp on Shasta's Cassaval Ridge for a winter ascent. The overwhelming response was, "Do it as a day hike, then you can stay in a cozy hotel and not have to deal with setting up camp etc." Many seemed unable to understand that it wasn't just about the summit, it was about being on the mountain. I'd rather sleep outside if given the choice.
2. I had the opportunity to speak with Tom Frost (very famous Yosemite climber) a few years ago after he gave a presentation to an alpine club that I belonged to at the time. I asked him how he had first gotten into climbing - "You must have been an outdoorsman first, then found that there were places you wanted to go that required technical climbing skills?" I asked. "No," was his answer. "I have never been much of an outdoorsman, I just got in with a group of people who were doing really amazing things, and I wanted to be like them." Since then, I've noticed that many "climbers" have no desire to actually sleep outside (for example), they want to get to the top of the route or mountain and then get the heck out of there. To be sure, this does not describe all climbers, and it certainly doesn't describe all peakbaggers, but it definitely describes some. That attitude is really very, very different from my own.
Does any of this really matter as long as you're having fun and getting what you want out of your life?
But, what if posting in this thread helps me have fun and get what I want out of life?
Have at it! It's all good! What do you think the rest of us are doing?
I mean no offense with what I am about to say, but regarding the Peakbagging // Peakbragging note, isn't that exactly what it is when signatures are posted w/ NE 69/100; NH48; NY46; etc.?
Should I look at a poster differently if it says that, vs. just "I walk in the woods"?
I think this thread was intended for our minority group, passionate hikers who don't follow lists/goals created by someone else, to share light hearted observations from our own esoteric point of view. I guess it is to be expected that peakbaggers would chime in, which, of corse, is fine.
I find that peakbaggers opinions/observations of non-peakbaggers does the same thing as reading the comments of fellow non-peakbaggers. It's all entertaining. A wildly off-target comment about my hiking style somehow warms my heart, and makes me look forward to my next aimless adventure in the forest a little more
anyway...you know you're not a PB when...
...you hike up to the top of Owl's Head Slide for the view and lunch, then back down
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