Saturday, December 27, 2025

2025 Grand Canyon Thunder River: The Final Roar

Friends - Thank you for coming along with me on this hike in the Grand Canyon. I hope you enjoyed our hike together.



One of the things I have realized with this particular series is that my commentary was rather brief.  That is a bit by design:  in this case, the Canyon can speak well enough for itself.  My commentary would be superfluous in many cases.


That said, this trip was not entirely devoid of epiphanies and revelations.  I can think of at least three.


The first happened at below, at Thunder Falls, and was replicated at Deer Creek Falls.  In both cases I remember looking with awe upon my surroundings. It then occurred to me that I could see my surroundings because I had come to see them. I had made the effort.  I had hiked down.  Nature, and life I suddenly realized, would indeed reward you.  


The lesson?  You have to pay the price - in this case, walking step by step into the Canyon.  In life, as Orison Swett Marden noted in An Iron Will"...success is the child of drudgery and perseverance.  It cannot be coaxed or bribed:  pay the price, and it is yours."



The second realization came from one of our fellow hikers.


One of the gentleman from Pennsylvania (Trail name Pepsi) celebrated an early 70's birthday on the trail.  He was working his way towards completing the Appalachian trail (in sections) and was very close to finishing.  He had been coming to the Grand Canyon for over 50 years.  He was also, as it turns out, a writer.


At one point in the hike he related that he had been in a job 10 years prior where, due to politics, he was overlooked for a position.  He got angry enough to retire.  "Best decision I ever made" were his precise words.  He now fills his time with hiking, running, writing (and reading; all good writers are readers) and golf (which, he confessed, was not his favourite but enjoyed by his wife).


The lesson: Do not let doing something that does not thrill you get in the way of living a life that does.



The last lesson was really was an output of the hike as a whole.


During the hike, one is divorced from one's day to day existence.  E-mails, texts, the news, really the world - it all just disappears.  One's life becomes reduced to one's companions, the pack on one's back, and putting one's foot in front of the other.  Meals become celebrations, water in desert places become not just a point of beauty but a reason to celebrate. Hiking confronts you with endless beauty and challenge in a way that is not confined to a keyboard or a meeting (in my case), and the chance to really, truly, disconnect.


The lesson? Really more of a giant question: What are spending your life on? And does it really matter in the long run?  Does it make the world better?  Does it make you better?


Hiking is an odd combination of a shared activity done together which is always experienced by the individual. We hike together, yet every one of us experiences the trail in a different way. We all walk away with both the same and different experiences, the same and different stories to tell.



And that, as they say, is a beautiful thing.


What about the next hike?  Well, like any good hikers we started planning as soon as we got home.  Next year will be a return to Mt. Whitney (the highest peak in the contiguous 48 states at 14,505 ft.) which I hiked in 2022.  Besides The Outdoorsman and The Brit, Nighean Bhan's fiancé will be joining us (for which, I suppose, I shall have to find a better name). 


The trail, as they say, calls - and I must answer.

2 comments:

  1. Nylon128:24 AM

    Ah.....disconnect from the keyboard...hard for many to do. Been going in for visits to a clinic and EVERY SINGLE person in the waiting room during the ten visits so far has been on their cell phone. My first visit i found a small cache of paperbacks in one corner and selected one, been reading every visit. Your hikes are giving you the chance to cut that "cord" for a few days and ponder/reflect TB. Plan and prepare for these trips and have some fun......:) OBTW, thanks for the work done in retelling these adventures TB!

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    1. Nylon12 - Cell phones are ubiquitous, and I am just as guilty in reaching for it as others, unless I specifically plan and bring a book with me. For me, things like hikes and even plane trips are ways to forcibly disconnect.

      Thank you for the kind words. I am glad you enjoyed the trip!

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