Lostone
New member
No. I'm not kidding? What is a hike, to you?
To some it isn't a hike unless you're out for days. Others will map out a piece of a trail per week / month.
I live at Sugarbush, in Vermont. Most of my hikes are going out my back door and wandering around the ski area. Mostly I'm on trails, but there are parts of the Long Trail that go between parts of the ski area. When I venture on them I feel like I'm on a highway! :blink:
I just got into it when I started coming to Vermont for weekends. I liked the idea of just going out and
wandering around this mountain, where I ski, and enjoying the clean air and the fact that nobody is around.
I had a camelback and some good shoes. I replaced the camelback with a better backpack and added hiking poles. I added a compass, and sometimes a GPS. I started always carrying my camera, cause you never know.
Now I live up here. I've basically been doing the same thin. The plan was to start doing hikes in different areas and different trails, but most of that has been put off until after I get a minor hernia surgery out of the way. Hopefully, I'll start spreading my territory toward the end of August.
But for you, what is going for a hike? I was out yesterday. They ran the bottom lift at North. Most people (almost all) rode the lift up. About 20% of them hiked from there to the summit. They hiked.
I hiked from the bottom to the summit, then after the first part, chose a different way down.
What do you do when you go for a hike? And how often do you do it? Is there much vertical, or are you pretty much on a level trail? Do you spend overnight, many nights, or is it usually / always a day trip?
Is it fun? What is fun?
To some it isn't a hike unless you're out for days. Others will map out a piece of a trail per week / month.
I live at Sugarbush, in Vermont. Most of my hikes are going out my back door and wandering around the ski area. Mostly I'm on trails, but there are parts of the Long Trail that go between parts of the ski area. When I venture on them I feel like I'm on a highway! :blink:
I just got into it when I started coming to Vermont for weekends. I liked the idea of just going out and
wandering around this mountain, where I ski, and enjoying the clean air and the fact that nobody is around.
I had a camelback and some good shoes. I replaced the camelback with a better backpack and added hiking poles. I added a compass, and sometimes a GPS. I started always carrying my camera, cause you never know.
Now I live up here. I've basically been doing the same thin. The plan was to start doing hikes in different areas and different trails, but most of that has been put off until after I get a minor hernia surgery out of the way. Hopefully, I'll start spreading my territory toward the end of August.
But for you, what is going for a hike? I was out yesterday. They ran the bottom lift at North. Most people (almost all) rode the lift up. About 20% of them hiked from there to the summit. They hiked.
I hiked from the bottom to the summit, then after the first part, chose a different way down.
What do you do when you go for a hike? And how often do you do it? Is there much vertical, or are you pretty much on a level trail? Do you spend overnight, many nights, or is it usually / always a day trip?
Is it fun? What is fun?