In the opening chapter Gros (a French philosopher) says this:
Walking is not a sport. Sport is a matter of techniques and rules, scores and competition ... Sport is keeping score: what's your ranking? Your time? Your place in the results?
He goes on to say:
When walkers meet, there is no result, no time: the walker may say which way he has come, mention the best path for viewing the landscape, what can be seen from this or that promontory.
Not all walkers I meet would fit into this description ... but the ones I tend to enjoy spending time with do.
What do others think? Is walking becoming more of a competitive sport, or will it always have the "gentle" edge that Gros describes?
cheers
Peter