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by eye900
2592 days ago
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> ... my desire to climb mountains. I just wanna see what it looks like on other side... aka curiosity. I wonder for some period of time why people like to climb, so I am excited by your answer. Given all the documentaries, news and travel ads, one can reasonably imagine what it looks like on the other side, don't we? Moreover, its geometry would remain the same in one's life time, for any specific mountain. One can get a pretty close idea from Google Map's terrain view. If one is not that into the details, like the precise curvature for each piece of a mountain, then they are largely the same. I find myself not attracted to climbing for exactly the reason that they are not different enough from each other to satisfy my curiosity. |
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In the last year or two though I’ve realized that every climb is it’s own experience, even on the same mountain. The season, the plants and animals that come with it (or snow!), the weather that particular day, whether it’s a dry or wet year, the time of day. Some days you get turned back before you reach the peak. Maybe an avalanche happened overnight. Or you time it just right to get a view of sunset/sunrise/aurora/milky way. There’s always something new to learn even if it’s your 100th ascent. They actually change much more than you’d think.
I always thought it would be tough or impossible to, say, get all the 13ers/14ers in Colorado, or all the 4,000ers in the northeast. Now I realize I could spend a lifetime just getting to really know a handful of them. I find a strange comfort in that. Maybe I’m getting older.
Also, I love to ski and snowboard. Gotta get up to ride down! But I’ve never lost the desire to go around one more bend, or over one more peak, to see what I can see beyond.