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America’s hiking culture is built on ego
(www.theguardian.com)
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Nice work! I do agree that there's a great deal of interesting stuff in less visually-appealling places, but I wouldn't want to tell someone that there's no value in bearing witness to natural beauty on a grander scale than what can be found behind a warehouse
I wouldn't say there's "no value" in seeing natural beauty. I just don't think that visiting tourist areas is more valuable than finding the beauty that surrounds you on a daily basis.
Some of this is probably because I don't have the money to travel, and it was really bumming me out that I couldn't go anywhere "valuable". It took a shift in mentality to realize that there is also value in the stuff right outside my front door, like these pixie cups.
There's a reasonable disticntion to be drawn between tourist areas and areas that are just a bit wilder / grander / less-accessible, surely? The two categories can overlap, sure, but they're not the same thing
Yeah, I think that the distinction can be drawn. However, when I read OP's article, I understood it to be about the more tourist-y areas.
Ahh, I see where you're coming from. I was meaning to reply more to OP's comments on the in-the-moment experiences of hiking as opposed to the article talking about the ramifications that the hobby can have outside of that
See, I also interpreted OPs comments as being about more popular attractions, haha.
They spoke quite highly of the more wild nature preserve they visit and bemoaned the capitalist urge to take a beautiful and wild area, and turn it into a profitible tourist attraction that pulls the kind of hiker that doesn't really respect nature.
Somewhat besides the point of the conversation, that's a really nice photo. I normally feel like my cheap phone's camera is good enough with a bit of creative usage, but stuff like that lovely narrow band in focus really shows what it can't do
Thanks! This was taken with my Note 8, which is a ten year old phone. It's got dual cameras though, one for landscape and one for close-up shots.