The Drive
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Re: The Drive
I’ve adopted a simple rule: the time on the ground (hiking, biking, skiing) must exceed the time behind the windshield getting there and back. Otherwise it’s not worth the effort.
"A couple more shots of whiskey,
the women 'round here start looking good"
the women 'round here start looking good"
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seannunn
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Re: The Drive
Must be nice to be able to have that rule.
I would have only been on one or two trips using that rule.
Sean Nunn
Peculiar, MO
"Thy righteousness is like the great mountains."
--Psalm 36:6
--Psalm 36:6
Re: The Drive
I don't like driving all the way to the San Juans if I can't spend at least three days of hiking down there. Preferably I'll do a week or more. I like to take a lot of 4-day weekends in the summer to facilitate the 13er quest. If I do it Thursday-Monday, then there's never any traffic to hit!
I say this, but I am also moving to the west slope very soon...
I say this, but I am also moving to the west slope very soon...
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HikerGuy
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Re: The Drive
Just to clarify, I always spend at least 2 to 3 nights when I drive to the San Juans and typically hike 3 days. I think I may be using the drive as an excuse for my lack of motivation and it is deeper rooted. Hmm...maybe Darin is onto something, it may be an aging issue.
Re: The Drive
Also it could be a monotony issue. After doing several hundred 13ers, I imagine its tougher to find motivation to basically repeat what you've done so many times before. Drive, hike, check box, drive home. I've struggled with it and I have way less peaks.HikerGuy wrote: ↑Fri Jul 03, 2026 8:34 pm Just to clarify, I always spend at least 2 to 3 nights when I drive to the San Juans and typically hike 3 days. I think I may be using the drive as an excuse for my lack of motivation and it is deeper rooted. Hmm...maybe Darin is onto something, it may be an aging issue.
After climbing a great hill, one only finds that there are many more hills to climb. -Nelson Mandela
Whenever I climb I am followed by a dog called Ego. -Nietzsche
Whenever I climb I am followed by a dog called Ego. -Nietzsche
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CaptainSuburbia
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Re: The Drive
I love the drive. I probably don't drive nearly as often as you do though. I look forward to listening to all my favorite music and eating unlimited snacks. Normally, I watch what I eat and am very disciplined, but not before and after a climb. I also look forward to seeing all the sights in Colorado. Before climbing I rarely got more than an hour or 2 from Fort Collins. I've seen so much of the state now. Then there are those same landmarks you pass every time. There's Bucees, the rough section of 76, the turnoff to get to 285 which somehow I've missed more times than I can count and uturn at Morrison, the initial winding climb up 285, the Bigfoot museum in Baily (gonna stop there one of these days), speed traps in Baily too, the hot dog stand, Kenosha pass, the ice machine in Poncha Springs, Poncha Pass, gift shop on Monarch Pass, all th elk driving down to Lake City, etc. etc...It sounds monotonous but I look forward to all this stuff. I also intensely look forward to the adventure of every climb, especially if there's some unknowns involved which usually I make sure there are.
Some day our kids will study Clash lyrics in school.
Nothing drives people crazy like people drive people crazy.
Save Challenger Point
Save the big cats
You can strike anywhere
Nothing drives people crazy like people drive people crazy.
Save Challenger Point
Save the big cats
You can strike anywhere
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Scott P
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Re: The Drive
Everyone is different but I just go somewhere closer when I don't feel like doing the drive.
Personally I wouldn't take a break unless I had to recover from an injury but to each their own. I don't have enough time to skip weekend in summer plus I'm too fat to justify staying home and my desk job is killing me.
As far as the West Needles go, I hope to be there soon. Luckily it's 2 1/2 hours from me instead of 7. Maybe I'll see you there.
Personally I wouldn't take a break unless I had to recover from an injury but to each their own. I don't have enough time to skip weekend in summer plus I'm too fat to justify staying home and my desk job is killing me.
