My plan this year is to hike to the summit, work my week, then hike back down. That will satisfy my participation in STP.
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My plan this year is to hike to the summit, work my week, then hike back down. That will satisfy my participation in STP.
and if you are late to the top then your wife will be mad and you will get docked some pay
I don't know about the pay part but..."there'll be no living with her after that.";)Quote:
Originally Posted by Charlie
I agree, going down is not always easy. It may not get my heart rate up, but it wears on my muscles and joints. Especially after you just climbed the mountain. This is when trekking poles really come in handy with added support and stability.Quote:
Originally Posted by mary
I remember as a kid we would run down, hopping and jumping on the rocks, pretending we were skiing on them. The legs bounced back really quick back then but now I am really glad to have my trekking poles for the decent.:)Quote:
Originally Posted by Bill O
Yes!!, I can remember "rock floating", as we would call it - moving so fast downhill that you never come down "fully" on any one foot - just a gentle "guiding" of the body, as it flows down the slope - always watching 3 or 4 rocks ahead . . .
On the right slope you could "float" down a thousand feet in no time!!
You knew it was wrong - you knew it was "asking for it" - you knew the dangers were rampant - but the adrenaline rush was intense!!
Now-a-days I'm a bit slower - the body takes much longer to heal - and the mind holds the body back from it's youthful exuberance. These days, I'd take going UPHILL any day over going down. Down is the real killer!
You ain't kiddin. The knees just ain't what they used to be!;)Quote:
Originally Posted by Trekker
I know about hiking slower now than before.