Showing posts with label hiking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hiking. Show all posts

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Bicycling across America and Climbing Mt. Everest in 2011

Despite all of the athletic things I did as a young man, I end 2011 with the feeling that even though I am 62, I may be as physically fit and even more than I ever have been.  It's been eight years since a hip replacement and the end of smoking.  It's been two full years of bicycling with gusto and hiking with passion.  If the tale is in the tape, I covered 4,324.59 intentionally man-powered miles:



  • 4,034.69 on my bike (Mom did 2,467.18)
  • 40.19 swimming in the pool (Mom did an incredible 83.72)
  • 249.59 hiking in the desert (we always hike together)


I started the year with a biking goal of 3,000 miles after doing 2,700 in 2010.  Once I knew I would get there, I wanted to knock of 3,500 so I could say I biked from Presque Isle, Maine to San Diego.  I'm pleased to have knocked that off and then some.  We hike with a Garmin Forerunner.  Over those 250 hiking miles, we climbed in elevation 35,189 feet, nearly 7 miles, some 6,000 feet higher than Mt. Everest, and we were on the trails for 73 hours in the process.

Mom turns 60 in January.  We're feeling pretty good about ourselves physically, mentally and spiritually.  Life is Grand, and it will get even better.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Sonora

Last weekend on our hike into the Sonora Desert, I decided to take a series of pictures from the top of a hill we climbed.  I found this slick website that allowed me to stitch them into a panorama.  Hope you enjoy it.


Thursday, January 13, 2011

Forever Young

You may find this odd, but here it is.  Yesterday morning in the darkness of the church, I had this calm, but very clear vision/sensation/feeling -- and I even mentioned it to Mom in the evening -- that I was going to live to be a healthy and productive 100-years old.  Maybe it's because the narrator of my new manuscript is 100.  Regardless, when I got up this morning, Brad sent me an email with a quote from the book he's currently reading.

"...this 95 year old man came hiking twenty five miles over the mountain. Know why he could do it? Because no one ever told him he couldn't. No one ever told him he oughta be off dying somewhere in an old age home."


from Born to Run by Christopher McDougall