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Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Mon Nov 07, 2011 1:59 am
by lcarreau
I BEG to differ. Some of us are BIKERS ..

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Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Mon Nov 07, 2011 1:47 pm
by LoneRanger
Beautiful post, Michael; I linked this thread to other portals I am active in.
CHeers

Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Mon Nov 07, 2011 2:25 pm
by Baarb
lcarreau wrote:
Baarb wrote:There are a lot of non-mountain related things on SP, perhaps mostly albums, are there any lines?


Depends on what kind of "lines" you're talking about.


Lines of 'keep it relevant to "climbing, mountaineering, hiking and other outdoor activities"'. I'm very happy for people to do whatever they want on here in their own corners but it just seemed interesting in light of discussions over what constituted 'valid' contributions to SP (technical vs. hiking), whether there were in fact any rules at all. There are pictures of people's diving holidays, excerpts from assorted hobbies that they have away from mountains etc. As zodis mentioned there is some contention over the flora and fauna stuff but this seems a little beyond that. Again, it's just a curiosity from my point of view.

Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Mon Nov 07, 2011 3:07 pm
by BeDrinkable
Baarb wrote: ...There are pictures of people's diving holidays, excerpts from assorted hobbies that they have away from mountains etc. As zodis mentioned there is some contention over the flora and fauna stuff but this seems a little beyond that. Again, it's just a curiosity from my point of view.

I don't think there are any solid 'lines' that have been agreed upon, but I recall members in the past being pressured to delete picture or albums of, say, their car on the way to the trailhead. I actually find myself getting more particular rather than more lenient as time passes, at least with my own contributions.

Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Mon Nov 07, 2011 6:23 pm
by eza
I love your point, couldn't dream of anyone explaining it better :)

Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Tue Nov 08, 2011 2:54 am
by Deltaoperator17
mvs wrote:I often identify myself as a "technical climber," and I get the feeling that the membership has heard quite enough, thank you, from such people in recent weeks. Just one more thing. Although I can see that there are things to be improved at Summitpost vis-a-vis technical goals in the mountains, I need to distance myself from a few notions that are flying around. Here is what I believe:

  • technical climbing is no more or less better than any other kind of human-powered mountain activity.
  • A technical climber is ALSO a hiker, skier and snowshoer BY DEFINITION. The technical part is only the specialization that happens on a trip provided that a particular X/Y coordinate was reached and the weather is safe to fool around with ropes.
  • Somebody who elevates one specialization above another, or above the general case, is merely denigrating himself. The moment I fail to appreciate the forest I hike through on the way to the cliff is the moment that I fail to offer the mountain environment and it's experiences the respect that is deserved.
  • Respect other people. Sometimes I don't want to read 3 paragraphs about the long traverse through old growth below the moraine. But I'm perfectly happy to read 3 paragraphs about the "crux move" on my current objective. There is a skill I can apply without lashing out at others, called "skimming."

For most of us, our first experiences in the mountains were on foot. And likely our last will be. It is simple, and in touch with the earth. That simplicity is only boring when we treat the mountains like a gym. Summitpost is for all of us who walk the mountains and have something to say on return. Despite my recent activism for changes in the way we edit the site, anything that makes a group feel "less than" is a wrong move.

Maybe some other technical-types will have a story similar to my own. All I wanted to do in the beginning years was walk. I moved from Texas to the Northwest because of the vast public lands covered in forests and glaciers. Once, as a teenager I got in trouble for trespassing across a vast ranch. I just wanted to walk, and couldn't do it in Texas. I thought that was sad because of the outsized reputation Texas has for rugged prairie and open sky, but oh well.

The whole technical orientation came on gradually over several years. It grew from a natural curiosity about what the environment was like on the more forbidding cliffs and snowfields. Like any "intense" activity, it's one that can seem a world unto itself. However it exists, or should exist from my point of view, as a special environment nurtured by the broader and more forgiving realm of hiking. I've seen there is a magazine called "Urban Climber." Okay. I don't get it.

I do more hiking than climbing, and until we get jet packs to reach the alpine cliffs, that will always be true. And every year I go on some multiday hikes that are rewarding in a different way from more technical goals. For years I've loved something Kev Reynolds, author of Alpine hiking guidebooks said:

"...from the point of view of the walker who is, after all, in the most favoured position to witness and enjoy mountain scenery in all its abundant variety. The motorist is divorced from all that is best in the Alps by being restricted to the highway. The non-active tourist is confined to mechanised means of uplift, the climber's attention is for the most part taken up with the intracacies of his chosen route, while the downhill skier needs full concentration in the rush to get to the foot of the slope without accident. Only the mountain walker, the individual with good general fitness, a modicum of scrambling experience and an eye for the hills, can move far enough and at the right pace to enjoy the full range of wonders that the Alps so generously offer."


For me this statement is absolutely true. And as I look years into the future, I become a hiker again, with the years of climbing becoming an exciting memory. I recognize that this is my unique path. We shouldn't misapply our natural inclination to build hierarchies to a place where it's neither helpful nor desired.

Thanks, :)
--Michael

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Feeding the soul with a multi-day hike near Bormio, Italy.

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Feeding "the rat" in the Wilder Kaiser. :lol:

Danke Mike ! Well stated and presented

Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Tue Nov 08, 2011 3:06 am
by lcarreau
BeDrinkable wrote:
Baarb wrote: ...There are pictures of people's diving holidays, excerpts from assorted hobbies that they have away from mountains etc. As zodis mentioned there is some contention over the flora and fauna stuff but this seems a little beyond that. Again, it's just a curiosity from my point of view.

I don't think there are any solid 'lines' that have been agreed upon, but I recall members in the past being pressured to delete picture or albums of, say, their car on the way to the trailhead. I actually find myself getting more particular rather than more lenient as time passes, at least with my own contributions.


Just my own curiosity, but WHY do so many members on SP's "sister site" GET AWAY with posting pictures that are completely irrelevant to BICYCLING ???

Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Tue Nov 08, 2011 3:22 am
by Arthur Digbee
[quote="lcarreau"Just my own curiosity, but WHY do so many members on SP's "sister site" GET AWAY with posting pictures that are completely irrelevant to BICYCLING ???[/quote]
MBPost is a front for a gardening club that smuggles non-native species into the United States. They are practically terrorists.

Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Tue Nov 08, 2011 3:32 am
by Baarb
^^^ It's times like these I want a 'like' button, not a 'thanks' button

Re: We are all hikers

PostPosted: Tue Nov 08, 2011 2:31 pm
by BeDrinkable
lcarreau wrote:Just my own curiosity, but WHY do so many members on SP's "sister site" GET AWAY with posting pictures that are completely irrelevant to BICYCLING ???

Assuming this is a serious question, it's because there are only seven or so active members. Hell, we could each post 50 pics a day and it wouldn't really clog anything up.