This article is within the scope of WikiProject Travel and Tourism, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of travel and tourism related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Travel and TourismWikipedia:WikiProject Travel and TourismTemplate:WikiProject Travel and TourismTourism articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Health and fitness, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
health and
physical fitness related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Health and fitnessWikipedia:WikiProject Health and fitnessTemplate:WikiProject Health and fitnessHealth and fitness articles
This article is within the scope of
WikiProject Backpacking, a project which is currently considered to be inactive.BackpackingWikipedia:WikiProject BackpackingTemplate:WikiProject BackpackingBackpacking articles
John Hillaby, Journey to the Jade Sea (1964); Journey through Britain; Journey through Europe; Journey to the Gods (1991). Accounts of various long distance walks.
I check pages listed in
Category:Pages with incorrect ref formatting to try to fix reference errors. One of the things I do is look for content for
orphaned references in wikilinked articles. I have found content for some of
Hiking's orphans, the problem is that I found more than one version. I can't determine which (if any) is correct for this article, so I am asking for a sentient editor to look it over and copy the correct ref content into this article.
I apologize if any of the above are effectively identical; I am just a simple computer program, so I can't determine whether minor differences are significant or not.
AnomieBOT⚡22:26, 16 November 2020 (UTC)reply
Images
Hi
Nick Moyes, I have restored the two images that you deleted, presumably because you thought that they were off topic. I understand, but I'm preparing now to start using
trail crampons for safety, even though I actually walk within a city's boundaries, and then, when deep snow comes, I will sometimes use
snowshoes. But I will still be hiking/walking. I will also see signs of skis on the trails that I use. The two winter images emphasises their similarity with hiking in other seasons. The snowshoe article begins: "A snowshoe is footwear for walking over snow".
Rwood128 (
talk)
15:06, 20 November 2020 (UTC)reply
Hi,
Rwood128. Thank you for giving your rationale for reverting
my removal of two irrelevant images from the 'See also' section of this article. Rather than stomping in and simply reverting you (which only causes upset) I thought it best to explain that I believe you were wrong to reinstate them, and to explain my rationale for their removal (which was mentioned in my edit summary):
'See also' sections do not contain images.
Neither
snow shoes nor
ski touring are mentioned in the article. They are, of course related activities and so a wikilink within the 'See also' section is quite acceptable.
If you feel they are relevant to the article, you should include a section of text about them before including an image, though I respectfully suggest you would be better doing so at
Backpacking (hiking), where both more specialised techniques are already briefly mentioned, then in this more general article about hiking.
Images used in articles need to add encyclopaedic content about the subject. Neither
this image nor
this image add value to the article, and serve only to confuse and misdirect, as they are not referred to anywhere on the page. Indeed, they are wikilinked in 'See also' at 'Related activities' and not even as 'Types of hiking' So this is
WP:UNDUE, just as including an image of a llama would be inappropriate on the grounds of it being relevant to
Llama hiking.
And most whacky of all: the image of a girl feeding a bird on her arm whilst happening to be wearing snow shows (that you can't properly see) is, well, plain daft.
So please reinstate my edit and appreciate that we all have experiences when hiking that might be related to the broad subject, but not directly it, but this is an encyclopaedia which should serve to inform and not confuse the reader. Neither your own personal experiences, or mine as an active hiker and alpinist are relevant. I often carry an ice axe and crampons when I'm hiking in winter, or on approach walks in the Alps. None of those images would be directly relevant here, nor are the two that I removed. Please revert your edit which reinstated them.
Nick Moyes (
talk)
16:19, 20 November 2020 (UTC)reply
Thanks
Nick Moyes. I will await any further comment, and will also think further about this. There is mention of winter hiking, under hazards, but this is peripheral. A section on winter hiking is needed that can includes, for example, reference to the use of crampons and an ice ax. Your choice of words such as "wacky" and "daft" is puzzling, but maybe there is a cultural difference as you don't have a real winter in England.
The disputed images in fact illustrate the "see also" section, especially "related topics". Your comment about the snowshoe image being "plain daft" is over the top. There is a caption and my ancient eyes can see the snow shoes.
