Monday, April 14, 2014

Taking the High Road


            The novel I am reading for my book club (Rite of Passage by Alexei Panshin) contains a conversation between Jimmy and Mia about what constitutes an adventure. Jimmy argues that Mia had one when she went down to a planet's surface; she responds that falling off a boat and swallowing nasty tasting water is NOT an adventure. so he sets out to find a "real adventure" for her. This sparked my thoughts about experiences I have had that would fulfill Mia's idea of "adventure,” of taking the high road to somewhere.
The high road experience I want to share had nothing to do with ethical dilemmas, nor with the “Bonnie Banks O' Loch Lomond.” My high road had everything to do with fulfilling a dream, checking an item off my Bucket List.
            In my 20’s, I read an adventure novel by Trevanian entitled The Eiger Sanction. The climax of the plot was precipitated by an avalanche down the North Face of the Eiger. Years later as part of a college summer studying in Europe, I had the chance to go to Switzerland, to stay in Lauterbrunnen, the town at the base of the Jungfrau Massif… a collection of three Alps of which the Eiger is one.
            The first morning I woke up in the youth hostel in Lauterbrunnen, I began to make arrangements to see the Eiger, up close and personal. I convinced Ivy Westwood to accompany me on my quest. We talked to several people at the hostel and the post office. We checked our shoes and socks (very important everyone told us, to have thick socks in comfortable shoes), loaded our back packs, made sure we had film in our cameras and water in our canteens. We did not need a map; after all, we only had to “follow the road behind the hostel until it turns into a path which will take you to the high meadow. From there you’ll see the glacier.”
            Ivy and I set off the next morning right after breakfast. As we walked the path, we found ourselves in Heidi country: steep, grass covered slopes peppered with small colorful, slant-roofed chalets. We stopped taking pictures of each other and the breathtaking scenery after the second roll of film. As we stepped over a couple of shallow rills, we remembered the hostel manager’s advice, “Don’t drink the water. It’s clean and pure, but it’s straight off the glacier and will freeze you from the inside out.” We didn’t really “climb” in the technical, Alpine sense of that word, as the path we followed wound up the side of the mountain in easy stages. Though we were fairly sure the manager was kidding us as tourists, we didn’t risk it. We never gasped for breath from exertion, though the air tasted different that far up an Alp. As we walked, the sun shone in cloudless skies; warm breezes made us never notice the sweat, if we even had any.
            Ivy and I ate lunch sitting on a flat rock overlooking the Lauterbrunnen valley, which I discovered years later was J.R.R. Tolkien’s inspiration for Rivendell. After all these years, I still remember the silence of the place.  We fell asleep in the Alpine grass and napped for about an hour.  Then we began our trek home to the village.
            The day remained perfect. Until we reached what on the climb up had been a shallow rill but had become a roaring torrent of glacial run-off, after the day of warm weather. What had been a step-over waterway had become a four-foot wide wade-through waterway. Ivy and I decided that removing our shoes and socks would be smarter than walking home with wet ones. We did not anticipate how cold glacial run-off is! One shoe in each hand, we stepped into the rushing water . . . shrieked and jumped, landing on our rear ends on the opposite side of the rill.  That water was so cold, it BURNED.  Dry socks and shoes never felt so good.
            Only one negative aspect of our experience: in our leap to dry land, our packs jolted off our shoulders and all our stuff floated down the water. Ivy and I have memories but no proof of our close encounter with an Alp. Our Kodak moments drifted away on a mountain stream.
            I took the high road that day and had an Alpine adventure I’ve cherished for years.


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