As far as the West Needles go, I hope to be there soon. Luckily it's 2 1/2 hours from me instead of 7. Maybe I'll see you there.
I'm old, slow and fat. Unfortunately, those are my good qualities.
Re: The Drive
This was a struggle for me when I was inching (so it felt like) closer to finishing the fourteeners, and there are only 58 of those (well...depending on your views about the Crestone Peak summit[s]
Lining up guides and/or partners for the last ten in particular (those post-Pyramid) was essential, because giving into my desires to stay home would then mean letting someone else down and/or being out a decent amount of money, and then I suppose I did have the little dopamine hit of finally checking a given box and being able to say, "And now, I never have to go anywhere near that miserable mountain again!" And while it admittedly did take me a while to realize after checking that last fourteener (goddamn Crestone Peak...figures I'd finish on the unranked one!), finally embracing life beyond summits and checklists has made it a whole lot easier to pack a bag, load up the car, and get on the road when conditions align for a hike I've been wanting to do.
But with OP's peak count, my specific bugbear from days of yore probably isn't the issue. But is there something else about those remaining thirteeners that sounds unappealing, besides the long drive to get to them (and maybe that's reason enough on its own - while I share CaptainSuburbia's overall mindset about enjoying the drive itself these days, I do not share his enthusiasm for 285)? That might be something to investigate. Or maybe this is simply a good time to take a pause from peakbagging and do some activities closer to home, maybe some that could eventually remind you what, if anything, you do like about peakbagging.
"I'm not selling drugs, dude. Drugs sell themselves. I'm selling stoke!"
- Guy at the table next to mine at Alta's Slopeside Cafe, in what I can't help but selfishly hope were (will be?) his verbatim words to the arresting officer(s)
- Guy at the table next to mine at Alta's Slopeside Cafe, in what I can't help but selfishly hope were (will be?) his verbatim words to the arresting officer(s)
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mtree
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Re: The Drive
I've reached this point and there's no turning back. I would hike every weekend. One day, I got out of my car and looked up at the mountains. The wind was howling. I was tired. I thought to myself, "Am I having fun?" I got in my car and drove home.
I still hike quite a bit, but its no longer a chore. I was never driven to check off a peak for the sake of a list. It was about enjoying the mountains, the hike, the experience. Once I realized I was doing it just to do it I had an epiphany. There were other things in life I was ignoring or not participating in. And I wasn't enjoying it like I used to. Part of the reason was the monotony of a long drive. The other was all my friends had stopped hiking so all of my adventures were solo. That gets tiring. The days of driving 3+ hours to hike a mountain are pretty much over unless I'm staying a night or two. And that's becoming rare. I've come to peace with it.
Now I hike because I feel like it. I may do repeats or take an alternate route and 13ers are a wonderful thing. Staying in altitude shape is more difficult, but that's what nearby peaks are for. Just recently I'm also more apt to hike in spring and fall. Less crowds and I love the spring weather (I know, its weird) and the crisp fall air with winter's impending march. Plus the traffic is much better. Less traffic equals less driving.
I still hike quite a bit, but its no longer a chore. I was never driven to check off a peak for the sake of a list. It was about enjoying the mountains, the hike, the experience. Once I realized I was doing it just to do it I had an epiphany. There were other things in life I was ignoring or not participating in. And I wasn't enjoying it like I used to. Part of the reason was the monotony of a long drive. The other was all my friends had stopped hiking so all of my adventures were solo. That gets tiring. The days of driving 3+ hours to hike a mountain are pretty much over unless I'm staying a night or two. And that's becoming rare. I've come to peace with it.
Now I hike because I feel like it. I may do repeats or take an alternate route and 13ers are a wonderful thing. Staying in altitude shape is more difficult, but that's what nearby peaks are for. Just recently I'm also more apt to hike in spring and fall. Less crowds and I love the spring weather (I know, its weird) and the crisp fall air with winter's impending march. Plus the traffic is much better. Less traffic equals less driving.
- I didn't say it was your fault. I said I was blaming you.