Rwood128 (
talk)
18:43, 20 November 2020 (UTC)reply
As I said above, it is quite inappropriate to add any images to the 'See also' section, and I have to respond to you over the image of a girl feeding a bird whilst standing, wearing snow shows to illustrate 'hiking'. It is, indeed, quite daft to include such a wacky image. Can you not see how irrelevant that is to the article? (Maybe it's a cultural thing.) But I am pleased you have now seen sense and removed it. I have moved the images out from the 'See also' section into the section you've sensibly created on 'winter hiking' - I'm very happy to see that section included, and would very much welcome seeing it being expanded, as well as appropriate images added to support the text content. Please just ensure you follow
WP:MOS when expanding content. You are quite right about English winters; that's why hikers in England who want to become competent alpine mountaineers often head a few hundred miles north to improve their winter skills by ice climbing in Scotland - a place where many of the world's toughest climbers have come from. Cheers,
Nick Moyes (
talk)
02:27, 21 November 2020 (UTC)reply
I agree with
Rwood128 and have restored the photograph of the snowshoer in the See also section. Snowshoeing is a form of hiking, and the picture illustrates snowshoeing, per
MOS:IMAGERELEVANCE. Further, there is nothing is
MOS:SEEALSO that forbids images in the section. If you'd like to come up with a better snowshoeing image, I'm open for substitution, but I think it illustrates a form of winter hiking, and I support keeping the photograph in. If you'd like to discuss further, let's stick to using Wikipedia guidelines, and avoid perjorative terms such as "daft". —
hike395 (
talk)
06:16, 21 November 2020 (UTC)reply
There's no problem having these images in the article, providing they are relevant to an appropriate section, which they now seem to be - and I appreciate the efforts of all those working to improve the structure and content of this article, which is now showing a marked improvement. But there simply is no justification for any image being placed in a See also section, just as there would not be in 'References' either. Perhaps consider a
WP:GALLERY if extra images are ever really necessary, but please consider mobile users who only see one section and their accompanying images at any one time. Meanwhile, I have repositioned the remaining image from 'See also' into the winter hiking section of the article, per
MOS:IMAGELOCATION, and have expanded that section a little. On a desktop, they still currently appear to project down into the 'See also' sub-section, but they are nevertheless in the right place now.
Nick Moyes (
talk)
15:50, 21 November 2020 (UTC)reply
@
Rwood128: I meant to restore the snowshoer with bird photo, but if you prefer the snowshoers in Bryce Canyon, it's clear that the consensus is not restore the bird photo. —
hike395 (
talk)
14:38, 22 November 2020 (UTC)reply
I think it has indeed benefited from the attention (and yes, I like the alternative snowshoeing image a lot better) - thanks both. As an aside, you might also have spotted that I've now uploaded and inserted a citation and image of alpaca trekking to
llama hiking because I thought we were unfairly excluding alpacas from the page, and also because the choice of main image there was a bit off-topic (aka daft). Warning: Anyone shoving an alpaca into this article will be instantly blocked. (Only kidding!). Cheers,
Nick Moyes (
talk)
16:11, 22 November 2020 (UTC)reply
Nick Moyes, re your recent edit, I don't know whether it is as glaringly obvious to all parent that: "it is possible to engage in hiking with young children", as you think, though the wording might be improved. In my experience successful hiking with a young child requires lots of planning and flexibility.
Rwood128 (
talk)
20:32, 28 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Thanks,
Rwood128. I don't think our role is to spell out things that are not glaringly obvious; it is, of course, to cover a topic encyclopaedically, and we need to avoid making statements that might themselves mislead.
