Archive for the 'motivations' Category

Year to Date

Over the weekend, I climbed Mount Hillyer - my 25th peak over 5000 feet - and now qualify for membership in the Sierra Club’s Hundred Peaks Chapter! That’s one New Year’s Resolution down, several more to go.

But as it’s a big number, I thought I’d take a peek at how I’m doing so far this year. Also, GPS programs make it easy and fun to keep track of all sorts of fun numbers. So here’s the first half of 2007:

Hikes done: 19
Total Mileage: 168.15 miles - 72.23 uphill, 78.07 downhill, 14.96 level
Total Ascent: 66,805 feet
Time Spent Hiking: 5 days, 12 hours, 28 minutes.

To put that in perspective, for the entire year of 2006, I hiked 234 miles with just under 47,000 feet of incline. So I could be doing better, but I’m definitely going to destroy last year’s numbers.

Hopefully.

Here’s to another six months of high-quality hiking time!

The Right to Roam

An article in today’s Daily Mail bemoans how today’s children have lost the ‘right to roam’ in four generations, due to a combination of automobiles, overprotective parents, and an over exaggerated news media.

It profiles a family in Britain whose ‘roaming radius’ from their homes went from six miles in 1919 to one mile in 1950, down to just 300 yards today. And unsurprisingly, this has adverse affects on peoples’ mental states.

According to representatives from Natural England, people are “healthier and better adjusted if they get out into the countryside,” and that “people deprived of contact with nature are at greater risk of depression and anxiety.”

Nothing we didn’t know already, right?

(Fast) Hiking for Fitness

I was all set to write about the New York Times’ coverage of “Speed Hiking,” a new fitness phenomenon threatening to turn our precious backcountry into the world’s largest Bally … then Tom beat me to it.

I can understand how gyms and outdoor fitness are cut of the same cloth - and I’d much rather spend time in a forest than I would in a stuffy gym. And while I do generally exhaust myself when I’m out on the trail, that’s never my intent when I go there. The gym is for physical maintenance. Hiking is for mental maintenance.

Tom agrees, saying:

I never deluded myself that (speed hiking) was hiking, which to my mind is a condition of being in the wilderness rather than passing through it. It requires letting go of your hard-charging, achieving self and giving at least four of your senses a workout (I draw the line at taste).

I’m all for people getting fit. And I’m really all for people enjoying the outdoors. But I remember hiking Mt. San Antonio last year during a trail race, and having to stand on the side while dozens of runners made their way downhill.

It’s a scene I’d rather not see again while I’m out in the woods.

Daily Ray of Hope Pool

The Sierra Club’s ‘Daily Ray of Hope’ is an inspiring little email list. So much of what comes out of the ‘environmental news’ section of the internet can seem a bit dour, which is why it’s nice to get the occasional blast of good news, inspirational quotes and - now - nature photography from Flickr users.

The Sierra Club set up a new Flickr pool where you can submit your photos for inclusion in the daily newsletter. It’s also a great place to just browse some great amateur nature photography, and see what other folks are up to out on the trail.

The pool is invitation-only to join, but you can browse openly without signing up for anything. If you’ve got some shots you’d like to share, all you have to do is send a message to the group moderator.

Blogger Summits Everest

Samantha Larson, of nearby Long Beach, successfully summited Mount Everest this week. She’d been keeping track of her progress on a blogspot blog, and now her story’s hitting the rest of the media.

At 18 years old, she is one of the youngest people ever to summit Everest, and may be the youngest ever to climb the “7 summits (a claim she’s making now, but will probably take a while to actually confirm).

Either way, congratulations to Samantha.

And thanks for making us all feel old.

Great Western Loop En Route

Andrew Skurka is updating!

Or, more accurately for now, his mother is updating.

Still, it’s exciting to be able to read about a guy on a 6800+ mile hike through our Great Western States. And even more exciting to see that he plans to incorporate on-the-go podcasts and RSS picture feeds on his site, so I can feel worse about not being even close to thinking about approaching Skurka’s hiking aptitude.

Still, I’m all for tech on the trail.

I’ll keep you updated when the podcasts start rolling in. Until then, good luck to Andrew!

You Should Be Watching This

6 days until I can hike again.

Until then, I sure am thankful for the Discovery Channel / BBC’s “Planet Earth” documentaries. The 11-part series is running through the end of April, and over the weekend my TiVo caught the episodes I missed last week.

It. Is. Incredible.

The series took five years to film, and was shot on state-of-the-art cameras in every conceivable situation … and it shows. It’s hands down one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen on television, and notable for being the very first thing I’ve seen that made me wish I owned an HDTV.

