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Posted

hiking is the approach to climbing.

 

seriously, the two overlap, its like a Venn diagram. There is mountaineering that is hiking, mountaineering that is climbing, mountaineering that is neither (skiing); climbing that is also hiking (if you hike up a peak, you have climbed that peak)...climbing is to ascend where as hiking is to walk...hiking along Olympic Beach for 3 days is not climbing but hiking up Whitney is, non-technical climbing; scrambling may be where the two overlap or it may be a subset of soloing without fall potential,

 

the big question is SO FUCKING WHAT? if its for reporting lost people on the news, if they had technical gear, they are not "hikers" and its a bit of a put down to call them that.

 

now to offend all the dog lovers moon.gif. if it is hiking a dog can climb it, and if it is climbing, the dog can't snaf.gif

Posted
Dr_Flash_Amazing said:

Hiking is flat and gay and there's no numbers to chase.

 

Climbing is steep burly mono-pockets and sick dynos and sexy onsighting and whatnot, all tied together with big numbers and bigger spray.

 

True indeed. wave.gif

 

LMAO, DFA! Don't forge the part about how hikers always get their proper permits, and climbers are too good for that! hahaha.gif

Posted
allison said:

 

LMAO, DFA! Don't forge the part about how hikers always get their proper permits, and climbers are too good for that! hahaha.gif

 

Quois? Mais non, petit grimpeur! Climbers always get the year 'round parking permit, it's just that climbers' permits are rad and sexy and facilitative of big-number sending, whereas hiker permits only lead to more gay flatness and boring non-anchor-clipping blanditudinalitification.

Posted
gay flatness and boring non-anchor-clipping blanditudinalitification

What if have to skewer a grizzly bear with my trekking pole or swim an icey river in the buff? Would that not increase the raditudinal factor of my hike?

Posted

Sure, trekking pole grizzly skewering and au naturel icy river fording are fairly high-action pursuits, but most hikers don't get to swing with that kind of action. You're lucky to get hit in the head with a pinecone at worst. And without big numbers to enrich your story? Or cool words like the tres Francais "gaston" or "roto-pockets," you're pretty much sunk the moment you lace up your Sundowners.

Posted

its like a Venn diagram

I'm going with Dru on this one. These are two of those words in our language that change meaning depending on the speaker, the context, etc. People who have "climbed" Mt. Rainier will also say they "climbed" Mt. Si, while others will say they "hiked" Si or "ran" Si. Do what you love, call it what you like, and if someone takes issue with your verbiage, pity tha foo.

pitty.gif

Posted

Sure seems like a lot of posts for such a boring subject. BTW, this all got started at Pub Club last night. My two cents worth is that it all overlaps. Two tier system:

 

Class 1-3 hiking (includes occasional use of hands)

Class 4-5 climbing

 

Three Tier system:

 

Class 1-2 hiking

Class 2-3 scrambling

Class 4-5 climbing

Posted
aint_this_great said:

its like a Venn diagram

I'm going with Dru on this one. These are two of those words in our language that change meaning depending on the speaker, the context, etc. People who have "climbed" Mt. Rainier will also say they "climbed" Mt. Si, while others will say they "hiked" Si or "ran" Si. Do what you love, call it what you like, and if someone takes issue with your verbiage, pity tha foo.

pitty.gif

 

that's cause everyone around here is a fuckin genius the_finger.gif

Posted
freeclimb9 said:

Mer said:

What if have to skewer a grizzly bear with my trekking pole . . . in the buff?

Can you get that on tape? It'd be a jackass stunt worthy of airtime.

 

This is close: web page

 

Makes keeping your kitty off your computer moniter seem tame by comparison.

Posted

So are trips like the Ptarmigan Traverse and the Bailey Range climbs or hikes? Don't forget about this third "High Alpine Traverse" category. From a personal standpoint, I think it may surpass both hiking and climbing as the "ultimate" mountain experience.

Posted
Dru said:

i thought the Ultimate Mountain Experience was mushsmile.gif and then remembering your past life as a snaf.gif

 

well, shit then i have had like 4 u.m.e. this year alone!!

 

i transcend shit! and am like zen!

 

mushsmile.gifrockband.gif

Posted
Fairweather said:

So are trips like the Ptarmigan Traverse and the Bailey Range climbs or hikes?

 

We decided this one last night. Trips like that are called fun

Posted
allison said:

Dr_Flash_Amazing said:

Hiking is flat and gay and there's no numbers to chase.

 

Climbing is steep burly mono-pockets and sick dynos and sexy onsighting and whatnot, all tied together with big numbers and bigger spray.

 

True indeed. wave.gif

 

LMAO, DFA! Don't forge the part about how hikers always get their proper permits, and climbers are too good for that! hahaha.gif

 

Climbing is exciting, climbers like adventure; like getting in a fight with the man cause you don't have a permit.

 

Hikers are boring and scared of stepping out of line.

 

Hikers that think they are climbers are pathetic.

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