My edit was purely intended to remove poor wording that to me would sound awkward to, or confuse, a reader. I'm OK with expanding this section a little more in order to explain the very different issues involved with hiking with babies, with toddlers and with older children. I suggest
this book might be a suitable source to base any expansion upon, or it could go in 'Further reading'. It certainly covers the key areas and, like you, I also have experience of taking a baby, and then a 4 year old, and then a teenage child up major mountain trails. Yes, I agree: they all involve careful planning. There are two definitions that seem essential to appreciate here in any editing: that of what 'hiking' is, and what a 'child' is. I do feel that some of this article's editors seem determined to expand it into areas that stray well beyond what general hiking is, and into into realms best covered by other articles. (I would, for example, suggest that the inclusion of the photo of Striding Edge is a perfect example of that. If anyone's been on it, they'll know why I say that. It's an easy
scrambling route, less a hiking trail, so doesn't really belong here).
Nick Moyes (
talk)
00:37, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Thanks
Nick, I certainly agree about the need not to stray too far into related areas. With regard to the photo of
Striding Edge, I believe that I added that, and for me it represents more or less the boundary of what I see as hiking. This also includes hiking in snow, paths protected with chains, etc, in the Alps, and, here in
Newfoundland. walking with trail crampons in winter on easy paths locally,
Rwood128 (
talk)
12:48, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Rwood128 OK fair enough. On further reflection I might accept that Striding Edge is at the very upper limit of relevance to 'Hiking' - with some limited scrambling involved - and the caption does make that clear. But other classic UK routes like Crib Goch on Snowdon or Aonach Eagach Ridge in Glencoe definitely fall into the scrambling category and so wouldn't be appropriate here. But I still wonder whether an image of another route better known for mainstream hiking, rather than pushing the limits would be better. Perhaps the Miner's Track or the Pyg track on Snowdon might fit the bill more? (Somewhere I've a photo of my 4 year old doing it all by herself, and carrying her own rucksack too; I might upload it if it looks potentially useful!)
Nick Moyes (
talk)
15:59, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
The point of the
Striding Edge image was to demonstrate a hiking "boundary", rather than a typical hike. The
Aonach Eagach ridge was done by a friend of mine, years ago, who was no mountaineer, and I suppose some might see it as representing the "very upper limit" between hiking and rock climbing. I did the
Snowdon Horseshoe as a student on a hiking weekend. We stayed mostly below the crest, with little scrambling, and I was guided through the only really exposed scramble (that I remember) by a mountaineering type dangling over an abyss! — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Rwood128 (
talk •
contribs)
18:35, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Hazard
Hike395 why change the image, in view of the discussion on the Talk page, especially as you suggest that this image is of a more obviously hazardous hiking route – which I don't in fact see. Anyhow aren't there too many photos of the North American landscape already? Can you clarify?
Rwood128 (
talk)
21:32, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
I interpreted
Nick Moyes's comment to say that Striding Edge was a marginal hike. I was trying to find a picture of an arete hike that is less hazardous than Striding Edge. Clouds Rest is a perfectly standard hike on an arete, no scrambling or handholds. It actually isn't that hazardous, unless you do something actively unsafe. You can get a sense of that hiking that spot from the video
here. There's a 1000m dropoff to the right of the arete, but it's difficult to take a picture that shows both the knife-edge and the 1000m drop-off.
I'm not insisting that the photograph stay in the article, if you think that we need to restore geographical balance. I can try to find a non-North-American version of a safe-ish arete hike. —
hike395 (
talk)
23:55, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
I found a photo on flickr of a ridge hike in the
Ötztal Alps. I've never been to that spot, but the satellite and topo maps show it's an arete. Not sure how dangerous it is, but the hiker shown doesn't seem to be scrambling. —
hike395 (
talk)
00:10, 30 December 2020 (UTC)reply
(
edit conflict) I'd just come back by suggesting that exposure is a very obvious hazard, and it might perhaps be more useful (=encyclopaedic) to highlight a less obvious hazard, and on a less extreme hiking route than on a sharp arete. Maybe something like use of a water filter to avoid risks from contaminated water, or perhaps sunstroke avoidance, or dehydration, carrying too much equipment, being insufficiently prepared, benightment, hypothermia, or navigation/map-reading failure, having toddlers in tow (!), accidents/injury, loss of daylight,
bear spray?, the so-called 'bad step/mauvais pas' or swollen river crossings which normal hikers can encounter wherein their lack of experience in scrambling/rock techniques mean they can suddenly become wildly out of their depth etc. (suddenly remembering a woman crying in sheer panic at the start of the Crib Goch ridge which I and my daughter skipped across without a problem!) BTW, whilst I'm here, did anyone tell the youths hiking in Israel that they should have carried rainproof gear? Our article's 'Equipment' section currently says they need to. It's important to appreciate that people hiking in arid climates encounter quite different hazards and needs than those of us in cold, temperate climes.
