JohnnoMcJohnno wrote: . . . Maybe, just maybe, there's a little bit of goat in all of us.
peregrinator wrote:JohnnoMcJohnno wrote: . . . Maybe, just maybe, there's a little bit of goat in all of us.
You've got to be kidding.
Very few people recognise that they're chronically peak point hungry, mainly because that aspect is stigmatised, but I feel like there is definitely that drive in every bushwalker especially with all the easily accessible peak lists around.
phATty wrote:Very few people recognise that they're chronically peak point hungry, mainly because that aspect is stigmatised, but I feel like there is definitely that drive in every bushwalker especially with all the easily accessible peak lists around.
Tortoise wrote:I've been sitting a few points short of my last goal for months, and I confess I get a bit antsy to get there sometimes. No enough, however, to proceed with a walk I won't enjoy, pushing through wet scrub in the cold. Or one that requires an attempt to cross an icy flooded creek. Or traipsing through deep mud, when I can wait for more enjoyable conditions. I think reaching 600 will be enough for me.
johnrs wrote:For goats, himalayan char and yaks, Mech Al
I think it is to protect from predators at night
John
Especially if it's a remote peak that took days to access. Otherwise it remains 'unfinished business'. I think some people are better at accepting that than others, and I've been better at some times than at others. Completing that unfinished business at a later date can be especially sweet. Like enjoying an hour or two on Pokana Peak on the second attempt. (All the more sweet given that the first time we didn't get back to our tents till 1 a.m., having not summited.)north-north-west wrote:] And, sometimes, it's just sheer bloodymindedness because "damn it, I came here to climb the thing and I'm going to climb the thing".
north-north-west wrote:The walkers I don't understand are the "get up there and back as quickly and easily as possible, just to bag it" mob. I want to explore the whole lot; it's not enough to just hit the summit, I need to cover as much of the country around as is practical.
north-north-west wrote:It's not conquering the mountain. You never conquer a mountain; it remains where it is and what it is despite your ephemeral presence. It's more about conquering your own weaknesses and doubts. And, sometimes, it's just sheer bloodymindedness because "damn it, I came here to climb the thing and I'm going to climb the thing".
That was my view... get away from normal people. But it's more than just that.Lophophaps wrote:It's just nice being in the bush, far from the madding crowds.
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