Dave_Schuldt Posted November 13, 2002 Posted November 13, 2002 Check out column by Joel Connely in todays Seattle Post Inteligencer. Page 2 of front section. Quote
Dustin_B Posted November 13, 2002 Posted November 13, 2002 quote: Originally posted by Dave Schuldt: Check out column by Joel Connely in todays Seattle Post Inteligencer. Page 2 of front section. Here is the link Quote
JoshK Posted November 13, 2002 Posted November 13, 2002 "It was the centerpiece in "Vertical Limit," perhaps the worst mountaineering movie ever made." LOL Quote
ivan Posted November 13, 2002 Posted November 13, 2002 fuk'em ...what's he climbed lately? last time i checked i was climbing for fun too... Quote
eric8 Posted November 13, 2002 Posted November 13, 2002 I agree with his thoughts that paying 60,000$ to be guided up everest is kind of lame. I image he feels much the same way i do when people who don't climb tell me they have climbed rainer. Then I ask if they were guided and of course they went up the dc with rmi. I know eveyone has there own sense of adventure but of the 5 people i have talk to that have done this none could tell me anything about crevasse rescue and only 2 new what i meant by self arrest. So is it really climbing, to be guide up rainer? I know everest is different but i image thats how he feels. Oh, and i willing be going to Kearneys side show on Thursday instead. Quote
mattp Posted November 14, 2002 Posted November 14, 2002 Veggy and Ivan: the guy is cool and the last time I saw him give a talk he was pretty entertaining, too (though that was nearly 20 years ago). Quote
Cpt.Caveman Posted November 14, 2002 Posted November 14, 2002 Looks pretty cool and short to me. My fav is the Tilman part-In the same year, in Houston's words, he and British climber Bill Tillman "went on a picnic" and found the route by which the world's tallest peak, 29,035-foot Mount Everest, was first climbed three years later. Tilman kicked so much ass over anyone nowadays it's funny. Cheers to Bill Tilman's adventures Quote
wayne Posted November 14, 2002 Posted November 14, 2002 Hunt and Tillman : The Planet-Ass-Kickers Quote
vegetablebelay Posted November 14, 2002 Posted November 14, 2002 quote: Originally posted by ivan: fuk'em ...what's he climbed lately? last time i checked i was climbing for fun too... Right on. He sounds like every other 80 year old complaining about "kids these days".... Quote
Retrosaurus Posted November 14, 2002 Posted November 14, 2002 quote: Originally posted by ivan: fuk'em ...what's he climbed lately? last time i checked i was climbing for fun too... quote: Originally posted by vegetablebelay: Right on. He sounds like every other 80 year old complaining about "kids these days".... Sounds like every other kid these days complaining about 80-year old hardmen. Quote
vegetablebelay Posted November 14, 2002 Posted November 14, 2002 Maybe he's the absolute hardest of hardmen, and like Caveman said cheers to his accomplishements. That said, he still comes off sounding like Quote
pindude Posted November 14, 2002 Posted November 14, 2002 quote: Originally posted by vegetablebelay: Maybe he's the absolute hardest of hardmen, and like Caveman said cheers to his accomplishements. That said, he still comes off sounding like... Remember, you're reading words from a newspaper column, and even though Houston is quoted, it's just one small side of him, as filtered through the eyes of another...in this case Joel Connelly. Journalistic columns are meant to be forums for opinion, and opinion is exactly what Connelly is giving, using Houston's words to back it up. My own opinion, FWIW, is that it is perfectly normal for the Houstons, Hillarys, Messners and other climbers from decades ago to lament the changes, the lack of innocence, and the current state of climbing and the world. C'est la vie. And it's perfecty normal for us as we get older to have strong opinions. But again, the Houstons of the world have a lot more to say about what it really was like. Charley IS a bona fide hardman, has contributed much to climbing and our understanding of high-altitude physiology, and is cool to boot. Given the choice of presentations between the local younger Kearney and Boston-area native Charley in his 80s, there is no question who I would choose to see. Wish I wasn't in Spokane mid-week. Somebody please post a TR, and let me know if Charley's wearing his Pendleton wool shirt. Quote
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