Nick Moyes (
talk)
00:43, 30 December 2020 (UTC)reply
We could show
this photo of Crib Goch. It's a Featured Picture (which I prefer to show in articles), and also shows hikers on the arete. Alternatively, per Nick, we could show the risk due to animals with
this photo of a bear trying to steal hikers' gear. I rather like that one. —
hike395 (
talk)
15:01, 30 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Nice picture, but really not OK for this article at all, as that route is not a hiking route - it's an exposed scramble, impossible to get on from the Pen-y-Pass end without a short but challenging scrambling move of c.10m, then a considerable amount of exposed scrambling elsewhere along it. Please don't be tempted to include any pics of that route on this page as it's too off-topic (I'd rather have the bear!). Quite a few people come to grief thinking the Crib Goch ridge is just an exposed walk/hike; I remember soloing a winter route on Snowdon's Trinity face back in Feb 1986, descending via the icy Crib Goch ridge, only to learn that the day previously the president of the
Alpine Club (UK) had fallen to his death whilst making the same traverse. But getting back on topic: I've spent the afternoon poring over maps and images to locate the Austrian ridge route added by
Hike395 in
diff. I've updated the image description on Commons and can confirm it's the
Rotkogel (2894m) - see also
[3] and, apart from steel cables for protection in one short section, there's no obvious scrambling on that route, so I'm quite OK with it's use here.
Nick Moyes (
talk)
16:50, 30 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment
This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 26 August 2019 and 11 December 2019. Further details are available
on the course page. Student editor(s):
Hanna wietsma.
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Travel and Tourism, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of travel and tourism related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Travel and TourismWikipedia:WikiProject Travel and TourismTemplate:WikiProject Travel and TourismTourism articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Health and fitness, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
health and
physical fitness related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Health and fitnessWikipedia:WikiProject Health and fitnessTemplate:WikiProject Health and fitnessHealth and fitness articles
This article is within the scope of
WikiProject Backpacking, a project which is currently considered to be inactive.BackpackingWikipedia:WikiProject BackpackingTemplate:WikiProject BackpackingBackpacking articles
John Hillaby, Journey to the Jade Sea (1964); Journey through Britain; Journey through Europe; Journey to the Gods (1991). Accounts of various long distance walks.
I check pages listed in
Category:Pages with incorrect ref formatting to try to fix reference errors. One of the things I do is look for content for
orphaned references in wikilinked articles. I have found content for some of
Hiking's orphans, the problem is that I found more than one version. I can't determine which (if any) is correct for this article, so I am asking for a sentient editor to look it over and copy the correct ref content into this article.
I apologize if any of the above are effectively identical; I am just a simple computer program, so I can't determine whether minor differences are significant or not.
AnomieBOT⚡22:26, 16 November 2020 (UTC)reply
Images
Hi
Nick Moyes, I have restored the two images that you deleted, presumably because you thought that they were off topic. I understand, but I'm preparing now to start using
trail crampons for safety, even though I actually walk within a city's boundaries, and then, when deep snow comes, I will sometimes use
snowshoes. But I will still be hiking/walking. I will also see signs of skis on the trails that I use. The two winter images emphasises their similarity with hiking in other seasons. The snowshoe article begins: "A snowshoe is footwear for walking over snow".
Rwood128 (
talk)
15:06, 20 November 2020 (UTC)reply
Hi,
Rwood128. Thank you for giving your rationale for reverting
my removal of two irrelevant images from the 'See also' section of this article. Rather than stomping in and simply reverting you (which only causes upset) I thought it best to explain that I believe you were wrong to reinstate them, and to explain my rationale for their removal (which was mentioned in my edit summary):
'See also' sections do not contain images.
