On turning 69
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At Philmont Ranch participating in age-inappropriate activities.
Today I turn 69 years old. Somehow that sounds dreadfully old. But I just don't feel all that ancient.
Whether due to willfulness or dumb luck, my physical and mental decline into abject senility and immobility seems to be fairly slow.
- I was very proud and happy to have performed well in the Philmont backpacking trip earlier this month when my 15-year-old grandson along with 7 other Boy Scouts and 2 other adults hiked over 55 miles of mountainous terrain in rain, hail, mud, stream crossings, and rocks. I even managed to get up from my sleeping bag each morning without too much difficulty. And remarkably, I came back injury-free. Did I mention we carried pretty good sized packs and lived on energy bars?
- Next week I am flying to Europe for a long-delayed bicycle trip along the Danube River. The 8 daily routes are not long (around 25 miles each) and hopefully flat. I'm staying on a river cruiseship. I don't know what COVID restrictions will be in place, but I'll have my vaccination card at the ready and sort of take things as they come. Leaving a couple days early just in case I need testing or something. Haven't been biking much this summer so this may be a challenge.
- This October, my friend Heidi and I are signed up for a Road Scholar Hiking trip to Arcadia National Park in Maine. Maine is one of the 4 states I've never visited. We are also planning a trip to the Galapagos and Amazon rainforest this winter. I'll stay in Ecuador for a few extra weeks to avoid the worst of Minnesota's winter and get in some high altitude hiking.
- Heidi and I completed the Hiking Club Challenge this June, having hiked all the identified trails in 68 Minnesota State Parks. It took 2 years. We got badges.
- I just finished writing a 372 page StoryWorth book I titled Memories, Lessons, and a Few Tall Tales. The book was written one short chapter a week over the past year. I am blogging still, albeit less frequently, and more and more to amuse myself and less to inform others.
- I still volunteer regularly with a local nonprofit giving rides and shopping for groceries for seniors. I'm service project chair for a local Rotary Club. I participate in outdoor recreation and bicycling groups.
- And I still read constantly. I'm about half done with a book called Stupid Things I Won't Do When I Get Old: a Highly Judgmental, Unapologetically Honest Accounting of All the Things Our Elders Are Doing Wrong by Steven Petrow. It should be a manadatory study for anyone over the age of 60.
Find the old guy. Hiking group at Ciudad Perdida, Columbia in 2015.
Way back in 2015, when I was just a young pup of 63, I asked myself whether I would be smarter playing with people more my own age. As the picture above shows, the rest of my fellow hikers were not quite at my chronological level. It was a tough, damn hike.
Yet the more I think about it, the less foolish such adventures seem. Yes, I could have a stroke or heart attack or be eaten by less-than-discriminating bears. But I could also, much more painfully, die of boredome and enui right here at home in my recliner.
Whether physical, mental, or mission-driven, challenges, I believe they slow the trip to the crematorium. Or at least make it more interesting.
Researching a hike to El Mirador...