Can someone please explain to me why the young find it such an ordeal to be with older people?
I don't find it an ordeal to be with older people, and in fact when we have older people travelling with us at work, I always make the effort to help them with their bags and come and introduce myself while we are waiting for others.
The older people (the 60+) on the Overland last week just happened to be a particularly rude and selfish group of people, for example:
1. Lighting the heaters in the hut despite the Parks restriction of only lighting it if the temperature is below 10 degrees (at Kia Ora, the hut must have been 30 degrees inside when we arrived and the heater was on FLAT OUT)
2. Going to bed at 7pm (2 hours before it got dark!) and getting *&%$#! with us for making any noise whatsoever when retrieving something from our pack or cooking dinner
3. Getting up at 4am (yes you read that right, as early as 4am, 2 hours before sunrise) and then happily deafening the entire hut as they noisily packed up their gear (people in glass houses, see point 2)
4. Putting every single piece of wet clothing/footwear/underwear over and around the heater (including stinky socks) making the entire hut stink of their BO and making it impossible to walk around the hut without tripping over
5. Sleeping on the floor in the common areas when bunks were available???
6. Sleeping in the bunks with unbelievably loud snoring (if I snored like that, I wouldn't be so rude as to sleep in the bunk and keep everyone awake, I'd stay in a tent)
I don't find it an ordeal to be with older people, but for some reason, when bushwalking, SOME of them can be unbelievably rude and inconsiderate!
As for the 85 year old farmer who walked in to Pelion for two days from Arm River, he was a gentleman and we spent half an hour having a good yarn over a cuppa. He was hoping to find someone to carry his pack out because he was really feeling it, but unfortunately we were going the wrong way!
Sorry about the thread drift.