Neither
snow shoes nor
ski touring are mentioned in the article. They are, of course related activities and so a wikilink within the 'See also' section is quite acceptable.
If you feel they are relevant to the article, you should include a section of text about them before including an image, though I respectfully suggest you would be better doing so at
Backpacking (hiking), where both more specialised techniques are already briefly mentioned, then in this more general article about hiking.
Images used in articles need to add encyclopaedic content about the subject. Neither
this image nor
this image add value to the article, and serve only to confuse and misdirect, as they are not referred to anywhere on the page. Indeed, they are wikilinked in 'See also' at 'Related activities' and not even as 'Types of hiking' So this is
WP:UNDUE, just as including an image of a llama would be inappropriate on the grounds of it being relevant to
Llama hiking.
And most whacky of all: the image of a girl feeding a bird on her arm whilst happening to be wearing snow shows (that you can't properly see) is, well, plain daft.
So please reinstate my edit and appreciate that we all have experiences when hiking that might be related to the broad subject, but not directly it, but this is an encyclopaedia which should serve to inform and not confuse the reader. Neither your own personal experiences, or mine as an active hiker and alpinist are relevant. I often carry an ice axe and crampons when I'm hiking in winter, or on approach walks in the Alps. None of those images would be directly relevant here, nor are the two that I removed. Please revert your edit which reinstated them.
Nick Moyes (
talk)
16:19, 20 November 2020 (UTC)reply
Thanks
Nick Moyes. I will await any further comment, and will also think further about this. There is mention of winter hiking, under hazards, but this is peripheral. A section on winter hiking is needed that can includes, for example, reference to the use of crampons and an ice ax. Your choice of words such as "wacky" and "daft" is puzzling, but maybe there is a cultural difference as you don't have a real winter in England.
The disputed images in fact illustrate the "see also" section, especially "related topics". Your comment about the snowshoe image being "plain daft" is over the top. There is a caption and my ancient eyes can see the snow shoes.
Rwood128 (
talk)
18:43, 20 November 2020 (UTC)reply
As I said above, it is quite inappropriate to add any images to the 'See also' section, and I have to respond to you over the image of a girl feeding a bird whilst standing, wearing snow shows to illustrate 'hiking'. It is, indeed, quite daft to include such a wacky image. Can you not see how irrelevant that is to the article? (Maybe it's a cultural thing.) But I am pleased you have now seen sense and removed it. I have moved the images out from the 'See also' section into the section you've sensibly created on 'winter hiking' - I'm very happy to see that section included, and would very much welcome seeing it being expanded, as well as appropriate images added to support the text content. Please just ensure you follow
WP:MOS when expanding content. You are quite right about English winters; that's why hikers in England who want to become competent alpine mountaineers often head a few hundred miles north to improve their winter skills by ice climbing in Scotland - a place where many of the world's toughest climbers have come from. Cheers,
Nick Moyes (
talk)
02:27, 21 November 2020 (UTC)reply
I agree with
Rwood128 and have restored the photograph of the snowshoer in the See also section. Snowshoeing is a form of hiking, and the picture illustrates snowshoeing, per
MOS:IMAGERELEVANCE. Further, there is nothing is
MOS:SEEALSO that forbids images in the section. If you'd like to come up with a better snowshoeing image, I'm open for substitution, but I think it illustrates a form of winter hiking, and I support keeping the photograph in. If you'd like to discuss further, let's stick to using Wikipedia guidelines, and avoid perjorative terms such as "daft". —
hike395 (
talk)
06:16, 21 November 2020 (UTC)reply
There's no problem having these images in the article, providing they are relevant to an appropriate section, which they now seem to be - and I appreciate the efforts of all those working to improve the structure and content of this article, which is now showing a marked improvement. But there simply is no justification for any image being placed in a See also section, just as there would not be in 'References' either. Perhaps consider a
WP:GALLERY if extra images are ever really necessary, but please consider mobile users who only see one section and their accompanying images at any one time. Meanwhile, I have repositioned the remaining image from 'See also' into the winter hiking section of the article, per
MOS:IMAGELOCATION, and have expanded that section a little. On a desktop, they still currently appear to project down into the 'See also' sub-section, but they are nevertheless in the right place now.
