views of Resurrection Bay from Mt. Alice
Living in Alaska and frequently hiking over the last two years has
convinced me that mountains have personalities. There are those
that will make you earn every single step and view on the way up and
down! This, at least for me, describes our tallest mountain in Seward,
Mount Alice. She always kicks my ass in one way or another.
I have
attempted to climb to its Godwin
Glacier overlook on a number of occasions. My husband has reached that point on the mountain a couple of times over the last two years without me. I am happy to say that I finally did it earlier this summer, but not without Alice testing
my nerves!
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B in his element. Mt. Alice's highest peak is on the left. |
I managed to keep it together on
the way up, and was quite proud and pleasantly supervised with myself
when we reached the top, given the crazy steep crumbling rock and snow
fields we had just finished crossing using the ‘ladder approach’.
However, on the way down, Alice reminded me who’s in charge. That’s when I
didn’t keep it together.
While we were crossing another steep downhill snowfield, and each step looked like it was taking me toward an endless abyss, because I couldn't see around the corner; and I started believing that if I didn't take an absolutely perfect step I would end up rolling down the entire side of the mountain and into Resurrection Bay; my dear husband sensed the level of my stress and started to say something sweet to me, when I screamed back "Please don't talk. I'm starting to freak out!" It got so bad that I started kicking the snow in frustration, as if that was going to make me get down quicker, or safer, or make my freezing hands feel better!
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I made it! |
Luckily,
and gratefully, he continued to remind me, in his signature gentle way, that everything was just fine, that we were safe, and that I could do this. And with that, along with a bit of crying by me and some loving hugs from him, I managed to get back to Zen somehow and enjoy the rest of the climb down. But not without feeling deeply humbled, once again, by Mt. Alice, the boss.
Happy mountaineering!
~Tamara
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