Check your local listings or set yourself a Season Pass. You will not be disappointed. Even if you haven’t joined the digital television ‘revolution’ yet.

Good For What Ails Ya

Bryan over at WildrLog posted a little inspirational pamphlet he picked up about how hiking and backpacking will basically take care of whatever problems you’ve got — from being overweight to back pain to colds and flu and even insomnia:

Do you suffer from insomnia? Try getting up at dawn, pack your pack, strike camp, cook breakfast, then head out on the trail. Carry a 45 pound backpack up and down the mountains for 8-10 hours. Then set up camp again, walk a half mile to get water and spend 20 minutes filtering the water. Walk another half mile each time you need to go to the outhouse. Then try ambling around at night trying to find a place 100 yards from camp to hang the bear bag. When you finally lie down to rest, think about doing it all again the next day. You’ll get a good night’s sleep.

Check out the full list of benefits over here. While I have still had trouble falling asleep on the trail, I blame that on a cheap sleeping pad.

WildrLog looks like a great site to explore, while you’re there. Not only does Bryan have some Google Earth GPS support, but he’s also got great taste in tv and books. The Modern Hiker is a big fan of both David McCullough and Teddy Roosevelt biographies, for the record.

To Snap or Not To Snap?

Another discussion has been bubbling up on the burgeoning Hiking Blogosphere today - sparked off by an old post from Crow about why she prefers to go sans camera on her outings. In list form, I am honestly quite glad that:

1. There is now a Hiking Blogosphere.
2. Just like the rest of the Blogosphere, we can get sparked off by month-old posts.
3. We get riled up about cameras.

Crow’s got some good reasons for going lens-less, like having less to carry, having less to worry about when you get home, and being able to enjoy more of the “moments” of life.

Tom picked up on a re-post on Besthike, offering an even-handed list of pros and cons and coming down in the middle - slightly leaning toward a non-photographic experience, if I read right.

Personally I’m always going to be bringing a camera along with me. My point-and-shoot slings tightly across my shoulder and under my CamelBak, and is light enough that the only time I notice it’s there is when I’m reaching to get it out.

I don’t worry about spending too much time actively looking for good pictures when I’m out on the trail, but if a scene presents itself to me, I’m not going to argue with it. I do try to frame up shots in interesting ways (to varying degrees of effectiveness), but you don’t necessarily have to in order to get some nice landscape shots.

And with digital photos, online albums, and one-click-Photoshops like Picasa, you barely need to know your way around a computer to get everything nice and organized, either. It’s much less intensive and space-hungry as trying to organize physical photographs. At least, I imagine it is, as I don’t have much experience doing that kind of thing back in The Olden Days.

As for the missed-moments argument, let’s face it - hiking is not the most action-packed of activities. Having a camera along for those unpredictable times when you’ll see a beautiful vista, a gnarled old tree hugging a cliffside, or frozen riverbed is worth the extra ounces. If you’re really about to have a capital M Moment, just leave your camera aside.

I remember an early morning hike in Topanga Canyon when I was lucky enough to come upon three large deer grazing in a meadow not ten feet away from me. We looked at each other for a long, silent moment before they bounded off into the woods. Right now, I can still remember the vibrations in the ground from their hooves stomping away … but when my memory starts going, I’ll be glad I have other pictures from that day to jog it back into working order.

But when it comes down to it, do what’s going to give you the most enjoyment. If you love pretending you’re Ansel Adams, lug your SLR along. If you want to romp in a riverbed and not worry about getting your gear wet, leave your camera at home. We all go outside for different reasons, so it doesn’t make much sense to worry about what everyone else is doing.

It does make good blog fodder, though.

Wheels on the Trail

Not of the trail-tearing ORV kind, but of the wheelchair variety.

Tom from Two-Heel Drive announced the new web-centric home of Mr. Bob Coomber, aka 4WheelBob, who was just inducted into the California Outdoors Hall of Fame.

Now, I’m not sure what, exactly the California Outdoors Hall of Fame is but I know the following:

1. I’m glad we have one.
2. If anyone deserves to be in it, it’s a guy who had to fight his way through rangers to get to the wilderness, then went and got himself a Gubernatorial Apology and statewide Right to Pass certificate.

There’s not a whole lot on the site yet - but Bob’s got one hell of an interesting tale to tell, so I’m hoping he’ll get some original writing up there soon. Until then, you can acquaint yourself with Bob via this Backpacker article from last year, which is where I first heard of him.

Think about Bob next time you’re bellyaching about blisters or trudging the last mile to your summit.

Then keep going.