Nick Moyes (
talk)
15:50, 21 November 2020 (UTC)reply
@
Rwood128: I meant to restore the snowshoer with bird photo, but if you prefer the snowshoers in Bryce Canyon, it's clear that the consensus is not restore the bird photo. —
hike395 (
talk)
14:38, 22 November 2020 (UTC)reply
I think it has indeed benefited from the attention (and yes, I like the alternative snowshoeing image a lot better) - thanks both. As an aside, you might also have spotted that I've now uploaded and inserted a citation and image of alpaca trekking to
llama hiking because I thought we were unfairly excluding alpacas from the page, and also because the choice of main image there was a bit off-topic (aka daft). Warning: Anyone shoving an alpaca into this article will be instantly blocked. (Only kidding!). Cheers,
Nick Moyes (
talk)
16:11, 22 November 2020 (UTC)reply
Nick Moyes, re your recent edit, I don't know whether it is as glaringly obvious to all parent that: "it is possible to engage in hiking with young children", as you think, though the wording might be improved. In my experience successful hiking with a young child requires lots of planning and flexibility.
Rwood128 (
talk)
20:32, 28 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Thanks,
Rwood128. I don't think our role is to spell out things that are not glaringly obvious; it is, of course, to cover a topic encyclopaedically, and we need to avoid making statements that might themselves mislead.
My edit was purely intended to remove poor wording that to me would sound awkward to, or confuse, a reader. I'm OK with expanding this section a little more in order to explain the very different issues involved with hiking with babies, with toddlers and with older children. I suggest
this book might be a suitable source to base any expansion upon, or it could go in 'Further reading'. It certainly covers the key areas and, like you, I also have experience of taking a baby, and then a 4 year old, and then a teenage child up major mountain trails. Yes, I agree: they all involve careful planning. There are two definitions that seem essential to appreciate here in any editing: that of what 'hiking' is, and what a 'child' is. I do feel that some of this article's editors seem determined to expand it into areas that stray well beyond what general hiking is, and into into realms best covered by other articles. (I would, for example, suggest that the inclusion of the photo of Striding Edge is a perfect example of that. If anyone's been on it, they'll know why I say that. It's an easy
scrambling route, less a hiking trail, so doesn't really belong here).
Nick Moyes (
talk)
00:37, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Thanks
Nick, I certainly agree about the need not to stray too far into related areas. With regard to the photo of
Striding Edge, I believe that I added that, and for me it represents more or less the boundary of what I see as hiking. This also includes hiking in snow, paths protected with chains, etc, in the Alps, and, here in
Newfoundland. walking with trail crampons in winter on easy paths locally,
Rwood128 (
talk)
12:48, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Rwood128 OK fair enough. On further reflection I might accept that Striding Edge is at the very upper limit of relevance to 'Hiking' - with some limited scrambling involved - and the caption does make that clear. But other classic UK routes like Crib Goch on Snowdon or Aonach Eagach Ridge in Glencoe definitely fall into the scrambling category and so wouldn't be appropriate here. But I still wonder whether an image of another route better known for mainstream hiking, rather than pushing the limits would be better. Perhaps the Miner's Track or the Pyg track on Snowdon might fit the bill more? (Somewhere I've a photo of my 4 year old doing it all by herself, and carrying her own rucksack too; I might upload it if it looks potentially useful!)
Nick Moyes (
talk)
15:59, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
The point of the
Striding Edge image was to demonstrate a hiking "boundary", rather than a typical hike. The
Aonach Eagach ridge was done by a friend of mine, years ago, who was no mountaineer, and I suppose some might see it as representing the "very upper limit" between hiking and rock climbing. I did the
Snowdon Horseshoe as a student on a hiking weekend. We stayed mostly below the crest, with little scrambling, and I was guided through the only really exposed scramble (that I remember) by a mountaineering type dangling over an abyss! — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Rwood128 (
talk •
contribs)
18:35, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Hazard
Hike395 why change the image, in view of the discussion on the Talk page, especially as you suggest that this image is of a more obviously hazardous hiking route – which I don't in fact see. Anyhow aren't there too many photos of the North American landscape already? Can you clarify?
