hiking classifications
- Wandering Daisy
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Re: hiking classifications
I am not up on my popular culture, but I thought we baby boomers are well past (too old) to be a "yuppie". I do not think that classification is limited to any age group- could label it as the "want-a-guide-for-free" backpacker.
Or perhaps the "insecure bucket-list" backpacker. Not really interested in the process, just wants bragging rights, not sure of his/her skills enough to do it him/herself. This backpacker will ONLY do "big name" trails or routes well documented and bragged about on the internet- nothing obscure. Definitely this trip will entail a lot of "selfies".
Or perhaps the "insecure bucket-list" backpacker. Not really interested in the process, just wants bragging rights, not sure of his/her skills enough to do it him/herself. This backpacker will ONLY do "big name" trails or routes well documented and bragged about on the internet- nothing obscure. Definitely this trip will entail a lot of "selfies".
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Re: hiking classifications
WD - I liked yours - pretty funny.
- Shhsgirl
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Re: hiking classifications
WD, you may be correct. It may be that Baby Boomers are too old to be Yuppies. I'm too old to recall when "yuppie" came into the currency!
- Cloudy
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Re: hiking classifications
Sorry, I couldn't tell that it started in jest. I'm still not into classifying folks but if I had to, it would be "dumb@$$es" and the rest...
- LMBSGV
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Re: hiking classifications
Here's the Wikipedia entry on "yuppie."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuppie
As a baby boomer (born 1951), "yuppies" were definitely the next generation. I know "baby boomers" are "officially" defined as 1946-1964, but if you weren't old enough to experience the Kennedy assassination, the Beatles on Ed Sullivan, and be draft-eligible for Vietnam (yes, I know women were not draft eligible back then, but they were old enough if we'd been less sexist) you are not a baby boomer.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuppie
As a baby boomer (born 1951), "yuppies" were definitely the next generation. I know "baby boomers" are "officially" defined as 1946-1964, but if you weren't old enough to experience the Kennedy assassination, the Beatles on Ed Sullivan, and be draft-eligible for Vietnam (yes, I know women were not draft eligible back then, but they were old enough if we'd been less sexist) you are not a baby boomer.
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- iHartMK
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Re: hiking classifications
Well since you're stereotyping people, SMH. Don't forget about the awful southern California hikers... the worst kind!.. They drive 7+ hours to the trailhead in their Lezbaru Outback wagons. They are the loudest most pretentious people on the trail. They are the ones us locals read about in the local news that got lost and died for doing something stupid in the backcountry. You're not in Disneyland anymore Mr & Mrs. SoCal.
I love that it only takes me 30 minutes to get to Sequoia Nat'l Park and that I can see most of the highest peaks from the second story of my home.
I love that it only takes me 30 minutes to get to Sequoia Nat'l Park and that I can see most of the highest peaks from the second story of my home.
Living On Kaweah Time
- TahoeJeff
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Re: hiking classifications
My motto:
Never trust anyone under 6200'.
Never trust anyone under 6200'.
"A society that puts equality before freedom will get neither. A society that puts freedom before equality will get a high degree of both."
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Milton Friedman
- markskor
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Re: hiking classifications
Flatlander...lol. Try 7,800'.TahoeJeff wrote:My motto:
Never trust anyone under 6200'.
Mountainman who swims with trout
- Cloudy
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Re: hiking classifications
"They drive 7+ hours to the trailhead in their Lezbaru Outback wagons". That is another atypical stereotype in the making (except for the hours)! I have owned my 1985 Subaru 4WD GL wagon since 1985 and it's getting time for a replacement after serving me well for so many years. It was love at first sight and and I have never regretted my choice. I will likely replace it next year with with a six-cylinder Outback since sadly, they phased out 4WD and manual transmissions. It may be the last car I ever own - which is a frightening thought...
- AlmostThere
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Re: hiking classifications
My significant alien drives a Subaru Forester - just replaced his old one with a new one - because they are the only car he fits in so as not to develop sore knees using the pedals and not hit his head on the ceiling. That it helps us get up to trailheads on iffy roads helps.Cloudy wrote:"They drive 7+ hours to the trailhead in their Lezbaru Outback wagons". That is another atypical stereotype in the making (except for the hours)! I have owned my 1985 Subaru 4WD GL wagon since 1985 and it's getting time for a replacement after serving me well for so many years. It was love at first sight and and I have never regretted my choice. I will likely replace it next year with with a six-cylinder Outback since sadly, they phased out 4WD and manual transmissions. It may be the last car I ever own - which is a frightening thought...
I've driven for about 10 hours to get to trailheads... sometimes it's worth the drive. Most weekends we drive less than 2 hours....
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