It strikes me that oral or written accounts of hiking trips – the descriptions of trails, flora, injuries, tiredness, the supposed adventurous hijinks that hikers get up to - could only be of possible interest to another hiker planning to cover the same route and wanting to know what they’re up against, or maybe not…
I borrowed a guidebook to the Kaçkar
mountains of northeast Turkey a month or two before setting out thinking, as
you do, that I would get busy reading it and be well briefed on the lay of the
land before actually getting there. I
was wrong, of course. It sat on my shelf
and collected dust before I finally wiped it off and gave it back before
leaving for Turkey. With the exception
of the useful map it contained there was really no motivation for me to read
it. I did try, but couldn’t do it.
Apart from a very general background
to the place you’re headed, you really only need a decent map and all the gear
to be ready. There’s very little return
to be had from reading beforehand that ‘when
you come to the broken cairn, turn left at the white rock to behold a glorious vista of post deluvian scree slopes
and moraine…ten minutes vigorous scramble up this will bring you to a boulder
strewn amphitheatre…’. Why spoil the
surprise?
Then, at any rate, you’re doing the
hike and trying to keep a journal about the days’events. It doesn’t work, does it? You’re too busy gawping at the…jaw-droppingly beautiful and ever changing
play of light as the sun sets, basking the pinnacle rocks and snowfields in an
ethereal magenta glow that cannot be copied with any paint pallette known to
man….to bother writing about it. And
forget about recording it for posterity later in your tent at night by the
light of a headlamp, wrapped up in your sleeping bag. It’s more interesting to listen to the wind
buffet the flysheet, or just…well, go to sleep because you’re tired from that
earlier vigorous scramble.
There’s a Turkish saying related to
travel that I like which goes ‘Yediklerin içtiklerin sende kalsın –
gördüklerini anlat’. Good, isn’t
it? Ok, it says ‘Whatever you ate or
drank on your travels is your own business – tell us what you saw’. Indeed.
There’s nothing more unforgiveable than boring others with descriptions
of food you had while away. Suffice it
to say that, generally, trail food is crap.
You’re reduced to eating serial soupy
concoctions involving quick cook noodles, sausage, a potato sometimes, and some
soup mix by Knorr. Each evening you try
to vary it, but it’s always more or less the same thing. It’s the kind of muck you would never subject
yourself to in normal circumstances. It
only makes sense at the time. At the end
of a long day’s hike it seems like the best thing you’ve ever eaten. The reason is twofold: you’re extremely tired
so even a sushi-ed rat would taste like ambrosia, and secondly you’re watching
eagles and hawks reel above you in absolute silence and the freshest of air,
which is proven to make otherwise normal people temporarily insane, enabling
them to knock back the trail slop.
So why do we put ourselves through
this if it’s all so bad? Because we
do. It’s sweaty, uncomfortable, at times
dangerous, often tedious, tiring, rewarding and the best sport on the planet,
that’s why. And as everyone knows, the
word ‘sport’ is actually an acronym
for sweat, pain, odour, repetitiveness
and tightened buttocks, so hiking
ticks all the boxes, really.
However, knowing all that should be
enough for the hiker who wishes to create a verbal picture of what they
experienced. Better not to bother. So you’re only left with what you saw. Of
course the best way to express this is through pictures. That’s why people create ‘photo essays’ –
basically a euphemism for ‘admittal that
if you can, in a photo, see what I saw, then you don’t need me to tell you
about it’.
So, the previous paragraphs are a
long winded way of introducing my own photo essay on the Kaçkar mountains,
though, in my defense, not half as long as had I decided to write down the
several thousand words that the pictures say better than I could.
For those
who might have come across this in a Google search for ‘Kaçkar’ while trying to
get background info for their own trip (I don’t delude myself into thinking that
anyone ever knowingly chooses to read
this blog), I’ll mention that the pictures represent two hikes. One was from Olgunlar village to Dilberdüzü,
and the other was from the former to Yukarı Kavron via the Çeymakçur/Naletleme
Pass in July and August 2010. If you’ve
got this far, you’ll know that there are certain books on the area which you
can buy, and (not) read, if you’re so (dis)inclined. Anyway, this is what I saw.















Great adventures and indeed and by simply looking at this amazing collection of images I can say that you always had a great time and somehow motivated me to live my life to the fullest and reminds me to live.
ReplyDeleteVisit us,
A Pack Mre
Gosh! Thank you for your kind words.
ReplyDelete