Rwood128 (
talk)
21:32, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
I interpreted
Nick Moyes's comment to say that Striding Edge was a marginal hike. I was trying to find a picture of an arete hike that is less hazardous than Striding Edge. Clouds Rest is a perfectly standard hike on an arete, no scrambling or handholds. It actually isn't that hazardous, unless you do something actively unsafe. You can get a sense of that hiking that spot from the video
here. There's a 1000m dropoff to the right of the arete, but it's difficult to take a picture that shows both the knife-edge and the 1000m drop-off.
I'm not insisting that the photograph stay in the article, if you think that we need to restore geographical balance. I can try to find a non-North-American version of a safe-ish arete hike. —
hike395 (
talk)
23:55, 29 December 2020 (UTC)reply
I found a photo on flickr of a ridge hike in the
Ötztal Alps. I've never been to that spot, but the satellite and topo maps show it's an arete. Not sure how dangerous it is, but the hiker shown doesn't seem to be scrambling. —
hike395 (
talk)
00:10, 30 December 2020 (UTC)reply
(
edit conflict) I'd just come back by suggesting that exposure is a very obvious hazard, and it might perhaps be more useful (=encyclopaedic) to highlight a less obvious hazard, and on a less extreme hiking route than on a sharp arete. Maybe something like use of a water filter to avoid risks from contaminated water, or perhaps sunstroke avoidance, or dehydration, carrying too much equipment, being insufficiently prepared, benightment, hypothermia, or navigation/map-reading failure, having toddlers in tow (!), accidents/injury, loss of daylight,
bear spray?, the so-called 'bad step/mauvais pas' or swollen river crossings which normal hikers can encounter wherein their lack of experience in scrambling/rock techniques mean they can suddenly become wildly out of their depth etc. (suddenly remembering a woman crying in sheer panic at the start of the Crib Goch ridge which I and my daughter skipped across without a problem!) BTW, whilst I'm here, did anyone tell the youths hiking in Israel that they should have carried rainproof gear? Our article's 'Equipment' section currently says they need to. It's important to appreciate that people hiking in arid climates encounter quite different hazards and needs than those of us in cold, temperate climes.
Nick Moyes (
talk)
00:43, 30 December 2020 (UTC)reply
We could show
this photo of Crib Goch. It's a Featured Picture (which I prefer to show in articles), and also shows hikers on the arete. Alternatively, per Nick, we could show the risk due to animals with
this photo of a bear trying to steal hikers' gear. I rather like that one. —
hike395 (
talk)
15:01, 30 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Nice picture, but really not OK for this article at all, as that route is not a hiking route - it's an exposed scramble, impossible to get on from the Pen-y-Pass end without a short but challenging scrambling move of c.10m, then a considerable amount of exposed scrambling elsewhere along it. Please don't be tempted to include any pics of that route on this page as it's too off-topic (I'd rather have the bear!). Quite a few people come to grief thinking the Crib Goch ridge is just an exposed walk/hike; I remember soloing a winter route on Snowdon's Trinity face back in Feb 1986, descending via the icy Crib Goch ridge, only to learn that the day previously the president of the
Alpine Club (UK) had fallen to his death whilst making the same traverse. But getting back on topic: I've spent the afternoon poring over maps and images to locate the Austrian ridge route added by
Hike395 in
diff. I've updated the image description on Commons and can confirm it's the
Rotkogel (2894m) - see also
[3] and, apart from steel cables for protection in one short section, there's no obvious scrambling on that route, so I'm quite OK with it's use here.
Nick Moyes (
talk)
16:50, 30 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment
This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 26 August 2019 and 11 December 2019. Further details are available
on the course page. Student editor(s):
Hanna wietsma.